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A93917 A learned and very usefull commentary upon the whole prophesie of Malachy, by that late Reverend, Godly and Learned Divine, Mr. Richard Stock, sometime Rector of Alhallowes Breadstreet, London, and now according to the originall copy left by him, published for the common good. Whereunto is added, An exercitation vpon the same prophesie of Malachy / by Samuel Torshell. Stock, Richard, 1569?-1626.; Torshell, Samuel, 1604-1650. Exercitation upon the prophecie of Malachy. 1641 (1641) Wing S5692A; ESTC R184700 652,388 677

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not corrupt the word b 41 they must be holy b 42. They must preach so as to convert men b 45 they ought to be learned in the Scriptures b 48 It is a great corruption when they occasion men to sinne b 67 when they are contemned and hated justly b 70 71 what they are then to doe b 74 they are Gods Messengers b 166 to defraud them of their maintenance is sacriledge b 215 216 219 220 221 225. Ministery of man ordinarily used by God a 12 13. How to be esteemed a 13 14. None may take it upon him without a calling b 26. The efficacy of the Ministry b 291. N Nature teaches not to wrong any b 79. O Obedience due to God in all things b 4 5. How far due to parents a 62 63 64 66. How far due to Masters a 80 81 82. How far due to Magistrates a 63 82. Old men their duty b 30. Omission of duties b 208. 209. Oppression God not pleased with sacrifices of it a 222. 224 225. Oppressors not heard of God b 110 Originall sin b 126 280 P Papists plea of bounty b 214 Parents to take care of childrens soules b 127 128. Passion a 25. Patience under affliction a 4 5. Patience in injuries b 108 109. Peace only to the upright b 45. People of God may be punished a 8 9 10. Their priviledges a 27. Person must be accepted before his praiers are a 189. Perfection whether in this life b 14. Perfididiousnesse a great sin b 82 83 Piety brings prosperity b 250. Plenty promised to the obedient b 31. promist to paiers of tithes b 231 232 233 Polygamie b 122 129 130. Popes may and have erred b 61 62 their Church robbing b 228. Portion how children to submit in that a 67. Poverty of Ministers b 226 227. Power of God a 37. Praise God to be praised for deliverances a 55. Praier not heard how great a judgement a 169 170. When the season of praier a 170. How we must pray a 172. What to pray for a 173. Praier to Saints departed a 175. Praiers of wicked not profitable a 178. Where to pray a 197 198. All need the praiers of others a 174. Praiers of Gods people accepted b 181 182. Preferring man before God how hainous a 160 163. Preist how the word used a 203. Professors their sin most hainous a 210. Prophanesse of heart how knowne a 145. Prophets 3. sorts a 12. Christ our prophet b 172 173 Prosperity b 158 159. Prosperity promist to piety b 250. No note of true Church b 241 242. Providence of God not to be questioned b 160. To deny it is pride against God b 244 245. Whence it is that men doubt of it b 247 248. Gods providence and protection a bond of service a 105. Publicke worship to be attended b 52 53. Punishment Gods owne people punisht a 8 wicked oft doe escape unpunished long b 256. Purgagatory b 178 179 235 R. Redemption of the elect b 277 Regenerate their workes holy a 205 Reigning sinne what b 278 Religion teaches to do no wrong b 80 81 Remembrance God remembers our waies b 262 Repentance onely removes judgements b 6 210 211 Reproofe a 133 134 Revenge the desire of it a 49 Reward to obedience b 33 Riches the way to attaine them b 32 234 whether fit for Ministers b 226 227 Wicked oft encrease in riches b 254 255 Righteousnesse cannot be without religion b 268 269 Righteousnesse inherent b 276 S. Sacraments their efficacy a 142 the Ministers of them b 28 Sacrifices of N. Test a 144 what Sacrifices required of Christians a 202 Sacriledge b 212 215 219 220 221 239 240 Sanctification of Gods elect b 275 276 Scoffing speeches whether lawfull a 167 Sencelessenesse under judgements a 3 4 Separation may not be from a Church for the abuses of it a 177 180 Servants their duty a 76 78 83 86 89 Service of God must be with best a 150 183 Sicke service a 159 T. Temple people not bound to it in prayer a 197 Tempting of God what b. 230 231 Tithes whether still in force b 216. 217. 218. Thoughts are known to God a 138 Toleration of Papists a 179 Truth all of it to be delivered b 39 V. Virginity how to be esteemed of b 136 Vowes to be observed a 234 235 Vsury b 85 W. Wages of hirelings not to be detained b 195 Wards the abuse b 198 199 Watchfulnesse required of us b 260 Widowes not to be opprest b 196 197 Wicked though flourish shall be destroyed b 272 273 Wife is husbands companion b 117 choice a of wife b 144 145 Witches not to be sought unto b 189 190 Word of God how to be preacht a 6 7. How to be heard a 7. must be applyed b 2 3. must be all delivered b 39. it must be heard publikely b 51 52. It must be sought after b 54 55 All things are good or evill as they are with or against the word b 84. Wicked not able to abide the preaching of it b 174 Workes no cause of justification a 189 Worship of God must be holy a 127 Where that is abused God is abused a 138 Worship of God removed for contempt a 229 Worship of God furthered by maintainance of Ministry b 227 228 Wrath of God a 44 45 Z. Zeale a 159 FINIS AN EXERCITATION VPON THE PROPHECIE OF MALACHY Wherein The Context is illustrate by a cleare Analyse The originall Text is examined Most translations extant are conferred The expositions of the ancients and others are weighed Together with some occasionall observations By SAMUEL TORSHELL Intended by way of Addition to a larger Commentary upon the same Prophecy by that reverend and godly Divine Mr. Richard Stock and now since his death at last published with the consent of his Executors by the same Author LONDON Printed by Edward Griffin for Daniel Frere Thomas Nichols and Samuel Enderbey and are to be sold at their shops in little Brittaine and Pope-head Alley 1640. NO BILISSIMO AC HONORATISSIMO DOMINO D. EDOVARDO COMITI DORSET BARONI DE BUCKHURST Serenissimae Dominae Reginae Domino Camerario praenobilis ordinis Periscelidis Militi Serenissimo Domino regi CAROLO a Conciliis secretioribus DEPVRATAE ELOQVENTIAE FACILE PRINCIPI INGENUORVM OMNIVM STVDIORUM fautori Mecaenati Dignissimo IN OMNIBUS NEGOTIIS A D HONOREM REGIUM ac Salutem publicam spectantibus Vigilantissimo ac prudentissimo Consiliario Has EXERCITATIONES in Prophetam MALACHIAM Ut exile quidem at Devotum tamen perpetuae observantiae maximi obsequii Testimonium D. D. D. Sacellanus ejus indignus Humillimus Servus Samuel Torshel To the Reader IT was not choyce but occasion that cast me upon this Subject Having the originall notes of the Sermons of that reverend learned and godly Divine M. Richard Stock upon this prophet Malachy entrusted into my hands and upon perusall of them finding many necessary points most wholesomely treated of I thought it too great an
discerne Because he may not dispose of the goods of his father without him Reas 2 not sell his land or alienate any thing from him but as he will dispose how then himselfe This reproveth those children that dispose themselves without their parents consent Vse 1 prey upon their right intangle and contract themselves yea and consummate marriages they not witting yea unwilling or by some necessity forced to shew some willingnesse which is the cause of so many untoward uncleane and polluted families and prophane succession as other times can witnesse so too many presidents in our dayes For as when children are compelled to match against their wills and where they have just occasion of exception for some sinister respect the parents have there follows much uncleannesse and impiety so when without the parents consent and not of their providing but they are their owne choosers shewing where parents consent is wanting there Gods blessing is away yea where parents consent is not there is Gods curse as in Esau and his posterity in Judah taking his Hoasts daughter Gen. 38.2 having Er and Onan such as God would not endure to live but slew them himselfe Yea that may also be seene Gen. 6.2 in the sonnes of Seth the Church which matched with cursed Chams seed of themselves without parents consent had such a wretched posterity This thing then is reproofe-worthy yea damnable in children without repentance parents are often causes of it and that first to some it is Gods retribution because they so served and abused their parents Secondly because they give such liberty to their daughters to wander as Dinah and so Ezek. 23.3 their brests come to be pressed and the teats of their virginity bruised or else their affections by often meeting are so intangled and inflamed as the fathers threats will not loose it nor the mothers teares cannot quench it It was not so Prov. 30.18 19. it should not be so Hierom to Demetr Epist 8.11 would not have Virgins alone solae sine matre for in a flocke of Doves the Kite often will prey upon one when they are abroad and it is a scabbed sheep that loves wandring and leaves the fold Thirdly because parents doe not take and use their right and provide for them in due time mates fit for them which makes them provide for themselves not without sinne but greatly sinning yet the parents partakers of it and oftentimes of much shame and griefe as it was with Tamar Gen. 38.26 But howsoever one mans sinne cannot excuse another nor yet the parents the childs sinne nor will not exempt them from the curse of God when they thus match to the griefe of their parents and the shortening of their dayes and life by whom they received life and should have their lives continued and lengthened To instruct children to be subject to their parents Vse 2 knowing what power they have over them to guide their choyce that without them they may not chuse and if they chuse for them they cannot without great cause and just exception stray themselves from liking smaller things they must endeavour to overcome they must not suffer themselves to be entangled by some who seeke by kind usage of them to steale away their hearts from their parents for their daughters to advance them as is the manner of some wretched and unconscionable men As Usurers get their fathers inheritance from them by feeding them with money so they must not set their affections by fervency of society and company upon others without parents and where never like to give allowance They ought to remember this is the fathers right to choose to dispose of them not onely in the generall but for the particular person But what if he be farre off and cannot see If he give thee liberty duely asking it of him he hath given his right from himselfe as Isaac to Jacob Gen. 28. But what if he upon some sinister respect deferre and passe the flower of her age I answer then hath God ordained the Magistrate as for their punishment so for their reliefe who is not to be sought to but when most urgent necessity requireth when the opposition stands betwixt Marriage and burning because that reveales the fathers fault and bewrayes his or her infirmity But what if he tender a match out of the Church a Papist or such like Then must the Child refuse with reverence not disposing of himselfe for as it were sinne to yeeld so the other is sinne to make choyce of himselfe But what if another that is not so religious and so fervent a lover of the Truth as is to be wished No direct deny all is lawfull but a wise delaying and a discreet gaining of time to sollicite God with their prayers who hath the heart of their Parents in his hand and to intreate them by mediation of best friends who if they can be diverted it is well if not I know no warrant a Child hath to deny his fathers choyce though he thinke and it may be he might choose better and he may looke for a blessing from God if in duty he thus submit himselfe to his Parents The last part of this honour is thankfulnesse which Children must performe to their Parents Children must performe all thankfulnesse unto their Parents Doctrine that is helpe them when they need and in age when their state and bodies are decayed and to be eyes and leggs and limbs unto them and to administer liberally according to their state and ability to them as they did to them when they were young and when yet they had nothing nor knew not how to get any thing that this is a part of honour Christ sheweth Math. 15.4 5 6. some thinke that of Psal 128.3 when children are made Olive plants not Olives onely and Olive branches which was a signe of peace so they to make peace and love betwixt their parents but plants such as might stand under them underprop and uphold them in their weaknesse and thus verily have good Children honoured their parents so did the sons of Jacob Gen. 42.1 2. so did Joseph Gen. 47.12 so did Ruth though but a daughter in law To this purpose Paul forbids that the Church should be burthened with widowes but their children Nephews ought to maintain them 1 Tim. 5.4 Because else he should not onely be unnaturall Reas 1 but unjust when the father by his speciall care for him and the mother by her prayers bearing and carrying of him watching with him lending eyes and legs and limbes to him feeding and nourishing of him deserveth it All which they the better deserve if they have children with whom they have the like labour and endeavour now justice requires to pay debt due and deserved Because they had forme from them as body and members and limbes Reas 2 so their education their trade their stocke and portion or both whereby they are that they are by the blessing of God reason then they relieve and maintaine
them by it if their need require This reproves many gracelesse children Vse 1 who never perform any such duty unto their parents specially if they stand in need of them indeed but if they be base poor will hardly acknowledge them as thinking it their reproach and shame not forgetting but disdaining the rock whereout they were hewed the pit whereout they were taken or if they doe releeve them or be kind unto them it is either because they have yet somewhat to give and bestow which till it be gotten they use them kindly yea if many children they strive which should shew most kindnesse but once gotten made over to them they set them light and turne them out some making their parents complaine to authority against them or if they keep them decayed they make them drudge as servants they set them with the Hyndes some so gracelesse as they complaine they are a burthen unto them the best of them never tendering them as they did them nor maintaining them as they are able neither answerable to their former condition nor their owne present and some driving them away and not affording any entertainment of releefe to these and such like we apply that of Solomon Prov. 19.26 He that wasteth his father and chaseth away his mather is asonne that causeth shame and bringeth reprovach and so esteem of them as God hath marked them To teach Children to performe all thankefulnesse to their parents Vse 1 if they live to be able and they to stand in need of them if they be never so base be not ashamed of them but remember the time was when thou wast naked and needy and not only had nothing but if thou hadst had all the world couldst not have had helpe but by them or some in steed of them And yet they covered thy nakednesse were not ashamed of thy infirmities carryed thee in their armes and nourished thee carefully Suppose and consider where thou hadst been if they had neglected thee thinke how many nights without sleepe and dayes without rest they spent about thee when thou wast young or weake or sicke see how love made all their labour light and all their charges as it were a gaine unto them And if thou hast any true naturall affection in thee thou wilt thinke nothing too much for them But feed and nourish them at thy table with thy morsell and cup carry and sustaine them in their weakenes and infirmitie yea though they should live as long or longer in infirmities and wants then thou wast of them there are some birds saith Basill who feed their dams as long as they fed them and carryed them how much more Christian Children oftentimes when thy father is dead his garment or his ring is deare to