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A69234 Lectures vpon the foure first chapters of the prophecie of Hosea Wherein the text is exponded and cleered, and such profitable instructions obserued, and applied, as naturally arise out of this holie Scripture, and are fit for these times. By Iohn Dovvname Bacheler in Diuinitie, and preacher of Gods word. Downame, John, d. 1652. 1608 (1608) STC 7145; ESTC S110223 535,213 680

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hauing found vs carried vs on his shoulders into his sheepfold of grace and happinesse Thirdly we are to obserue the meanes whereby Christ Christs bloodshed the meanes of our gathering into the church gathered vs into his Church namely by shedding his blood for sinne which excluded vs out of it and scattered vs abroad could not be done away but by Christs death whereby Gods iustice was to be satisfied and his wrath appeased The consideration whereof as it should make vs most thankfull to our good shepheard Christ who hath not spared to giue his life for his sheepe so it should make vs most carefull to walke in the waies of Gods Commandements and to auoid the by-paths of errour and sinne lest after we are gathered together and brought into Christs fold we wander againe and goe astray and so fall into the iawes of the spirituall wolfe who daily seeketh to deuoure vs. For if we neglect the paines and labour yea the losse of the pretious blood of our good shepheard which he spilt in seeking vs that he might free vs from danger and bring vs safe to his sheepfold and suffer our selues to be allured with euery vaine triffle to leaue his flocke and to wander in the deserts of the wicked world till we are againe lost and subiect to the former dangers from which he freed vs let vs take heede lest he also basely account of vs as being vnworthie of a second labour in seeking of vs. Fourthly we are to obserue that the meanes whereby hee The ministrie of the word the meanes of applying Christs benefits vnto vs. Iohn 10. 27. applieth the former benefit vnto vs making it effectual for our gathering into his Church is the ministerie of his word his holy spirit and a liuely faith and therefore wee are carefully and conscionablie to heare Gods word which is the voyce of our shepheard whereby hee gathereth vs into his sheepefold And forasmuch as wee are dull of hearing and slow in comming both in respect of the stiffenesse of our limmes and stubbornnesse of our willes therefore let vs continually implore our good shepheard not onely to call vs with his voice but also to send his holy spirit to assist vs for he alone openeth our deafe eares suppleth our stiffe ioynts and mollifieth and inclineth our stubborne willes making vs both able and willing to come vnto him when he in the ministerie of the word calleth vs. And seeing wee also before we can come vnto Christ must be indued with a liuely faith therefore let vs vse all good meanes ordained of God to attaine vnto it and not cease begging of it at the hands of our heauenly father seeing it is not of our selues but wee haue it onely by his free gift as appeareth Eph. 2. 8. Ephes 2. 8. Gods spirit the bond of our vnion with Christ and one with another Lastly we are to obserue that this collection of Gods people is spirituall because the spirit of God is the bond of this communion which is amongst the saints and therefore it cannot be hindred by distance of place because the spirit of God filleth all places in heauen and earth The which serueth notablie for our comfort in that we haue by vertue of this spiritual and inseparable vnion part with al the saints in al their fastings prayers al good exercises and holy duties of Gods worship and seruice though we should bee exiled into the vttermost parts of the world because we are vnited vnto them by the same spirit But besides this spirituall communion there is also a local That there ought to be a locall gathering together of the Church and corporal gathering together in the same visible Church and congregation which as much as in them lieth is to bee desired and attained vnto of all the faithfull for they are the sheepe of Iesus Christ and therfore they are not wild beasts to be scattered and singled euery one from another in his owne denne but to flocke together in their owne sheepfold that they may ioyntly performe seruice to the great shepheard in hearing his word receiuing his Sacraments praying for those things they want and praysing him for those good things which they haue receiued that also by this outward collection of their bodies they may testifie the the inward coniunction of their minds and soules and not only testifie but also confirme and increase it by performing all mutuall duties one to another as instructing the ignorant helping the distressed relieuing the poore comforting those that mourne defending the weake and exhorting one another to all holy actions of pietie and righteousnesse Neither must they consort themselues with wolues goates beares and such wild beasts that is with worldly and wicked men who either will seduce or else destroy them seeing it is the nature of the true sheepe of Christ to flocke together and to sequester