thee this thou carriest upon thy finger and wouldst not lose it for any thing think how should his body when he is living S. Aug. de Civ D. lib. 1. or if thou see others so esteeme them apply it to thy selfe and give them their whole honour or else looke for the shortning of thy daies and for the like recompence from thine His Father Having seene the duty we must proceede now to the parties to whom this duty and honour is to be performed to the father and parents as their parents authors of their being or at least instruments of their being God being Principall Children must performe all these duties this honour to their parents all their life long nothing will free them from them Doctrine nor dispence with the neglect and omission no greatnesse nor excellency themselves may come to no state nor condition of theirs neither want infirmity and imperfection of theirs This is manifest by the example of Joseph the second in the kingdome of Aegypt yet did not omit the least duty to his father but performed all in their places obedience subjection mainteinance reverence in his infirmity and weakenesse and his own greatnesse Gen 48.12 caeteris capiti Solomon to his mother 1 King 2.19 20. Christ to his parents Luke 2.51 Hence came the curse upon Cham pronounced by his father and executed by God notwithstanding what he had to say and could hold out for his defence his father was drunke and like a beast Gen. 9. But Shem and Japheth blessed who did him reverence To this purpose is that of Solomon Prov. 23.22 Hearken unto thy father that begat thee and despise not thy mother when she is old howsoever unworthy of it yet thou must performe it even to thy mother weaker by nature subject to more infirmityes by so much more apt to despise them more then when the infirmitie of their sex and the imperfections of the age are combyned together yet we have no liberty to despise or deny duty Because neither the greatnesse of the one Reas 1 nor the weakenesse and infirmitie of the other can breake that relation which is betwixt childe and parents which the Law of God being morall hath made perpetuall unto everlasting And the reason of this is because as Chrisost in Rom. 13. non principi sed principatui that honour obedience and subjection is required not so much to the Prince as to the Princedome not to the person as to his place So of this the honour is due not to the father but his fatherhood not somuch to the person of him as he is a man and so either a bad or a good man as to his place office as he is a father now he is a father she a mother though of never so bad life or bad parts and so to be honoured and the childe is to give it not as a man and so great or base high or low but as a childe which he ever is and so must alwayes performe it Because they are the authors or principall instruments of their lives Reas 2 essence and being which is that which never can be blotted out but will ever remaine while they are therefore is this to be performed 'T is Solomons ground Prov. 23.22 This serves to condemne the Church of Rome and their odious and impious positions Vse 1 where they allow by doctrine the childe to disobey his parents for they allow him not so much as to acknowledge him to be his father if he be an Hereticke if a protestant yea by the heresie of the father children are freed from all obedience and the father deprived of all his naturall power Symancha Justit Cathol Tit. 4. sect 74. see yee not these men going against the current of humanity and against the light of nature and are oppisite to the light of the word Cham may not dishonour his father though he be drunke but he shall have the curse how shall they escape it But Heresie is a greater sinne then drunkennes undoubtedly not as they count Heresie which is to differ from the Church of Rome in any thing specially in matter of the seven Sacraments And what is this in comparison of that which makes a man a beast
stony conduits God conveyeth the water of life as a Gardener doth water to his plants but it is not better in regard of them who doe it for it maketh their condemnation more grievous Judas preached condemnation to himselfe and yet no doubt converted some as the rest did Noah was glad he could get some to build his Arke himselfe and his sonnes being no workmen fit for it but it profited them not a whit that built it as good never have done it This may teach us what to judge of our Church-Papists Vse 1 who for feare of law avoiding of losse for escaping of imprisonment doe resort to our congregations without conscience and care they are worse than those who doe refuse to come than open recusants for if to come to Church for a shew to prophane Gods worship and to doe it rashly for sinister respects and in hypocrisie be worse than not doing then they are greater offenders in comming than others in abstaining The Shechemites were greater sinners with Hamor and Shechem his sonne in taking the Sacrament of Circumcision for profit and satisfying their pleasure and to make a prey as they thought of Israel Gen. 34. than the other Gentiles who refused it So in this they come to Church for advantage or profit or saving of that they have then is it better they should not come at all Nay not so but it is lesse e vill not more good The goodnesse is that they labour to be instructed in that they ought and to know how they ought and to endeavour to come with care and conscience as is required In the meane time hee that abstaines and comes not is lesse evill than he that doth come carelesly c. Why then should Magistrates compell men to the service of God Object when he shall make them sinne and sinne more than if they abstaine The Magistrate may not compell any man to doe evill Answ that is a thing simply forbidden of God but hee may compell a man to doe that which he may sinne in doing of it Things that men doe are of three sorts good and commanded evill and forbidden indifferent and neither commanded nor forbidden of God In this last the Magistrate ought to have a speciall and tender respect to the conscience of his subject though it be erronious specially when they are things of no moment the doing of them little profits the Church or Common-wealth and the omitting of them doth prejudice it nothing at all For the other Ad fidem unllus est cogendus invitus sed per severitatem into per misericordiam Dei tribulationum flagellis perfidia castigari August contr lit Petil. lib. 2 cap. 38. And againe Si quae igitur adversus vos leges constitutae sunt non bene facere cogimini sed malè facere prohibemini Ibid. he is not to respect the erronious consciences of men as not to suffer them unpunished for evill doing though they should pretend conscience in it so is hee not to abstaine from compelling them to that which is good for that evill is adjoyned to it it is not his fact that commandeth but comes from their infidelity and corruption who are commanded of which he cannot be accused when he hath carefully endeavoured that they be duely and rightly instructed and informed for when he may say the things I require are commanded in the Scriptures I have done my best endeavour that you may know the truth and not perish and I will not cease for hereafter to perswade and exhort and command you doe you need the Scriptures conferre with the Ministers pray God to open your eyes he hath then done his part This teacheth the fearefull condition of such as onely doe and performe the service of God Vse 2 but marvellous carelesly and corruptly they heare the Word they make prayers they receive the Sacrament but they are no more acceptable unto God than if they did them notat all God saith unto them as a Father to his Child and a Master to his servant seeing them scambling over their duties and businesse without care and respect I had as leese you did them nor at all Now what would we think of him that should never pray never heare the Word never receive Sacrament would not every one thinke hee is an odious man to God verily such and more odious if it may be is every one that doth these but without care of course without conscience they heare the Word but without profit God had rather have them away than come to Church to deride his Word to sleepe or talke there to prophane his worship So they pray but not with their hearts but with their lips their hearts are taken away with their pleasures profits and delights As Hosea 4.11 he esteemes of them as well when they pray not they receive the Sacrament but without preparation without understanding what they doe most unworthily they intrude themselves to the Table of the Lord God had as liefe have them away their roome were as acceptable to him as their thronging as his without the wedding-garment at the feast of the King Matth. 22. This is their fearefull condition he that heares is as though he heard not he that prayes as though he prayed not he that receiveth the Sacrament as though he did not and so of all the service of God he is as acceptable to God in not doing them as he is in doing and è contra as odious Then a man had as good not doe at all Object and so while you reprove one thing you open the gap to another from carelessenesse to prophanenesse If any man doe gather so Answ it is his collection not my assertion he like a Spider or Toad gathered venome and poyson from sweet flowers and wholesome herbs If a Master should tell his servant doing his businesse negligently that he had as lieve he did it not Will he reply then he will not if he doe shall he not for such contempt be beaten with more stripes Nay a servant that would avoid that and receive any wages and reward will seeke to correct his errour and reforme his corruption so in this This ought to instruct us that have any desire to be accepted in our service of God Vse 3 and not to be rejected as if we did neglect it altogether to doe it with all care and diligence and in the best manner that may be doe we must And then not to lose our labour and have no respect nor reward we must endeavour to doe them as they ought to be done heare with an honest heart to profit pray with a fervent spirit to prevaile use the Sacraments in knowledge and due preparation for them these and all other parts of his service as he requireth else we are in a strait as the Lepers were 2 King 7.3 4. without the walls of Samaria if they enter the City there is death if they sit still there is death also So we if we
ground of all duties Reas 1 specially of the cheerefull ready diligent performing of them and the cost which men think nothing too much of where they love Parents to their Children the Wife to the Husband Now no naturall and wicked men have the love of God or can have it for it is a supernaturall gift therefore no marvell if they deale thus Because the motives of these duties Reas 2 and the manner of doing them are the benefits received and the blessings and rewards to come upon them that doe them so Now naturall and wicked men want spirituall eyes to see God the giver of all that they have and the reward for things to come and what profit the service of God brings to them then no marvell though they think all too much Micha 6.6 7. here are hypocrites that thought not great things too much for God Object This they offered but they never did it It may be a question Sol. if God would have taken them at their word whether they would have performed or no for many promise largely that are short enough in performing But admit they would yet that they would not have done it for any service to God at all but only for a safeguard to themselves and their sinnes The Prophet threatned them with the judgments of God if they did not returne from their sinnes they thinking to save themselves and keepe their sinnes which were so deare unto them offer thus liberally and it may be would have given so but it was not for God but themselves As the Mariner in a storme or danger and the traveller when he is beset with theeves will cast away liberally This teacheth that there are a great company of men in the Church who are but meere naturall men at the best Vse 1 but hypocrites in the Church seeing so many find and professe themselves to find such tediousnesse and wearines in the service of God thinking the time too much the paines too great the cost very burdensome weary of Sabboths and the times and places of exercises can be content to serve with ease but not with any strictnes or as they account it inconvenience a little labor happily but no cost without grudging To whom the Sabboth when it commeth is like to a bad guest whose departure is farre more welcome to them then his comming so is the end more acceptable then the beginning and every houre is a day till it be over others thinke it was ordained for their ease and refreshing from their labors and not for Gods service and therefore thinke it too much to give the whole day to God too much to heare twice but intolerable they should be bound to make care of it in the whole in private besides the publique service Quae diabolus imperavit quam laboriosa quam gravia nee difficultas fuit ejus man datis impedimentū Chry. ho. 19. ad P. Ant. many masters are there who thinke much to give to God a whole Sabboth who will not remit their servants a piece of one of the six dayes Many a servant who can be content to toile himselfe more that day with the workes of pleasure and the workes of Sathan then in the week with the works of his Master but thinks every thing too much for God as Chrysostome What commands doth the Devill lay on man how laborious how grievous yet the difficulty is no impediment to his commands But here a little thing hinders and they thinke all too much how much more shew they themselves wicked men who like Judas finde fault with others care or cost in the service of God and draw others with them into the same opinion to thinke it is too much when it is short of that that is expressely required To teach every man Vse 2 when he finds any such wearinesse in the service of God his heart thinking too much of his cost and pains to censure it in himselfe as a relique of the naturall man whether it come of himselfe or he be drawn unto it by others as the Disciples were by Judas and to humble himself for it for it cannot be good comming from this and men cannot gather figs of thornes nor grapes of thistles to judge it to come from this that his love is unperfect as his knowledge is but in part or from this that he hath not the feeling of Gods love his bounty and mercy towards him as he ought neither knows the fruit of this service To teach every one to labor against this corruption and to withstand it Vse 3 that it sease not upon him seeing God taxeth these for it for wherefore else but that we should avoid it and never think either paines or time or cost too much in his service and worship for which purpose two things must we labor for one the love of God for nothing will we think enough then for him as Jacob and Shechem another delight in the duties Isaiah 58.13 Psal 122.1 John 6.34 give me a man that delights in any thing and all is not enough for it And ye have snuffed at it Their gesture which as it noteth their unwillingnesse so taken as some doe take it for panting then it signifies their arrogant dissembling by which they made shew as if they had brought most excellent sacrifices when they were nothing and brought nothing but wilde and base sacrifices to God It is a grievous sinne for men to make shew of great care and diligence in the service and worship of God Doctr. and indeed doe nothing lesse Men cannot abide it specially an upright and plain dealing man Prov. 29.27 much lesse God that is righteousnes it selfe Ezek. 14.7.8 Isaiah 58.2 3. Psal 5.6 Acts 5. Because it is grosse hypocrisie Reas 1 and so abominable unto the Lord who as he is a most simple essence most holy and pure cannot endure such doubling Because offences which are done openly and committed apparently doe nor so much offend a generous and valiant minde and man Reas 2 as when they are done by craft and dissembling the reasons because the former argues the audaciousnesse and impudence of the actor the latter the great contempt and irrision of him which is so provoked This will convince many of grosse sinne before God who make such shew of great service of God Vse 1 and yet doe nothing lesse To say little of Papists as of Monks who commend their manner of worship or services who brag that they are continually in prayer that they rise in the night season with the hazard of their health to keep watch for the salvation of others and waste their bodies with watchings fastings and other exercises yet they think it skils not much what manner of prayers how without affection being but as Basil speaketh like the lowing of so many oxen though they be never so barbarous yet God will accept As the Pope provided for his idle and unlearned Priests by his Canon Quod verba Dei non debent
Doctr. by what meanes or howsoever ought to give the praise and glory of it to God so here taught what to doe Psal 50.15 Call upon me in the day of trouble and I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie me Hosea 14.3 Ashur shall not save us we will not ride upon horses neither will we say any more to the worke of our hands ye are our Gods for in thee the fatherlesse findeth mercy Examples of Moses and Miriam with the people Exod. 15. Of Barak and Deborah Judg. 5. Of Ester and the Jewes Ester 8. of Hezekiah Isa 38. Because it is he alone who is the deliverer and Saviour of his people meanes he often affords them Reas 1 and meanes they use and must lest they tempt God but that meanes are not effectuall it is ever from him else why one and the same meanes bring to some deliverance to others none Hence Psal 144.10 It is he that giveth salvation to Kings who delivereth David his servant from the hurtfull sword Because in this as in all other benefits Reas 2 it is the high way to obtaine moe and new deliverances when we pay the old we run on a new score as men are incouraged to helpe when they receive their just glory for that is past so God is drawne on as it were to bestow new This serves to reprove the common practise of men Vse 1 who are ready to give and doe give the glory of all their deliverances to others then God and not to him If victory in war they ascribe it to the wisdome and power of such and such and oft-times ready to make war among themselves for the honour of the day when God is never thought on In other preservation or establishment to the wisdome of their gravest and experienced Senate from sicknesse to Physitians and such other meanes not at all to the Lord never magnifie nor praise him God seldome made mention of or only cursorily and because of those who are present for which cause he oft taketh from them their meanes that either they may perish in new dangers or else more sensibly discerne that it is he that gives deliverance To instruct all and every one Vse 2 to give the glory and praise of all their deliverances whatsoever unto God and to magnifie his name for them Particular deliverances from danger and sicknesse and such like every man must magnifie God and his Name for it our first seeking in danger should be to him and he should be the first we should praise for the deliverance not as many that doe both send first for the Physitian before they send up to God agree with him before with God and praise him oftner to men then ever they did God But it should not be so he should be magnified principally and chiefely Yea every one for our generall deliverances of which we are all partners should magnifie him of which we may say as Jer. 23.7 8. Behold the dayes come saith the Lord that they shall no more say the Lord liveth which brought up the Children of Israel out of the Land of Aegypt But the Lord liveth which brought up and which led the seed of the house of Israel out of the North Country and from all Countreyes whither I had driven them they shall dwel in their own Land Many are the deliverances we have had and this nation from the tyranny of Romes Church at the death of Queen Mary from the invincible Navy 88. from the Insurrection of the Earles of Northumberland and Westmerland from the treason of the Duke of Norfolke and Queene of Scots from that of Babington and his fellowes from Arden Somervile Parry Cullen Lopes Squire and such like yet now to this that it may be said the Lord lives that hath delivered his Church from any one or all the former but from the cruell bloody and desperate unmatchable plot of our wicked papists which is the Lords only because the cariage of the thing was his that he would have it wholly ascribed to him Therefore we may say the Lord hath magnified himselfe many wayes but now he hath surmounted them all we ought then to magnifie him and give the glory of it to him not in word only but for ever in deed The Parliament King and Commons to make lawes more for his glory against Sabboth breaking Oathes Drunkennesse Usury Oppression to further his Church and to remove stumbling blockes The Judges to execute them Deus exonerans onerat Bern. without sparing and partiallity All to obey God more constantly and man for God For disburthening us of the danger and feare he burthens us with more obedience and thankfulnesse This all should doe yet if it be not in generall let every one for himself and his family as Joshua and mourn for the sinnes of the time God will marke him when he brings a generall Plague Ezechiel 9. In times of danger many are petentes few promittentes most few persolventes But we must not onely aske deliverance but promise new obedience and perform our vows else let us looke for that Mat. 23.37 38. VERSE VI. A Sonne honoureth his Father and a Servant his Master If then I be a Father where is mine honour and if I be a Master where is my feare sayth the Lord of Hostes unto you O Priests that despise my Name and yee say Wherein have we despised thy Name WEE have seen the first sinne reproved in this people together with the arguing of it and the evincing of them of it The second followeth from this to the ninth verse It is contempt and prophanation of Gods service and worship and in it as in the former we have first Gods accusation secondly the debating of it And in this first their answer and excuse secondly Gods reply manifestly evicting them of it In Gods accusation we consider the vice he accuseth them of secondly the persons In the first the thing and the reason of it which is first set down then applyed The ground is a plaine Axiome in nature or a rule of nature A Sonne honoureth his Father Though the handling of these duties seeme not so essentiall to this place ayming at his own honor rather then theirs yet it being so necessary and the contempt so great it shall not be amisse to stand upon it The coherence and meaning is plaine we must speake first of the duty then of party to them The duty is first inward reverence a reverent affection to them Children sonnes and daughters Doctr. must inwardly reverence their parents carry reverent affections and opinions towards them This is a speciall part of honour to be performed to them Solomon makes it the part of a wicked childe to despise his mother Prov. 15.20 he commands not to despise the mother no not when she is old Prov. 23.22 he threatens a fearfull curse from God to such Pro. 30.17 The eye that mocketh at his father and despiseth to obey his mother the ravens of
some sort greater than those in the other of greater note For as a man sometimes sinnes worse in a small than in a greater fault for the greater by how much the sooner 'tis acknowledged 't is quicklier mended but the lesser while 't is counted almost none at all is therefore worse because we more securely lived in it So of this particular though disobedience and want of reverence differ in themselves yet is unreverence thus the greater because it is accounted as none and men lye very secure in it Therefore ought men to avoid it and strive against it both because they are forbidden and because as a little wound neglected will fester to a great one so this unreverence accustomed will breake out to a greater contempt and disobedience and if Christ make him culpable of sinne that saith but Raka to his equall and him of hell-fire which calleth him Foole Matth. 5.20 what shall he be worthy of that calleth his Parents so and useth them most unreverently And if 2 Kings 2.23 24. Children that mockt the Prophet were torne with Beares how shall such things escape a judgment They shall not for that of Solomon shall be true Prov. 30.17 The outward reverence must not stand in signes and words onely but as 1 John 3.18 speaks of love My little children let us not love in words neither in tongue but in deed and in truth So say we of this this reverence must appeare in our actions and this will part it selfe into obedience and subjection for the first so much Children Doctrine sonnes and daughters must not onely give inward and outward reverence in thoughts and words but they must obey them as Christ sheweth by his condemning of the sonne who obeyed not Matth. 21.30 Hence are the Commandements Coll. 3.20 Children obey your Parents in all things for this is well pleasing unto the Lord in all lawfull things as the like 1 Cor. 9.22 To the weake became I as weake that I might gaine the weake I am made all things to all men that I might by all meanes save some as farre as I may lawfully not seeking my owne profit 1 Cor. 10.33 even as I please all men in all things not seeking mine owne profit but the profit of many that they may be saved in all lawfull things not seeking his owne profit preferring the pleasing of them before it the opposition being betwixt his and their pleasure and profit not betwixt their profit and pleasing of God So in this not betweene Parents and God but their will and their Parents shewing that the sonne is not to obey his Father in what he will and liketh but he is simply bound in all things though never so dislike to him so they be not displeasing to God Hence is the Commandement but with some limitation Ephes 6.1 Children obey your Parents in the Lord for this is right The Lord when he commends the Rechabites Jer. 35. doth shew this thing as a duty Because it is a thing well pleasing the Lord Reas 1 Coloss 3.20 so pleasing as that his owne obedience is more acceptable with it and without it he will not like of his owne at all as appeareth Matth. 15.5 6. But ye say whosoever shall say to his father or mother it is a gift by whatsoever thou mightest be profited by me and honour not his father or his mother he shall be free thus have ye made the Commandement of God of none effect by your tradition And undoubtedly he that preferred pitty and mercy to men before sacrifice doth much account of piety towards Parents Because if not in all things but where they please Reas 2 and according to their owne will then they preferre themselves before their Parents indeed obey not their father but themselves As they who love others from whom they looke for good doe not love them but themselves so in this therefore is it that they must endeavour to obey in all things unpleasing To reprove all disobedience that is found in Children of all sorts to their Parents young and elder and all ages Vse 1 If the Law Deuter. 21.18 19 20 21. were now in force alas how many Parents should long before this be bereaved of all some of divers of their children because not onely negligence is to be found and omission but in many apparent contempts upon whom the Law was to take hold See your sinnes and forsake them O children else know that if the former shall not goe unpunished lesse this and if such punishments for that more for this And know you that if you have or may have children and live to that God shall make them revenge your Parents quarrell and contempt to bring you to repentance or to punish you for it and the more securely you now contemne the admonitions of the Ministers the more sharply shall God then punish you and the more piercing shall it then be unto your Soules Let this then admonish every childe to give obedience to his fathers commandements Vse 2 whatsoever they are not only when they are pleasing to him but even how crosse soever they be to his liking doing his fathers will not his own being affected in regard of his earthly father as Christ was of his heavenly John 6.38 For I came downe from heaven not to doe my owne will but the will of him that sent mee and therefore was contented to breake himselfe of his owne will rather then to crosse his fathers will Math. 26.39 so must they To obey them in things that are pleasing and profitable unto them liking them well enough is not so commendable because they may be led with these respects rather then duty or love but in things difficult and hard crossing their will and affections is a double obedience and shall receive a greater reward Therefore endevour thus to obey them and God in them it is not his will of permission but of command wherein Gods law is broken if they be disobedient And not so onely but he will reject all service done to them when they neglect that they owe to theirs so that he will be deafe to their prayers contemn their service his eyes shall be shut to their miseries they may pray he will not heare stretch out long hands he will not regard yea cry to him yet will he not accept if the sighes of thy father and teares of thy mother come up before God for thy rebellions towards them thinke that thy prayers shall little be accepted of God Num. 16. If Moses his words to God for the rebellion of Corah before God made not onely their sacrifice unacceptable but brought a curse upon them think of it and take heed of the like But some in this matter may doubt and for it object and question thus Pomand 17. First what if God commanded one thing and mens parent another It is answered thou must then answer with the Apostles Act. 5.29 We ought to obey God rather then Man or
their ruine yet when they are dead their sinne living not repented of they are requited often in the same kinde againe as they did to their Parents so their children doe to them yea often not without them but farre worse courses then they tooke The third thing wherein their subjection is required and submission is for their portion and childes part Children must submit themselves unto their parents Doctr. in receiving their provision and portion and be content with that they have provided and allotted unto them whether in their life or at death not being their owne carvers nor sharing it out as they list The Prodigall sonne amongst much evils is noted to bee free from this to share himselfe but was content his fathers portion whereas his elder brother though free from many other evils yet is blotted with this Luke 15.12 29. It is commended in the sonnes of Abraham that they in this thing submitted themselves At least no contrary thing is manifested of them Gen. 25.5 6. As Adoniah is reproved for usurping the kingdome and making his fathers will for him not content with his portion so is it the commendations of the rest of Davids children that they were content with their portions and never murmured that Solomon not the eldest but the son of Davids age had the kingdome given him of his father Kings 1. The rest of the Patriarkes are not recorded to be malecontent that Joseph had a double portion among them Because they must thinke Reas 1 they discerne better of their own estate and what they are able to afford every one out of the stocke while they live and they maintaine an honest and comely state as before and at their deaths how that they have gathered will part it selfe to them so some portion be for God good uses and other thing necessary Because the father best knows them and with lesse partiality then themselves Reas 2 who hath beene to him the best childe and who have more grace in them according to which he may deale and dispose As did Isaac to Jacob Jacob to Joseph a double portion all the other taynted with some grosse sinne for their goods they may and ought to dispose of according to grace and vertue which makes the youngest the eldest and so è contra Because they are able best to discern Reas 3 who is like to doe more good to Church Common wealth and see in some one more hope then in another and if he so dispose they must be content To reprove al discontented children not content with the portion the father hath set out for them Vse 1 neither living nor dead but murmuring at the dealing of his father as if his were lesse the other too much as the Prodigall sonnes elder brother or as Adoniah making choise of