themselues from all other companie as much as they can in this worldlie wildernesse wherein oftentimes necessitie and not choice intermingleth those which should be seuered And thus much for the vnitie of the faithfull The second The vnanimitie of the faithfull thing expressed is their vnanimitie which appeareth in their ioynt consent and generall agreement in the choice of their head and gouernour For after they are called by God and gathered together into the Church and kingdome of Christ then being thus chosen to bee Christs people and subiects they likewise make choice of him to be their king and head And this is signified in these words And shall appoint or as the decorum of the matter requireth the words may well beare choose or set ouer themselues one head that is one king and supreme gouernour namely the Lord Iesus Christ For he alone is the great King of his people the great shepheard of his flocke the head of his members which is his Church as appeareth in many places of the Scripture So Ezech. 34. 23. 24. 37. 22. 23. 24. Ioh. 10. 16. 1. Cor. 11. 3. Ephes 1. 22. 5. 23. But here it may be demanded how this here is ascribed 〈…〉 Christ is ●et ouer his Church as head by God and how chosen by the faithfull Ephes 34. 23. Ephes 1. 22. to the Church to set ouer them a king and head seeing in other places this is attributed vnto God himselfe as Ezech. 34. 23. Ephes 1. 22. To which I answere that God the father first and principally doth appoint Christ head and king ouer the Church and the people of God do set Christ ouer themselues when as they giue their mutuall assent to Gods appointment and by a liuely faith receiue Iesus Christ for their king and head promising vnto him their alleageance and obedience Thus Saul was appointed and annointed King ouer Israel by God 1. Sam 10. 1. And the people also 1. Sam. 10. 1. 1. Sam. 11. 15. are said to haue made him king ouer them in Gilgal 1. Sam. 11. 15. So that it
and therefore seeing the commandement of God made that action lawfull which otherwise would haue been theft in the people of Israel therefore the like commandement might make this mariage of the Prophet lawfull which in it selfe was vnhonest and vnlawfull To which I answere that there is great dissimilitude in these two examples for first God the soueraigne Lord and chiefe owner of heauen and earth and all that in them is in his own right and by his sole authority might take that which was his owne frō one and giue it to another Secondly this action was lawfull by the law of nature and nations that those who had long serued them as bondmen should haue some reward for their labours which because they tyrannically withheld the Lord like a Soueraigne monarch and iust iudge righted the cause of the oppressed and appointed vnto them this wages for their tedious seruitude And therefore there being no such equitie in this vnhonest mariage and seeing the Lord neuer by his sole authoritie commandeth things vnlawfull and dishonest this example maketh nothing for their purpose Againe they obiect that God commanded Abraham to sacrifice his owne sonne which action in Abraham should haue been vnnaturall and wicked I answere that this commandement in Gods purpose was a commandement of triall onely which he meant not should be put in execution Yea but though Abraham had slaine his sonne his action had been iust and lawfull I answere that this also is most true for seeing God who is absolute Lord of all creatures and chiefe iudge of heauen and earth hath vnlimited power of life and death and seeing the party was to be slame howsoeuer he was innocent towards his father yet had deserued not onely temporarie but also eternall death in respect of his sinnes against God Abraham being commanded by God to be his minister of iustice in executing deserued punishment vpon his sonne was to set aside fatherly affection and to yeeld obedience to Gods seruice but yet iust commandement Neuerthelesse because the outward administration of this act would haue seemed vnnaturall and against the law of nature and nations the Lord onely inioyned it by way of triall and neuer purposed that it should be put in execution although being the father of spirits it was easie for him to haue raised him againe from death to life And therefore this semblable commandement of a seeming vnlawfull thing affordeth no colour to proue that this dishonest marriage should bee actually inioyned and performed Secondly we may not giue such an exposition of one of Gods Commandements which contradicteth and crosseth an other but that one of such holy and high a calling as this Prophet should linke himselfe in marriage with an infamous and common harlot contradicteth and crosseth other commandements and therefore we are not thus to expound it The proposition needes no proofe the assumption is manifest by these reasons In that it was vnlawfull for the high Priest to take to wife a diuorced woman a woman polluted or an harlot nay he might not so much as marry a widowe Leuit. 21. 14. In that the Lord giueth speciall charge concerning Leuit. 21. 14. 1. Tim. 3. 11. Tit. 1. 6. the choyce of his Ministers that their wiues be honest sober and faithfull 1. Tim. 3. 