his own portion and if they have not the allowance they would have they think they may come by it as they can and whatsoever they get from their father they thinke it well gotten and but of their own and no sin But see what the holy Ghost sayth Pro. 28.24 who so robbeth his father or his mother and saith it is no transgression the same is a companion of a destroyer making such a sonne a companion and cozen german to a murtherer At his death and in his sicknesse if either they be privy to his will or guesse by his affection in his health that that will not fall to their portion they desire to helpe to shorten his dayes and hasten his end he shall heare newes that they have shar'd for themselves as Adoniah after his death many a sonne shewes himselfe gracelesse telling abroad every where how unkindely his father dealt with him that his portion was so small not remembring in the course of common society de absentibus mortuis nil nisi bonum much more for parents whose infirmities must be covered being living more dead neither remembring how little they deserved at their fathers hands or how unkindely they used him in respect of others or how little hope they gave him that they would use that well he should leave them and by it be profitable to God or man Church or Common-wealth To teach every child to be content with the portion his father sets out for him living or dead whether more or lesse Vse 2 equall or inferiour to others imputing somewhat and not a little to his fathers wisdome knowing his owne ability seeing their present graces or their future hopes somewhat looking at home how dutifull he hath beene in comparison of others how little deserving what little grace and so lesse goods And if his father seeme not to have dealt so equally yet it is his duty to suspect his owne wisdome rather than his fathers to accuse his owne demerits yea to cover it in every place and every way shewing himselfe contented If Jacob see good cause to disinherit Reuben and to passe by Simeon and Levi and leave the Lordship to Judahs hand yea if he shall skip over Dan and Asher and the rest till he come to Joseph from the eldest of all to the youngest or state one and bestow the double portion on him and his the rest must not be discontented with his distribution but give him leave to doe with his owne as he list honouring him thus yea and using his portion left thee for his honour for increase and advantage as the Talents that the world may judge of the justice and uprightnesse of thy fathers getting of his goods The fourth thing in this submission is to be disposed of for their marriages and matching It is the duty of children to submit themselves to their Parents in their matches and marriages Doctr. to be given and taken in marriages this is a part of their honour for the Scripture gives this authority to the parents to bestow them as is proved Deut. 7.3 1 Cor. 7.38 yea to break them Exod. 22.16 17. then must they and ought to be subject Besides the examples of all good children who have thus submitted themselves And exempla sanctorum pro regulis sunt ubi deest regula vel contraria non datur Isaac submitted to Abraham Gen. 24.3 Jacob to Isaac Gen. 28.1 2. Sampson to his parents Judg. 14.1 Rahel and Leah to their father Laban Gen. 29.19 yea even prophane and wicked have in some sort done it Ismael Gen. 21.21 Shechem Hamors sonne Gen. 34.3.6 Because this is to honour them Reas 1 when they thinke them wiser and better able to provide for them than themselves whose advice if they must submit themselves to for their calling and portion more for this when they are led commonly by the heate of affection to the liking of the person onely when there are many other things as necessary to concurre as that as religion honesty of kindred good report equality and such like all which is rarely found in youth to be so duely respected as parents by their experience respect and are able to
which is worse sayth Saint Chrysostome then to bee a beast because istud naturae illud culpae est which some small difference from them cannot make But say it were greater yet doth it not therefore dissolve the knot or relation betwixt them for it is not in the greatnesse of the sinne but when such a sinne can be given that doth breake the relation for instance Idolatry is a greater sinne then adultery yet this not that breaks and dissolves marriage Because that not this meets in cominter-position with the knot of marriage In that they being and becomming one flesh with another 1 Cor. 6.10 and so cutteth himselfe from her he was knit to before in this they are onely one spirit with an Idol and cease to be one spirit with the Lord. So this It is not heresie for his greatnesse that can dissolve this naturall bond which is perpetuall for it cannot make that he had not his essence and being from his father and the duty depending upon this obey thy father that begat thee hath he begotten thee it is no matter what he is thou must honour him Then impious are their positions but no marvaile if they teach rebellions and diobedience and murthering of Princes if they allow dishonouring of parents To teach every child to performe this honour his Parents Vse 2 whatsoever he is whatsoever they are Art thou higher and richer and wiser than they yet must thou doe them honour and by it shalt thou have these the more Looke upon Joseph Solomon and Christ and nothing can be in thee that can give thee freedome from it when they did it the two first ex debito Christ ex placito to fulfill all righteousnesse and give us example Though then thou be married or advanced or howsoever yet still they are thy Parents and thou must not deny but performe honour unto them for thou hadst thy being from them and till that be dissolved thou owest them still the duties the bonds remaining yea whatsoever infirmity is in them no sinne dissolveth the bond it makes not an annullity of the duty for as Gold is Gold though it be smeared over with durt and filth so are they thy Parents whatsoever their lives and manners be Thinke with thy selfe how their love made them beare with many naturall infirmities of thy Childhood and not to neglect thee for the many untoward carriages of thy youth and not to cast thee off from them And thinke what duty now should bind thee unto if they for their perfect love and upon some hope of comfort many yeares after did passe over all how much more thou in duty and in lieu of thankfulnesse for that which thou enjoyest from them Children must not be like Flies as Plutarch which slip along the glasse where it is smooth but catch hold of it where there are any scratches or flawes They must turne away their eyes from their infirmities and forget their hard usage if it have beene any and not be undutifull for that because they have their being and education from them Take heed of Chams curse and seeke Shems blessing by not seeing their infirmities but covering and performing duty to them accounting it to be a sin to be repented of when they cannot find their hearts so cheerefull in their duties as they ought because of their Parents infirmities A servant his master The second rule of nature the ground or other pillar of Gods reason against this people For the meaning 't is plaine the duties here required are in the generall the same for the most part with the former though not in every particular The first is reverence and this both inward and outward To joyne them together Servants must give all reverence unto their Master Doctr. all inward good affection and estimation of them and all reverent respect in gesture and speech Eph. 6.5 1 Tim. 6.1 Eccles 10.20 It may be applyed to Masters for the King is but a great Master and the Master a little King The outward in words as not replying unreverently Titus 2.9 not speaking their infirmities to others as 1 Sam. 25.17 giving them all reverent speech and submissive gesture as 2 King 5.13 not despising them as Hagar did Sarah Because God hath made them reverent Reas 1 in that he hath communicated unto them part of his excellency and dignity that is his Lordship and Dominion making them his Vicegerents and Lords over their family therefore they ought to reverence them Because his Commandements are spirituall Reas 2 and reach to the inward man and without it were all outward but hypocriticall and counterfeit which is abhominable And this without the outward is imperfect if it may be supposed it may be without it and so cannot be acceptable This is to let servants see their sinnes past or present Vse 1 when they have or doe carry themselves unreverently towards their Masters in heart and outward man in eye and tongue to their faces and behind their backs they are all guilty of the breach of the decree of the most High and indeed all for where shall we finde a servant any thing neere performing the carriage he ought to his Master and Mistris that he hath a base thought opinion and estimation of him appeares by his speech and carriage his speeches so void of reverence nay his answers full of contempt his eye and carriage so full of scorne and disdaine Hagar despising Sarah looking scornfully upon her which must needs argue unreverence in the heart for by these things many a man well knows what is in the privy Chamber of the heart and by this outward pulse thus beating may we discerne how the inward parts are affected For he that will speake so frowardly and looke so scornfully and doggedly as many will it must needs shew he hath no reverence but his heart is full of despight and contempt and he that will speake so to his face and in his presence what will he to others behind his back and in his absence Where is the feare and trembling Paul calls for Where is all the honour Peter exacts when ye will thus bourd them often thus disdaine them when ye will answer them frowardly or murmuring when their backs are turned when you tell their weaknesse not to your fellows but to neighbours servants whereby their estimation is impaired Thinke you the Apostles call for these in vaine or shall such things goe unpunished Assuredly no for when the Apostle saith to servants to encourage them that are good Eph. 6.7 8. with good will doing service as to the Lord and not to men knowing that whatsoever good thing any man doth the same shall he receive of the Lord whether he be bond or free did he not meane the contrary and would have you to understand that whatsoever evill thing a man doth that shall he receive of the Lord whether he be bond or free so expect it in this particular see then that unreverent and contemptuous
his service to his Master after he was become a Jew that is a servant of God 2 King 5.23 He speakes to those who are free not to bind themselves to such hereto may we apply that 1 Cor. 7.20 21 22. not to deny service but to alter the manner of service before for feare of Masters displeasure now for conscience of Gods command before their Masters onely now Christ in their Master Because as was noted in Children out of Chrysost Reas 1 it is due to their place not person as Non principi sed principatui so Non magistro sed magisterio The feare is due not to his person and so good or bad high or low gentle or churlish but to his place and authority as a master which he may be of what quality or condition soever he be and from them as servants whatsoever their persons and quality and gifts may be Particularly for such as are religious that they bring not dishonour upon Gods Name and Doctrine Reas 2 1 Tim. 6.1 but may honour him For both because it shall be more respected of God Reas 3 the lesse it is deserved by any thing in thy master for then it is done of conscience and for God as a good worke ought to be This will condemne the Doctrine of the Church of Rome Vse 1 howsoever bragging it selfe to be Apostolicall yet holds it but few of the Apostles doctrines which it hath not either corrupted or taught something to the contrary And in this point most directly to Peter and Paul forbidding feare and faithfulnesse to be performed of servants to their masters and them who put them in trust Symacha saith Instit Cathol Tit. 46. sect 74. that all keepers of forts and all other vassals and slaves are freed from the oath of subjection to their Lord and Master he being an Heretick affirming that by it he is deprived of his civill power he hath over his servants the ground of the unfaithfulnesse of Sr. William Stanly in yeelding up Daventer an act approved and commended by Cardinall Allen how unlike are these spirits to the spirit of Saint Peter and Saint Paul who will have faithfulnesse to the good and bad to the Insidell aswell as the beleever shall not that be verified of them Math. 5.19 But they will say Heresie is a greater sinne then insidelity first I answer not as they make Heresie ut ante secondly be that true of August Sanata vulnere infldelitatis sed gravius percussa vulnere Idololatriae yet all Heresie is not Idolatrie neither can this if it be destroy the knot and bond of this duty which is not faith nor the foundation of divine religion but apolitique title having force and strength from the law of nature which is not to be dissolved by Heresie not contrary to it And the Apostle reason will be here aswell as in Infidelity it will make the name of God and his doctrine ill spoken of But the truth is this is but a shift of theirs for they teach no faith to be kept with such and so no faithfulnesse with such as are heathen or Infidels If we may gather the lesse from the greater Vladislaus he was I take it the King of Hungary and Poland in abattaile against the Turkes Amurath the second of that name had the better hand so that the Turke offered to yeeld to any conditions whereupon Vladislaus and the Turke swore to Articles of Agreement but presently a Legate came frome the Pope and urged Vladislaus to set upon the Turke againe Eugenius 4. neere vanquished already telling him that the Pope had power to dispence with his Oath which he attempted though sore against his will Then the Turke cryed out O Crucifixe crucifixe vide gentem tuam perfidam Oh thou crucified thou crucified take notice of thy treacherous people And so bestirred himself that he overthrew Vladislaus which hath ever since turned to the greatest detriment of all Christendome out of this by proportion we may see it is but a colour of their distinction of Heresie and Infidelity To reprove all such servants as thinke they owe no feare nor duty Vse 2 or lesse feare and duty to their Masters because of some defects in them or some excellency in themselves if he be base borne and they of worshipfull Parents if he be irreligious and they have somewhat or more taste of piety if he be poore so when they came to him or impoverished after c. But they must know that none of these will dispense with omission of any duty Is he their Master If they give him not all respect they sinne against his place and dominion and so against God that hath given it him If God had allowed only rich men or religious men or good and courteous Men to be his Vicegerents in the family then it were somewhat but he hath given this to the rich and the poor alike he hath lightned both their eyes the good and the bad hath the seale of the Commission alike therefore they who doe not alike reverence their masters one as other are guilty of sinne before God and shall have no reward from God because he doth it not in conscience to Gods Commandement but for sinister respect for which they may receive their reward from men but a heavy one from God To perswade servants to feare Vse 3 and doe all duty to their Masters whatsoever they are one or other he that is well borne must forget his father and his fathers house and looke not upon his master whence he came but what he is he that is religious remember he must adorne his profession and looke not upon his master what he is of himselfe corrupt and prophane but what God hath made him his owne Vicegerent and his master and thinke what unworthinesse soever be in thy master yet that thou art most unworthy to doe him any disgrace or to deny him any duty Remember that what is due to him it is not to his person but place indeed not to him but God and to him in Gods stead and the more unworthy he is of any duty the more readily thou perform'st it the more reward thou shalt have from God yea for the present it is a speciall proofe of true grace in the heart For as it is Rom. 5.7 8. so every one will obey a great and a good master but that is true obedience when the master is neither great nor good or great and not good or good and not great for so have good servants and holy men done in times past unto their masters If I be a father where is my honour Here is the application of the former ground and rule to himselfe and them not speaking in generall but applying it particularly teaching in his example what is the best and most profitable kind of preaching when application is joyned with doctrine Vide Heb. 12.1 If I be a father Here is first the father-hood of God to be
ethe difference plainely Jer. 5.22 23 24. Feare ye not me saith the Lord or will ye not be afraid at my presence which have placed the sand for the bounds of the Sea by the perpetuall decree that it cannot passe it and though the waves thereof rage yet can they not prevaile though they roare yet can they not passe over it But this people hath an unfaithfull and rebellious heart they are departed and gone For they say not in their heart Let us now feare the Lord our God that giveth raine both early and late in due season he reserveth unto us the appointed weekes of the harvest If you will nor have this filiall feare yet at least shake not off this servile dread if not feare in regard of good I have yet of evill I may doe them By these two for the present may every one examine himselfe whether he hath a servile or a filiall feare If thou fearest as a Childe thou hatest sinne as sinne because it is sinne thou art like a man that loaths a meate and therefore would not eate of it If only a servile feare thou loathest sinne for the punishment not for it selfe indeed but the sequel like a man that hath a minde to eate of something that the Phisitian hath forbidden him and is hurtfull and abstaines only because he dares not touch it for feare of further inconvenience If thou hast the child-like feare* It is not the outward worke that dislikes thee and externall act of sinne only but even the desires Ista sagitta timor qui configit interficit carnis desideria Ber. motions and affections for it is pure That dart is feare which pierces and kills the very desires of the flesh If the servile onely then the outward worke onely and practice of sinne is feared if a filiall feare then it will grieve thee to offend nay to be provoked to offend so good and gracious so mercifull and loving a father who hath beene ever so gracious and good unto thee But if but the servile feare then onely when thou feelest his hand or fearest an imminent danger or hast the fresh remembrance of a judgment which is but new taken from him for which a Child of God must and ought to feare but then are not these the principall causes of feare in him for these he feares and flies sin but principally for the other If a filiall feare thou art afraid to offend in lieu of thankfulnesse for thy being and preservation and all thy manifold blessings received already If a servile onely for feare of evills or hope of that which is to come It is the whip the scourge and the rod that causeth the hypocrite as an Asse a foole and a stave to forbeare and leave sinne but it is love conscience and obedience that maketh Gods Children willingly to abhorre it Nazianz. if thou bee'st a slave and a servant stand in feare of the whip or the scourge if an hireling worke for thy wages expect thy reward but if over and above all these thou beest a sonne doe good because it is thy duty to please and observe thy father from whom thou hast received so much good before The third difference of these two feares is this the one is a loving feare and the other is a hatefull feare the first is joyned with love such as good subjects beare to good Princes and ordinarily children beare to their fathers The second is joyned with hatred such as servants beare to their hard and cruell Masters the one would if they could withdraw themselves out of Gods government and get out of his sight as Adam Gen. 3. as a fugitive servant as Hagar Gen. 16. the other would not willingly away from God but submitteth himselfe unto him and seeketh as he can to presse neerer and neerer as farre as he dare with due reverence of his Majesty like the Prodigall sonne who came home to his father and yeelded himselfe willingly into his hands And therefore it is a true saying that after sinne the wicked are troubled they cannot get themselves farre enough from God and the godly are troubled they can not come neere enough home to him the one is afraid of the losing of God the other is afraid of Gods finding of him of that saith Augustine in 1 John 4. it is called castus timer a chaste feare T is one thing to feare God lest he send thee to Hell Aliud est timere Deum ne te mittat in Gehennam aliud ne ipse à te recedat ille non est castus qui non venit ab amore Dei sedex timore poenae iste castus est quia venit ex amore Dei quem amlecteris August in 1 Joh. 4 another lest himselfe depart from thee that feare is not chast because it comes not from the love of God but from the feare of punishment but this is chast because it comes from the love of God whom thou delightest in So that this filiall feare agreeth with the love of Gods Majesty yea it riseth out of love a man is afrayd to offend one that he loveth but the servile fear is joyned with the deadly hatred of God And so as it is said whom they feare they hate Quem metuunt oderunt quem oderunt periisse cupiunt and they desire he may perish whom they hate So it may be said of this that by it he is not homicida a manslayer but Deicida a Godslayer wishing there were never a God to punish him The fourth difference of these two feares is in their continuance which is manifest First If we consider them in divers subjects for the one is but for a bront like lightning that giveth a flash and is gone and comes in an instant never ceizeth upon the soule nor dwelleth in the heart For instance we may take Pharoah Exod. Chap. 27 28 29 30. so Ahab when Eliah had summoned him hee feares 1 King 21.27 but soone after he goes fearelesse to Ramoth Gilead 1 King 22.26 27. The filiall feare is permanent and constant as the causes of it are Isa 11.2 Prov. 28.14 For it is no naturall worke but a supernaturall habit Secndly if we consider them in one subject the one outlasteth and overlives the other 1 Joh. 4.18 perfect love casteth out feare that is servile feare but Psal 19.9 The feare of the Lord is cleane enduring for ever that is filiall feare when it comes it casts out that because it brings with it assurance of God favour It remaines still having the lesse paine and trouble with it the longer it lasteth and the more forward it commeth to perfection And this feare is so lasting that it remaines after this life not that the blessed shall fear either lest they should offend for they are then without danger of falling but in regard of Gods power and his incomparable and his incomprehensible graces there shall be a reverent dread and yet delightfull such as the Angels
hainous those which are against the main end of his calling wherein God hath placed him As the Minister must labour against ignorance idlenesse suffering his gifts to decay not increasing his talent and he must endeavour to search and beat out the simple and sincere sence of Gods word and will and impart it unto the people to bring them to life eternall for it is a hainous sin for him to be ignorant or to handle the word deceitfully or corruptly as Saint Paul speaks or to wrest the sense of it as Saint Peter speaks to their purposes And so as it is Isaiah the 3.12 They that lead thee cause thee to erre So the lawyer must not use unfaithfulnesse or cunning dealing he must search out the proper grounds of the law to direct his client to proceed warrantably to see his wrongs redressed or recover his right for for him to spend his time in devising quirks and distinctions which may serve to obscure the truth and make contentions and suits rather then end any or to delay his clients cause when he may well haste it and bring it to an issue and as many doe use their cunning to this purpose it is the greater sinne in them so a Physitian and a Surgion must imploy all his skill to cure for him to deferre and somtimes to help forwards and then pull backwards againe to make gaine of his patient and empty his purse and hurt his body is very hainous both of them worse then theeves by the high-way making Gods ordinance a cover for their theft not so punishable by humane laws but as culpable before God and shall as severely be punished So if a sonne omit the honour due to his father or a servant the feare due to his master is a greater sinne for others to doe it to the same men is not so hainous so t is the duty of a wife to be a helper that she must indeavour in all things For for her to be as Eve who was given as a comfort to make Adams life more joyous for her to be a broker to bring death she that was taken from him as part to be shot at him as a dart to the wounding and murthering of his soule as Basill speaketh or for her who was taken out of his side to guard and hemme in his heart to be a ladder to the Devill to scale the heart of her husband as Gregory speaketh of Jobs wife was more hainous then when the Serpent and Devill did it who were professed enemyes and so now being directly against the end of her creation and calling and so of all they are thus to thinke of their sinnes and thus to avoyd them That despise my name The sinne they are accused of is contempt of his worship not the omitting of it or the not doing of it at all but the doing of it corruptly carelessely and contemptuously The name of God signifies First himselfe Secondly his properties Thirdly his commands or his authority Fourthly his workes Fifthly his word and worship which is here meant and which they not only omitted which might be through ignorance or some forcible temptation but contemned or despised for many could not pretend ignorance and at this time there was no persecution to compell them to dishonour God but many did it out of a base conceit they had of Gods majesty thinking any kinde of service would serve the turne the word signifies to trample under feet as we doe vile things Math. 5.13 2 Kings 9.33 but did the Preists doe thus Ribera answereth things are oft said to be done which are intended to be done because nothing is wanting in them why it should not be done who have a will to have it done Contempt of Gods name that is when men doe indeed the works of Gods worship and service but doe them negligently Doctrine carelesly and contemptuously thinking if the deed be done it is enough but how for the manner it matters not greatly it is a grievous sinne Manifest that it is here made the grand sinne of this people and these Priests for which the burthen is threatned in the beginning and many particulary judgements afterwards This people did the work of the Lord brought their Sacrifices but they did it carelesly and contemptuously brought any thing as thinking it good enough This was one difference betwixt Abel and Cain though faith was the main yet how carefull the one was that thought the best was bad enough the other the worst would serve for he brought a Sacrifice Gen. 4.3 4. Hence are the qualities of the sacrifices described in the Law God requiring not only Sacrifices but such as were perfect without blemish Levit. 22.20 21 23. Deuter. 17.1 But why this but to shew how he requires the manner of doing aswell as the deed and that he cannot endure corruption here Hence Saul laboured to lessen the fault because they saved the chiefest for the Lord. 1 Sam. 15.15 Hence is that Malach. 1.14 which we shall see hereafter Because this argues a great contempt of God and as we may speake Reas 1 of his persn for when any man is respected either for love or feare there the offices and duties that are performed about him are done neither negligently nor carelesly but with all diligence The Wife that loves her Husband the Child that honours his Father the servant that feares his Master doe their duties with all diligence and care Where the duties are done of course and coldly there is not the respect of the person that should be so it is in our carriage towards God Because it is grosse hypocrisie when men doe thus performe the act Reas 2 and yet their hearts and affections are farre remote and so are no living sacrifices but onely dead carkasses such as must needs stinke in the nosthrils of God yea and thus honouring him they doe dishonour him Isaiah 29.13 St. Salvian speaking of such as worship God corruptly saith Non tam inanis criminis fuisset ad Templum Domini non venire quàm sic venire quia Christianus qui ad Ecclesiam non venit negligentiae reus est qui autem venit sacrilegii minoris enim piaculi reus est si honor Deo non deferatur quam si irrogetur injuria ac per hoc quicunque ista fecerunt non dederunt honorem Deo sed derogaverunt De gubern Dei lib. 8. This being such a sinne argues the age we live in guilty of a great deale of sinne before the Almighty Vse 2 his worship is performed but yet contemned marvellously amongst us As they brought the sacrifices so doe we the workes but so corruptly and carelesly that he speaks to us Ministers and people Ye despise my Name The Word is preached and heard prayers are made Sacraments are delivered and received but alas so carelesly cursarily and customably that it is but the contempt of them and the contempt of God in them How many Ministers preach the Word but for gain
as King Cyrus the King of Persia hath commanded us If they have parts of learning it were fit they should bee imployed otherwayes then in the ministry to the scandall and hurt of many To admonish the Ministers of their duty Vse 3 that they would as much as they have any power in their hands reject and exclude the wicked and not receive them as John would not the Pharises and Sadduces till they confesse their sinnes and so give some tesTimony of their repentance But yet this must not be done upon every small infirmity or hidden sinne but for hainous sinnes that are contagious in respect of the quality of them are scandalous in regard of the opennesse of them for hidden sinnes must be left to the judgement of God and infirmities must be otherwise dealt withall mildly with lesse censures Gal. 6.1 3 4. secretsins secretly reproved Math. 18. onely publique sins to be publiquely censured and the offender to be excluded and yet not at first but as in the matter of the Leper so he must not presently expell him the Church but admonish him the first and second time Tit. 3.10 11. and then expell him if he persist obstinatly in it This being the last censure and the greatest As Physitians seek all meanes to cure before they cut off a member For the people to learn to submit themselves to the censure of the Ministers of the Church Vse 3 as Hebr. 13.17 Obey them that have the oversight of you and submit your selves for they watch for your soules as they that must give accounts that they may doe it with joy and not with griefe for that is unprofitable unto you to doe as they say and be ruled by their censure and that first for their own good 1 Cor. 5.5 be delivered unto Satan for the destruction of the flesh that the spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus Excommunitio est medicina Eclesiae For even excommunication is the Churches medicine It cast not off from the whole Church but from a particular congregation or one visible Church to keepe him from infecting others and to recover him from his own corruption The not yeelding is the rebelling against Christ who hath so commanded his and not carrying his yoake here is to deprive themselves of the Crowne there yea and when they are cut off from a particular Church to persist and contend it is to cut themselves of from the whole whereas to submit and to seek the effect off it is their good as it was Onesimus his and as a bone that is broken if it be well set groweth stronger againe so is it with them They who have the charge of others Doctrine by God committed unto them are guilty of the offences that are committed by them Ezech. 