11. and that they haue faithfull children not riotous or disobedient And therefore it is not likely that the Lord who hath had such speciall care of their marriages would inioyne his Prophet to take vnto him an harlot and her adulterous broode and so make his house which should be vndefiled a stewes or filthy brothell Thirdly by such a marriage God should haue made his Prophet contemptible and his ministery and that true religion which he professed should by this meanes haue beene despised and exposed to the slanderous reproach of vnbeleeuers who are apt to take all occasions whereby they may disgrace Gods Ministers and their ministery Fourthly whereas the Lord calleth not onely his wife a woman of fornications but his children also children of fornications hereby it is manifest that this was not actually done but in vision and parable for if we say that they were her children before marriage the text is plaine against it which affirmeth that she conceiued after marriage and bare these children vnto him if wee say that the Prophet had them by her in lawfull marriage how then could they bee truely called children of fornication though before marriage she had plaied the harlot Fiftly there was no necessitie why this should be actually done seeing if it onely appeared to the Prophet in vision and were deliuered to the people by way of parable it were sufficient to conuince them of their sinne which was the maine end the Lord aimed at Sixtly it should not haue been so fit for Gods purpose that this should be actually done seeing he could not marry her and haue by her three children one after an other in lesse time then almost three yeares whereas the Lord sendeth his Prophet to the end that hee should presently conuince the people of their sinnes and reclaime them from their corruptions which were so great that they needed present cure Lastly in the third chapter the Lord commandeth the Prophet to loue and take vnto him an adulterous harlot but this the Lord would not haue actually done for the Lord is a holy and pure Spirit who hateth and abhorreth adulterie and all vncleannesse but onely in type would haue the adulteries of the Israelites which they committed with their false gods discouered from which the great loue which he their Lord and husband had from time to time shewed vnto them could not restraine them And therefore seeing that is typically to be vnderstood why not this also But it is obiected that in the text this is plainely set down as an history of things actually done I answere that this Obiection 1 Answer is vsuall with the Prophets to the end that they may after a more significant and emphaticall manner expresse their mindes and leaue a more deepe impression in the mindes of their hearers to propound types and parables as histories of things done for the distinguishing whereof and the true expounding of such places we are to obserue this rule that where the litteral sense implieth any impossibility or grosse absurditie or any thing contrarie to the analogie of faith or some other plaine place of Scripture there wee are to expound it as a type or parable but in this place if wee take the litterall sense it implieth a grosse absurditie and contradicteth other places of Scripture as I haue shewed and therefore it is to be vnderstood typically and as a parable Neither are we to vnderstand this place so only but many other the like which seeme as plaine histories of things done as this here So Esay is said to haue walked naked and barefoote 3. yeeres Esa 20. 2. 3. So Ezechiel is commanded Esa 20. 2. 3. Ezech 3. 1. 2.
remedies Secondly God beginneth here with legall comminations The best method of preaching for the conuerting ●f a sinner before he comforteth them with any euangelicall consolations because this is the best and fittest course for the conuersion of a sinner For first their sores and festered wounds must be lanched searched and drawne with the rasour and corrosiue of the law before they be healed with the plaisters of Gods promises in the Gospell for otherwise the wound being not healed to the bottom will breake out againe and become worse then it was First we must be beaten downe before we can be raised vp we must first see our sinnes and seeing bewaile them before God will shew vnto vs his sauing mercie wee must bee nothing in our selues before we can be something in Gods sight we must labour and grone vnder the heauie burthen of our sinnes desiring nothing more then to be eased of this intollerable waight before we will come to Christ or he relieue vs we must see our owne nakednesse before hee will clothe vs with the robe of his righteousnesse our owne emptinesse before he will fill vs our owne beggerlinesse before hee will inrich vs and our owne sinnes before he will pardon vs. All which preparation is begun by the preaching of the law and therefore the Lord beginneth with it here as also hee tooke the same course with our first parents Gen. 3. and with his Church Gen. 3. and people from time to time so Iohn the Baptist and our Sauiour Christ himselfe whose example all his faithfull Ministers are to imitate c. The third thing which we are to obserue is that he deciphereth Why idolatry is called fornication