33.8 if they be not carefull to censure them for them so is it here and vers 9. When I shall say unto the wicked O wicked man thou shalt dye the death if thou doest not speake and admonish the wicked of his way that wicked man shal dy for his iniquity but his blood will I require at thine hand Yea the Magistrates doe sin in not punishing Nehe. 13.17 2 Sam. 3.38 39. and for this is it thought that law was made Num. 35.31 Yee shall take no recompence for the life of the murtherer which is worthy to dy but he shall be put to death For by that he should give others incouragement to kill and make also the sin his own yea and as the peoples sins are the Ministers and Magistrates so the Childrens sinnes are the Parents 1 Sam. 2.29 Wherefore hast thou kicked against my sacrifice and my offering which I commanded in my tabernacle and honourest thy children above mee to make you selves fat with the first fruits of all the offerings of Israel my people said the Lord to Eli when yet his sonnes only were guilty Because every man is commanded to reprove his brother Reas 1 his friend Levit. 19.17 Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thine heart but thou shalt plainly rebuke thy neighbour and suffer him not to sinne If he may not beare with the faults of his friends lesse of children servants subjects people where not only the generall charge is in the command but a speciall one also and so the twofold cord binds them Because every man is bound to prevent sinne as much as lyes in him specially the sins of his charge but he that reproves not Reas 2 corrects not censures not punisheth not according to his place prevents not sinne Because every one that scapes without these or some of these is hartned and incouraged to commit other sinnes and others of the same condition by him servants subjects c. Because they are made keepers of both tables Reas 3 such as ought to looke that both tables should be kept therefore the command touching them is made the sinew strength of the other that if they be obeyed the other are better kept if they doe their duty the breaches of the other are better withstood and therefore some think the law of the ton Commandements was given to Moses the Magistrate for them all Exod. 19. It shews the wretched estate of Ministers Magistrates Vse 1 Mrs. Parents if they neglect reproving correcting punishing censuring as their place requireth they have their Bill of indictment increased against the great day by the sinnes of other men This teacheth us that those who have charge of others Vse 2 have a farre greater account to make then those who have not for it is enough for those if they keep themselves from their owne wickednesse the other must be carefull to keep others in good course and so from sinne The governours must care for those who live under them the householder for such as are under his roofe the Prince for such as are within his Realm it is not enough they serve God themselves but they must cause others to doe ikewise as Abraham Gen. 18.19 and as Joshua 24.13 the Master must looke his servant keep the Sabbath to him is the command Exod. 20.10 he must come with his traine to the house of God Psal 42.4 he must prepare himselfe for the Sacrament and charge his and sanctifie them Job 1.5 yea he must correct censure and punish unlesse he will have their sinnes fall on him if he thinke he have not personall sins enough of his owne let him be herein carelesse but he that thinks he hath enough and too many of his owne to answer for let him seek to restrain others committed to his charge by his censures and power that he may be free from them which is done two waies and two things are required of him that he keep himself free from others mens sins The first is to pry and enquire into the lives of those that are committed unto him into their carriage and behaviour that he may see what is amisse It is enough for a
private man if he reprove an offendor when he seeth him comitting sinne he is not bound to enquire and take notice of what they doe or curiously to watch over them but not for a Magistrate Minister c. He must Prov. 27.23 bee diligent to look to the stateof his flocke and look well to his heards The Minister is Episcopus a pryer to signifie it is his charge to pry and look to the lives of those who are committed to him and so ought every particular master of a family for his house is his Diocesse though he may not be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to meddle in an other family 1 Pet. 4.15 It is not enough for them to take notice of things that are offended in the open view but they must enquire into their secret carriage many imagine they are bound no further then to take notice of open sinnes and thinke ignorance of close crimes will excuse them but such affected ignorance when they might have knowledge increaseth the sinne for they might either prevent it or humble themselves for it as Job or reprove them as Elisha did his servant 2 Kings 5. and free themselves from their sinne The second thing is that they have power to punish when they cannot prevent It is enough for a private man when he sees a sin to reprove to bewaile it and pray for him that sinned but not for him that hath charge he must use the power of the sword being a Magistrate of the keyes being a Minister of the rod being a Master or Parent yea and in obstinacy dis-inherit as Abraham cast out scoffing Ismael and his Mother and expulse his house as David said he would purge his house Psal 101. And without this can they not keep themselves from the sinnes of others To teach ever inferior to submit to his superior Vse 3 or to him that hath charge over him to be pryed into reproved or corrected as their power is It is profitable to have an enemy prying profitable to have a child tell us the cloake hangs awry as Chrysost more profitable to have a friend of whose faithfulnesse we doubt not and whose duty must make us beare with him as with Physitians though they deale with us very homely And you say wherein have we polluted thee The second reply of this people adding denyall to denyall they would not grant that they did so that they offered polluted bread One sinne drawes on an other the first a second that a third Doct. and both a greater we may say of sin as Leah said of her sonne that her Maid Zilpa bore Jacob Gen. 30.11 a troppe commeth we see it in our first Parents in David 2 Sam. 11. in Asa 2 Chro. 19.10 in Peter Because one sinne must serve to bolster and uphold another Reas or else to smother and conceale another This people though it a shame having once denyed their fault not to defend it and stand out to the utmost But it is manifest in the example of David of which Basil thus the Devill seeing that after the doing of it he was ashamed of what he had done and willing to hide his shamefull wound he made that shame of his a broker to another sinne and so drew him to draw one ulcer over another while seeking to cover his adultery with murther he made him an author and so guilty of both This ought to teach men not to give place to sinne Vse 1 to any one great or small but to resist them all for as Proverb 17.14 The beginning of strife is as one that openeth the waters Therefore ere the contention be medled with leave off As when a man maketh a way to a current or streame of a river which when he hath once let into his grounds he cannot stay again though he would never so faine so is the begining of sinne To give the water passage is to let the tongue loose for the carelesse minde slideth away by degrees till it fall and he that is not carefull of idle and harmlesse words at the first commeth soone to wicked and hurtfull words at the last Greg. past 3. the like may be said of other sins The way to Heaven is upward hard and difficult the way to Hell is downward Now he that runneth down a Hill cannot stay when he will or if he set downe with himselfe how farre and where he will stay he is not like to observe it so in sinne he cannot take up himselfe when he would to say thus farre and no further I will sinne for the corruption of his nature is as fierce horses and the devill as the driver he shall not command himself when he would Did not David fall from idlenes to wantonnesse and from adultery to murther from a filthy sinne to a bloody crime did not Salomon from excessive buildings where his sin begun for he was as long again about his own house as he was about Gods house to abundance of wives and from the love of strange women to the service of strange gods Did not Asa fall from distrusting God to the imprisoning of Gods Prophets and from that to oppressing of his people yea from distrusting in God to trust wholly in Physitians and are we better then these who was like them in Israel and what is our strength in comparison of them It is good then that we withstand small sinnes and the first If any be overtaken with sin unawares let him shake it off with speed Vse 2 lest he come to binde sin to sin and so shall he be sure not to escape unpunished let him labor to rise out of it and to stay himselfe as Job 40.5 Once have I spoken but I will not answer yea twice but I will proceed no further So say thou once have I sinned but I will doe not more yea twise but I will proceed no further And to lessen thy fault excuse not thine offence seek no excuses and pretences to cover or colour it for that will bring thee to be more intangled As one saith beginning are with more ease and safety declined when we are free then proceedings when wee have begun so small beginings then continuance the further and longer the harder it will be to rise and the smaller the sinne is the harder haply to rise for hee that fals lightly he makes no great haste to rise againe whereas he that fals hard and foul hee hastens to arise so in this It is Sathans policy not to draw men to great sinnes at first but by degrees lest they should abhorre them before the conscience be inured and somewhat hardened As the way to good is by degrees because of the diffiuclty of it so to evill because of the horriblenesse and shame of it And by one sinne if it be lived in without repentance there is left in in the heart a ore provocation to sinne the same sinne againe yea and a greater pronesse then before to any other sin whatsoever of the same
if faith and holinesse of life be wanting here it is apparent in these Priests not accepted for all the dignity of their office Cain was the first borne and had that priviledge yet for all that God received not his offering but Abels Gen. 4. so betwixt the Pharise and publicane Luke 18.10 c. as betwixt the rich men and the widdow Marke 12.41 42 43. Because he is no accepter of persons Acts 10. that is Reas 1 for any outward thing for he accepts for inward It is borrowed from Judges who being corrupt are swayed not with the uprightnesse of the cause but with the person his place his honor his riches and such like which being denyed in God shewes why he accepts not the wicked Because he looks not as man looks Reas 2 upon outward things This will serve to check a corruption in our times Vse 1 and not in ours onely but that which hath ever beene in all ages great men nobles and Princes wealthy and worshipfull personages perswade themselves so are soothed up by their flatterers that a little thing from them is greatly accepted of God a few cold prayers a little devotion a carlesse hearing shall be accepted from them though they never trouble themselves for the true feare of God and to worke righteousnesse whereas first in reason there is more due to God where he hath given more But why should he accept lesse from them because they are great as if he were an accepter of persons or as if they were or could be great in respect of him Let no estate hinder a man from this service Vse 2 for the best excuseth not the meanest makes us no lesse acceptable VERSE X. Who is there even among you that would shut the doores and kindle not fire on mine Altar in vaine I have no pleasure in you saith the Lord of Hosts neither will I accept an offering at your hand WHo is there among you Here is the rejecting of them and their sacrifices threatened which is the maine point in the verse but in the former part as divers of the learned doe so take it he returnes unto his former expostulation reproving the priests for their ingratitude and corruption of his worship And then it will be read who is there among you that will shut the doores or doe you kindle fire on my altar for nothing And some expound it that the Priests would not so much as shut the doores till they had their wages payed others that they did nothing in Gods service but they were rewarded for God arguing their unthankfulnesse to him by his bounty to them But others take the words as they are here read both more agreeable to the originall as also more squaring to the present matter to shew how he rejected them and their sacrifice when he wisheth that some body would shut the doores of the Temple or that they would offer none at all and so keepe out the Priests that they could not come to sacrifice any thing upon his Altar which he did so distaste and dislike and so it is I would rather you should not offer at all then as you doe For the particular words And kindle not fire upon mine Altar q.d. that yee might not come to offer upon mine altar kindle not my altar so in the originall a Metonymia In vaine id est to no end the word signifieth freely Job 1.9 for nothing so unjustly without cause Psal 69.5 so scotfree without punishment Prov. 1.11 to no end or purpose Job 2.3 Pro. 1.17 so here I have no pleasure in you The former is a wish this is the reason of the wish All is in vaine and to no end because I like not you and will none your sacrifices he shews that he esteemed not these offerings not from the nature but from the minde of him who did offer them If he were indued with piety and holinesse God would accept his offerings and service If otherwise God would take no delight in them for all their offerings Neither will I accept an offering at your hands These offerings he simply refuseth not being things he had commanded but because they were offered by them qd I am so farre from accepting at your hands these corrupt and imperfect sacrifices that if they were never so perfect and agreeing to the lawes of men prescribed yet I would not accept you please me not your gifts and offerings cannot be accepted of me here is first a wish and the reason of it he wished that they would offer no sacrifices to him at all rather doe him no service then doe it as they did The Lord had rather have no service done unto him of the sonnes of Men Doctrine then to have it done carelessely and negligently corruptly and not as he hath commanded it So is it manifest from this place as from that Isaiah 1.11 12 13 and 58.1 2 and 66.3 Math. 7.22 and 6.1 5 16. Because this argues contempt of God and as we may speak Reas 1 of his person yea often times more contempt then not to doe the works of his service at all for where any man is duly respected either for love or feare there the duties and offices to bee performed unto him are done neither negligently nor carelesly as the child that honours his father the servant that feares his master doe with all diligence and care their dutyes Where they are done coldly or cursarily there is not the respect of the person that should be Againe dutyes may be omitted without contempt as of ignorance not knowing what a man ought to doe of infirmity or an erronious conscience because hee thinks he may not doe that which he can not doe in all perfection But to doe them carelesly and that wittingly with corruption can have no such excuse and so more contempt Because the Lord hath no need of the sacrifice and service of men a man cannot be profitable to him Reas 2 as hee may be to his neighbour It is nothing to him that thou art righteous that thou prayest or performest any other service unto him Job 22.2 May a man be profitable unto God as he that is wise may be profitable to himselfe therefore he as a rich King values not the gift but the mind of the giver he looks more to the manner of doing than the deed he respects more the heart than the hand the inward affection than the outward action No marvell then if he had rather have nothing than carelesly and corruptly done And this made him esteeme more of the Widows two farthings and mytes than of the rich mens treasure * Deus puram magis conscientiam exaudit quàm preces August contr lit Petil. Donat. lib. 2. cap. 53. God rather heares a pure conscience than prayers Phil. 1.15 Object 16 18. better Christ be preached any wayes than not at all It is better in regard of others Sol. who have the benefit of it and to whom by such leaden and
notwithstanding as it is here so Mich. 7.18 and Mal. 3.17 Numb 23.21 1 Kings 15.5 Jam. 5.11 and yet Job 3. Because of that 2 Cor. 8.12 For if there be first a willing mind Reas 1 it is accepted according to that a man hath and not according to that a man hath not God respects the mind more then the gift as in the widowes mite and the cup of water so doth he the mind rather then the service for it profits not him nor he stands in no need of it And the willing minde is that a man with all his heart would doe more if he were able which God seeing he accepts that they have Because they condemne and dislike their imperfections themselves Reas 2 and judge themselves for them then 1 Cor. 11.31 If we should judge our selves we should not be judged yea as Rom. 7.17 while they thus condemne it it is not accounted theirs as Bernard of envy Thou feelest it but agreest not to it it is such a passion as God one day will heal in thee but not condemn thee for It affords comfort against the temptations of Sathan Vse who sets forward our discouragement from the little good wee doe And voweth and offereth a sacrificeth or corrupt thing The second part of their deceit they made great shew and promise of great things they would doe but they repented themselves and they omit them altogether or performe them very corruptly He that dealeth deceitfully in the Lords service and worship Doctr. that is maketh great shewes and promises of great duties of piety but after when he finds it more costly or painefull or crossing to his affections then he thought of repents and doth it not or doth it carelessely and corruptly when hee looks for a blessing shall finde a curse so here and Deuter. 23.21 Numb 30.3.6 Eccles 5.3 4 5. Math. 21.28 ad 32. Acts 5. Because he robs and spoiles God as it were taking or keeping from him that which is his for vowing it to God Reas 1 he hath put it from himself made an alienation of it put it out of his own right into Gods whereas it was his owne before Acts 5.4 Because they serve not God but themselves Reas 2 as children who can bee content to please their parents in things liking unto themselves but not in other please themselves not their parents so in this and shew that they preferre all those things before God which to keep they will break promise with him This may teach many men that they may justly looke for the curses of God upon them and theirs if they be not upon them already because they have so often vowed and promised great care and diligence in the service and feare of God and performed very little or none at all to him sometime in health sometime in sicknesse sometime in danger sometime in deliverance they promised great things unto the Lord but they have played the couzeners with him It was but to serve their owne turne for the present nothing they have performed or nothing as they ought and promised To say nothing of necessary vowes how carelesly they are found every way performed as the vow of Baptisme when men live more like Infidels than Christians at the best but as Jews resting in the outward ceremony or but outwardly civill and honest never labour for any inward sanctification any sincere holinesse any conscience of Gods Will offer fleeces for the flesh and skin for the beast The vow of Parents promising to bring up their children in the feare of the Lord as was commanded Eph. 6.4 but they take onely care for the body not for the soule and to ingraft Gods feare in them Qualis crescerem tibi aut quàm castus dummodo essem disertus ut discerem sermonem facere quàm optimum persuadere dictione Aug. Such as Augustine confessed to God his father was who troubled not himselfe saith he how I prospered in thy service or how chast I were onely his care was that I might be eloquent and learne to speak well so they for worldly things Thirdly the vow of married parties who made a covenant before God and to him Prov. 2.17 which is broken by many meanes amongst many who think the Covenant unviolated if they commit it not outwardly and actually when as wanton words and looks and lusts break it To say nothing of these for which many have either the curses of God or have them hanging over their heads But voluntary vowes men in some trouble or sicknesse renew their vow of obedience as Israel Hosea 6.1 2. but when that is once past either they doe not care for keeping it or thinke they are discharged well enough if they doe a few dayes heare the Word or performe some one or two good duties and after give over againe unlike David Psal 119.106 112. The Prophet tells them they are accursed better it had beene for them never to have vowed it at all for though without it it is a sinne yet now it is the greater sin To teach every man to take heed how he vows anything unto God Vse 2 for often in the vow he may deserve Gods curse and often in the breaking it In the vow when it is of unlawfull things Acts 23.12 then it is the bond of iniquity Secondly when the party vowing is not able to performe it either simply or not without sinne as Popish single life Matth. 19.11 Thirdly when a party vowing is an inferiour and doth it without the consent or contrary to the mind of the superior Numb 30.6 9. So Papish children contrary to Parents minds enter their rules Fourthly when it hindreth a man from the duties of his calling as those who leave their calling and goods to professe wilfull poverty or become Friars Mendicant 1 Cor. 7.22 Fiftly when there is put holinesse in it and it is made meritorious If it be faulty in these or any the like then is sin committed in the making of it and so a curse followeth it but if not then the curse followeth the breaking of it When then it is so hard a thing to vow and not to have sinne cleave to it if there be any feare of sinne there will be rashnesse avoided in it and if there be any feare of the curse they will not be so rash lest they provoke God Eccles 5.1 To teach every man when he hath vowed Vse 3 to be very carefull for the performance of it and let neither cost nor labour profit nor pleasure hinder him for he shall lose more by the breaking of it than he can gaine The sinne of breaking a mans vow or promise ought to make men affraid to doe it Men feare perjury and abhorre it this is no lesse if Christ may be beleeved Matth. 5.33 But if not the sinne yet the curse and to avoid it make good that thou hast spoken to God I suppose many men in the time and heate of the sicknesse vowed great things
in the first part of the comparison their good and worthy parts which were the predecessors vers 6. and the reason of it vers 7. There are foure worthy parts reckoned of theirs And these were not of private and particular parts as they were private men but they were such parts as were in them as publicke persons As if it had reference with the former he said he did not onely carry himselfe and approve himselfe a good and godly man but he shewed himselfe a wise and compleat Doctor both in teaching the Law and Truth of God and giving most wise grave and wholesome counsell The law of truth was in his mouth The first part of the predecessors which was commendable in them he was ever most studious of the law of God and most skilfull in it and taught it most sincerely to his people ever teaching most sound doctrine to them that they might observe my precepts And there was no iniquity found in his lips The second thing commendable he never propounded or taught any errour he never deceived any of my people to draw them from my true worship but taught ever that which was wholsome and good Iniquity is commonly taken for the pervertion and depravation of the knowne right and is opposite to equity and truth He walked with me in peace and equitie The third thing commendable the summe of it is he lived and performed the duty of his place without all negligence unfaithfulnesse approving himselfe to God and men He walkes with me i. he was most carefull to please me and to approve himselfe unto me to worship me as I required and followed not the wickednesse of the age nor was corrupted with the depravations of the time whereby men were depraved in my service and feare as Gen. 5.22 In peace That is peaceably not provoking me to anger but cleaving fast unto me and obeying my will so that I had no cause of expostulating or quarrelling with him Cyril saith To have peace with God is nothing else but to desire to know and do that which God requires and to offend him in nothing And did turn many from iniquity The fourth thing commendable in them was that by their exact walking and faithfull teaching they helped to turne others from their sinfull wayes Out of the coherence that from their personall and inherent vertues he proceeds to the vertues of their place and their publicke actions and carriages we may note It is not enough for a man to be honest and good in himselfe Doctrine in his owne person but if he have any place either more or lesse publicke he must be good faithfull in that if hee would be approved of God As if he be a Magistrate or Minister or officer or master of a family As this is manifest in the coherence so by that Gen. 18.17.18.19 Exo 18.19.20.21 Hence is both the cōmendations blemish of old Eli he was a good Priest a good Magistrate but a bad father in the more publicke good in the lesse defective 1 Sam. 1.2 Hence we read in Scripture the commendations of good governours and Kings both for their private parts and their publicke vertues In themselves fearing God and in publick discharging their duties sufficiently and faithfully And in the new Testament we finde not onely private and personall duties prescribed to Masters Fathers Husbands to Ministers and Magistrates but specially publicke Ephes 5. and 6. Col. 3. and 4. 1 Tim. 3.2 c. Tit. 1.6 Hence the commendation of the Angell of the Church of Ephesus though he was defective in personall Rev. 2.2 and the reproofe of the Angell of Pergamus verses 14.15 Because he more glorifies God for though his good workes Reason 1 as a private man do glorifie God yet nothing so much as his faithfulnesse in his place publicke which makes that God is glorified much more and of more An annuall Magistrate may procure the glory of God more in that yeare then in all his life not onely because Regis ad exemplum c. but because they may command and compell moe Because this will blemish the other their private parts Reason 2 and bring Gods judgements upon them at least temporall as in Eli and the Angel of Pergamus This may let all those see their errour and corruption Vse 1 who take places or seek them only for the honour and dignity of them without either ability for the duties or conscience and care to performe those publicke duties onely it sufficeth them that they have some faith and feare of God as other private men have and never shew themselves faithfull in their publicke places never regard to doe and execute the places But of few fathers of families can God say as of Abraham nay he knowes the contrary that they tooke the place with no minde to do any such dutie and so execute it still So of Magistrates and Ministers They are brought or thrust themselves before they be called upon the stage of the world and when they are on it do no more then make a dumb shew perform no more then lookers on or but things that must be done of course and would be though they slept which is the fault not onely of men profane or but civilly honest but of men who professe the feare of God and may well be thought to have some good measure of it and go for good and truly honest men Yet it is their blemish that they are carelesse of the duties of their place That as he said An evill man may be a good Citizen we may say Good men are evill Citizens Masters c. which blemisheth much their private graces in the sight of God and good men And upon many hath and doth and will bring particular and temporall judgements from their families and servants c. For this is a grand cause why good men fathers of families have such gracelesse children and corrupt servants Ministers such untoward flockes Magistrates such people This may admonish and instruct all that have the faith and feare of God Vse 2 to joyne with it this care of the duties of their place whatsoever it is that they must have because these duties though they be profitable for the common good yet are they not acceptable from him As he saith Cypriansec de zela livore that performeth holy things and is not a consecrated Priest doth things in respect of himselfe childish and unprofitable though they may be good to others So he that doth things without faith and the feare of God they are unprofitable yea wicked and damnable sinnes howsoever they may benefit others so may I say of these but yet this had will not beare out nor excuse the negligence and not doing the duties of his place It may make the infirmities of them passed over but not defend the omitting of them Therefore to be accepted of God men must also be carefull of that Masters c. The excuses that commonly are pretended will not
and 18 22. he that findeth a wife findeth a good thing and receiveth favour of the Lord. This teacheth us Vse that this is as the Apostle an honourable estate having such an honourable Author as the God of Gods And it notes unto us the spirit of Antichrist in the Popes and Church of Rome yea the spirit of Stan teaching such doctrine of divells Innocent saith it is to live inthe flesh and calleth it Bed pleasure and uncleannesse when he would condemne Ministers marriage by it so Siricius and others have spoken most wickedly and despitefully of it allowing simple fornication before it in their Priests And wherefore one because he sought a godly seede The end of marriage in the holy intent of God to have a holy seede the Church and religion propagated and increased The meaning is not as if holinesse and sanctification came by nature which is onely of grace for of such holinesse he doth not speake but the word is the seed of God that is that their children might be the sonnes and daughters of the true God and pure religion for it is here as the contrary was before Verse 11. The daughters of a strange God such as professed the worship not of the true God The meaning of this is manifest by that which we have in Ezra 9.1.2 the holy seed matched with the people of the land namely they who professe true religion and the true God with those who falsifie both Also 1 Cor. 7.14 where holinesse is nothing but to be within the Covenant and professors of the true God and religion God then ordained marriage for the procreation of Children and that holy ones the propagation of the Church and the increase of such as should truely worship him The end of marriage the most proper and excellent end of it Doctrine is the procreation of children for the propagation of Gods Church and Gods worship That it is an end is here affirmed that it is the most proper and excellent I manifest because it was the end of it before the fall in mans perfection though sinne had never come yet this end was ordained of God as Gen. 1.28 propagation of mankind but specially the Church Nay by that is onely meant the Church seeing they were in their perfection and if then they had given themselves to propagation or had continued in their first estate they had brought forth still hly men in their perfect image who should have beene the seed of God Lombard hath a speech * Post lapsum hominis conjugium remedium est quod ante laepsum duntaxat officium suit Lombard After mans fall marriage is a remedy which before the fall was onely an office The whole is true but it is not the whole truth for it is now officium as well as then to procreate children and propagate the Church now that this is the end that shewes that he prohibiteth and reproveth so often unequall matches with infidells because though that may encrease mankind yet not the Church for that will spread rather idolatry then the true worship Deut. 7.3.4 and Ezra 9.1.2 Hence it is that amongst the people of God that virginity was a griefe and barrennesse a shame and so taken and accounted because they could not increase the Church for the first see Judges 11.37.40 for the second see Luke 1.25 Hence the Apostle forbiddeth to take into the Church young widdowes for the service of the Church but will have them marrie for the increase of the Church 1 Tim. 5.14 Because this to bring forth children Reason 1 to increase his Church and true worshippers most procures that which is and ought to be the maine end of all that is the glory of God For not every one that brings forth children doth this but the contrary as the Heathen and Infidels who bring them forth for idolatry and dishonour of God This being to the contrary is a principall end Because this is the duty enjoyned them from God Reason 2 to bring up their children in his true worship Eph 6.4 Now the end of conjunction for procreation ought to be the same that their end of education must be of bearing and bringing forth which is of bringing up To reprove many who when they seeke a wife or a husband Vse 1 never thinke of this I say not they intend not procreation of children and increasing of the world as they say but not the increase of Gods Church and a religious seede that should further and set forward the true worship of God Certaine it is many of them take barrennesse for a crosse and a reproach unto them but it is onely because they have not little ones to solace themselves withall when they are young or to leave their wealth to when they are of yeares but never to propagate by them the Church and true worship of God It may be in our times they leave not unto them false worship but that is onely thankes to the state not them who if the state did so beare it would as well leave the one as the other to them And that I may not slander them I prove this from their choyse and from their use of their marriage estate The first is apparent that they choose onely for beauty though they be the daughters of men or for riches for portion or person never respect religion nay if there be the other to be had though their religion be suspected and it be either none or corrupted they will not forbeare such marriages though they joyn themselves to the daughters of a strange God at the best but the daughters of men never seasoned nor yet inclinable to the truth and true worship In the law he that would not marry his deceased brothers wife but another manifested that he never intended to raise up feede to his brother So in this He or she that matcheth not with the daughters of God shew they never intend this Againe in the use of marriages many men and women though they desire some children not many and those they have they may happily give them civill breeding and education and bring them up in knowledge of humane things arts and sciences and such like but no instruction of religion That which S. August complaines of to God as touching his father may many justly complaine of their parents Non satageret idem pater qualis crescerem tibi aut quam castus dummodo essem disertus So they have little care for piety and religion to informe them and instruct them that way but that they might as he saith ut discerem sermonem facere quam optimum persuadere dictione Confess 2.2.3 To be either an eloquent Divine or an absolute Lawyer or a fortunate Merchant or such like That seeing there are three speciall ends of marriage Vse 2 Procreation of children and increase of the Church Secondly helps and comforts of this life Thirdly a remedy against incontinency though all must be aimed at yet
stream Rev. 3.4 For them that feared the Lord. The Lord hath a booke of remembrance for them which is not barely to remember what they have done but effectually to remember it that is to reward it and so much for them importeth that it is for their benefit and profit and to recompence and reward them It is not in vaine to serve the Lord Doctrine but godlinesse is gainefull and they who feare the Lord and thinke upon his commandements to doe them they shall be blessed and have their reward in their measure in this life in the full measure in the life to come so much is affirmed directly here Jam. 1.25 Blessed in the deed Because justice requires it Reason and equity that he should not dismisse his servants empty handed specially old and who have spent their strength in his service Heb. 6.10 But of this point formerly VERS XVII And they shall be to me saith the Lord of hosts in that day that I shall do this for a flocke and I will spare them as a man spareth his own son that serveth him AND they shall be to me saith the Lord Here is the Prophets second answer from a gracious and sweet promise of God of his goodnesse and favour towards them who feare him even as an effect of his remembrance and a proofe he did not forget them And the sum of this promise is that in the time of the Gospell he would make his choice and refusall of the good and bad when it should appeare who was more excellent then others so that those who did believe should be taken into his family and should enjoy great commodities and great dignity both be his and so respected and enjoy the benefits belonging to his And they shall be to me And Here hath the force of an illation or reference to the former sentence ending that and beginning this i. To shew that I remember them I will make them mine so much the phrase in the originall signifies In that day when I shall make them my treasure my peculiar The Lord to shew how dear they should be unto him how he would defend them how he would honour and adorne them used this word which is used Ex. 19.5 translated chiefe treasure It signifies a portion of wealth got by a mans owne labour and industry which men used to love more earnestly and keep more diligently when they have it and so by this he tels them how dear and pretious they should be unto him who did receive the Gospell and truly professe him Some understand this of the last judgement only and that day which is not probable Some both of the day the Gospell and the judgement which hath great probability with it I will spare them or I will use mercy and compassion towards them I will receive them and specially love them and will shew my love in this in sparing them when they offend or as some in winking at their infirmities and corruptions and not rejecting their service for them which the similitude doth shew As a man spareth c. A similitude illustrating the promise of compassion and mercy shewing how great and how tender his compassions should be toward them when it should be as of a father to his sonne whom he loves both as his sonne and also because of that reverence honour and obedience he hath done unto him Now this that is first promised is that they shall be his for so is the phrase they shall be mine like that which we have Gen. 48.5 And now thy two sonnes Manasseh and Ephraim which are borne unto thee in the land of Egypt before I came unto thee into Egypt shall be mine as Ruben and Simeon are mine i. They shall not be as my Grand children but as my owne sonnes and in the division of the Land shall have their portions as any one of my sonnes so here they shall be mine i. I will adopt them and make them mine who are not so by nature nor of themselves No man is of himselfe and by nature not of his parents the child of God but adopted so of God to it Reve. 2.17 Doctrine and in thee a new name written In that day that I shall do this for a flocke Or rather in that day when I shall make them my chiefe treasure as it is translated Exod. 19.5 But all comes to one end to note how deare the Church and people of God are unto him They who feare God and thinke of his name Doctrine delight in his waies are more excellent then others and more pretious deare and beloved of God Rev. 2.9 with 1. Pet. 2.9 And I will spare them c. Another matter promised unto them in it two things First That he would wink at and passe by their infirmities when they served him and did the duties of his worship and passe by many infirmities in them which he will not do in another Secondly That when he did visite them yet he would do it in love and compassion and use them as a father his son that serveth him This is a speciall thing Doctrine promised to Gods children proper to them that in their obedience when they endeavour to serve and performe duties commanded he will accept it though it be mixed with many infirmities and will winke at them and passe by them as though he never saw them Mich. 7.18 I will spare them or have compassion of them When he should come to afflict and correct them it should be in compassion and love The Lord when he afflicts and corrects his he doth it in compassion and love Doctrine grieving to do it retaining ever his fatherly affection towards them Isaiah 27.4 Rev. 3.19 VERS XVIII Then shall you returne and discerne between the righteous and the wicked between him that serveth God and him that serveth him not THen shall you returne and discerne c. The third part of the answer to these threatning a judgement to these who spoke thus blasphemously against the Lord. The sum is that such a judgement should come upon them as should open their eies which they winked on now and make them see and acknowledge a difference as well in the things as in Gods affection betwixt the good and bad Then shall you who now blaspheme God and say you have found nor reaped any profit by my service Shall returne that is be smitten with a late and unprofitable yea damned repentance no true and serious returning And discerne Out of wofull experience when you shall feele your owne misery and see the happy estate and condition of the godly shall you know in how farre better estate the righteous that is he that is carefull and conscionable in all the duties of justice honesty and equity And the wicked him that hath no conscience at all but is unjust unfaithfull uncleane or any waies wicked yea you shall discerne and know how excellent his estate is that serveth God that is conscionable in all the
in Paul towards the Gentiles Gal. 2.8 So he will this day be powerfull to some of the rich the next to some of the poore this Lords day to one of honour the next haply to one in disgrace and vile to all according to the pleasure of his own working A Table of the Contents The letter a sheweth the first Alphabet the letter b the second the figure sheweth the Page A. ACcepting of persons a great sin b 74 75 Adversity b 158 Adultery b 192 Adultery annuls not marriage b 119 Affection how farre necessary in Gods service a 159 160 Affliction a burden a 3 It befalls Gods dearest children a 8 Why it befals them b 236. 248 Almes of oppressors a 223. 224 226 Altar what it is a 126 Anger of God a 187. 188 Angels the name to whom given b 166 B. Banishment a proofe of Gods anger a 29 Blasphemy a great sinne b 152 It much displeaseth God b 153 some kinds of it b 156. 157 248. 249 Blessings abused aggravate sinne a 208 Bread what meant by it a 126 Bondage of naturall men b 281 282 Bounty in Gods service a 150. 151. 152. Bounty of Idolaters b 213. 214 Burden what it signifies a 2 C. Calling of Ministers b 26. 27. 49. 50 faithfulnesse in particular calling b 36. 37. How children to be ordered by their parents for their callings a 66. Sinnes against ones calling are more hainous a 120 Catholike Church and the members of it b 102 Children their duty a 57 59. 60. 64 67. 69. 71. 73 Children of God their happy condition b 237. 238 Christ to whom he comes b 167 his comming desired by Patriarkes b 168. his comming promised long b 170. 171 he is our Prophet b 172. 173. be purifieth his people b 175. 176 Church now Catholike a 194. it is the most excellent society b 178. it may erre b 59. 60. 61. it must be holy b 89. the honour and prosperity of it b 240. 241. Church-robbers b 219. 220. 221 225. 228 229 Conference of godly b 261. Creation binds us to Gods service a 91. 92. Creatures have all power from God b 12. Credit not got by sin b 17. 19. It is gotten by honouring and maintaining of Ministers b 239 Customes injurious concerning tithes b 225 D. Dearth and famine for sin b 14 Death how Gods children freed from it b 278 279 Deceivers in Gods service a 231 233 Desire of Christ b 179 180 Disgrace brought by sinne foretells ruine without repentance b 20 Divorces for needlesse causes b 122 Divorce may only be by authority b. 118 119 unlawfull but only for adultery b 141 142 143 144 Dominion of sinne b 278 Donatives their original b 228 E. Elijah who he is b 286 287 Election bindes us to Gods service a 94 95 Encrease in grace b 281 282 Error not to be taught b 41 Excellency of the godly b 267 Excommunication a 129 130 131 132 Executors of wills their sinne b 198 199 Exhort we must exhort one another b 258 259 Extraordinary providence of God for his people b 237 F. Famine for sinne b 14 Fatherlesse children not to be injuried 198 199 Favour of God how to be esteemed b 205 206 Feare of God a 97 98 the want of it causes sinne b 201 differences of filiall and servile feare a 98 99 the effects of Gods feare a 101. servile feare what it is with the effect of it a 110 111 Forgetfulnesse of benefits a 25 Free will b 138 281 G. God his power a 37 his anger a 187 188 the Lord of hosts a 37 Godlinesse causeth prosperity b 250 H. Hearing required b 51 52 53 Heart must be kept pure b 137 Honour of God a 97 Honour lost by sinne b 19 Hopes of wicked men vaine a 38 39 Hosts God the Lord of hosts a 37 Husband may not grieve his wife b 105 106 Hypocrisie a 156 157 b. 187 188 It is a great sinne a 220 Hypocrites thinke all too much for God a 218 Hypocrites justifie themselves when under judgements a 251 252 I. Idolaters liberall in their worship b 213 214 Imitation of predecessors vertues b 58 Impropriations of Churches b 228 229 Inconveniences must not hinder obedience to God b 4 5 Ingratitude a great sin a 16 17 25 208 Injuriousnesse is against nature b 79 it is against religion b 80 81 Injustice is joyned with irreligion b 150 151 268 Invocation of Saints b 181 Ironies whether lawfull a 167 168 Irreligion b 187 268 Iudgements are for sinne a 41 they should restraine sinne a 5. Of profiting by them a 10 11. They profit not the wicked b 13. How wicked carry themselves in them b 98. How vaine their course is b 98 99 Hypocrites justifie themselves under them b 251 252 Iudgements may be upon things belonging to men as well as upon their owne persons b 235. No person freed from judgements b 10 11. The causes of judgements b 96. God brings them not but upon knowne causes b 185 They are equall a 52. God will be justified in them a 43 44 47 God hath glory by them a 54. God can bring them with a word b 16. The difference of them on the godly and the wicked a 45 46 Iudgeing of others a 146 147 148 149 K Kingdomes dispoed of by God a 40 Knowledge of God how needfull a 152 153 Knowledge excuses not hearing b 6. 7. God knowes the wicked and their waies a 184 260 L Lame service a 156 Law the false pretence of it encreaseth sin b 147 Liberality of Idolaters b 213 214 Long life a blessing b 29 30 Love the causes of it b 77 Love of God to his Church a 19 M Magistrates when they neglect to punish God will do it b 94. How they are to give judgement b 185 186 how to be obeyed a 63 82 Maintenance of Ministers b 215 216 221 224 225 226. 227 232 233. What it is b 216 218. How necessary b 227 228. A blessing to such as maintaine them b 231 232 Marriage how children to submit to their parents in it a 69 God is the witnesse of marriage b 115. The description of marriage b 121 122. The author of it b 132. The end of it b 133 Marriage with contrary religion b 90 91 92 Vnfaithfullnesse in marriage is sinne against God b 112 Married persons their duty b 120 Masse whether one may be present at it a 157 Meditation of the word b 7 Mercy of God only keeps off judgements b 203 204 Mighty men cannot withstand God b 273 Mincha what it signifies a 199 Ministers must put difference between godly and wicked a 126 130. They sinne if censure not the wicked a 132 Contempt of Gods Ministers and his worship goe together a 214. Best Ministers most contemned a 219 They must apply doctrine b 2 3 what their care must be concerning Gods worship b 8 9. A speciall Covenant is made with them b 24 25. They deliver whole truth b 39 they must