the idolatrie of the people vnder the name of fornication whoredome and adulterie and that for diuers causes first in that there is betweene them great similitude and likenesse For as the man taketh the woman to wife coniugall faith being on both sides promised so the Lord hath married vnto him the Church and in Iesus Christ the second person in Trinity hath assumed mans nature into y● Hypostaticall vnion and so hath inseparablie ioyned vs vnto himselfe Iesus Christ also being knit vnto vs in that mystical vnion and so becomming our head and husband And likewise there is a mutuall contract passed betweene vs for the Lord promiseth his grace loue fauour protection and all the benefits of this life and the life to come and the Church for her part promiseth her loue to God coniugall faith and dutifull obedience And of this mariage mention is made Hosea 2. 19. 20. Ier. 3. 1. 8. 20. 2. Cor. 11. 2. Hos 2. 19. 20. Ier. 3. 1. 8. 2. Cor. 11. 2. As therfore the wife breaking her coniugal faith and promise and withdrawing her loue obedience and bodie from her husband that she may communicate them to some other man becommeth an adulteresse so those who breake their faith and couenant made with God and withdraw their loue obedience and outward seruice from him that they may communicate them vnto false gods and idols doe go a whoring after them and commit spirituall adulterie with them And this is the reason why in the Scriptures idolaters are vsually called harlots fornicators and adulterers and idolatrie whoredome and adulterie as appeareth Exod. 34. 15. Exod. 34. 15. Leuit. 20. 5. 6. Deut. 31. 16. Psalm 106. 39 16. Leuit. 20. 5. 6. Deut. 31. 16. Psalm 106. 39. Secondly as the adulterers are so blinded with their burning lust and blind furie that though they bee naturally wise yet they fall into sottish folly running headlong and as it were blindfold in their vncleane and filthie courses though thereby they impaire their health ruine their state lose their credit shorten their life and destroy their owne soules so Idolaters though neuer so wise through their blind superstition are so infatuated that they beleeue more palpable lies and fall into more sottish follies then little children could be brought vnto not regarding their health wealth life nor credit and hazarding the losse of their soules so that they may goe forward in their blind deuotion The second cause why idolatrie is called adulterie is to shew the greatnesse of this sinne and how odious it is in Gods sight for as it is a most horrible fault and to any louing husband most abominable if a wife should prostitute her selfe vnto others and that in her husbands sight and presence so is this sinne of idolatrie no lesse grieuous or odious because the Idolaters doe prostitue themselues to idols to commit spirituall whoredome with them and that in the sight and presence of God who seeth all things and is present euery where But it may be obiected that idolatrie is a farre greater sinne then adulterie and therefore when it is called by that name the sin is rather extenuated then aggrauated I answer first the grieuousnesse of this sinne is so much the greater by how much more excellent the person is who is iniured and offended and therefore when this adulterie is committed against Gods glorious Maiestie it is infinitely more outragious and hainous then when man is thus wronged Secondly though idolatrie is a farre greater sinne then adulterie yet when it is called by this name it is aggrauated not in it own nature but according to mens conceit and opinion who make light account of the sins of the first table as idolatrie blasphemie breaking the Sabbath but thinke the sinnes of the second table very hainous in respect of the other as murther adulterie theft and such like And therfore the Lord calleth them by the names of these sinnes which we can better iudge of to make them as they are odious and hainous in their owne nature so also to appeare vnto vs. As if a man hauing to deale with a louing child and intending to aggrauate the hainousnesse of this sinne of murthering the prince should compare it to parricide he should to his conceit make it appeare much more grieuous although it be a farre more hainous and pernitious sinne to murther the prince who is the father of the countrie then a mans owne naturall parent And these are the things which are to be obserued out of Idolatrie and superstition know no limits the name The fourth thing to be obserued is that hee saith they had committed great whoredoms and also continued in them wherein we may note the nature as of all other sins so of this sin of idolatrie For if once it bee entertained it knoweth no limits nor bounds but with the heate of blind furie ignorant superstition it carrieth mē as it were hoodwinckt into all grosse and abominable impietie so that there is no creature in heauen or earth so base and contemptible which the Idolater in his blind deuotion wil not worship in the place of God as appeareth Rom. 1. 23. And this Rom. 1. 23. befalleth them by the iust iudgement of God that they should be carried
weake and in want of all things but want of misery Secondly because he was a Prophet sent not to the Iewes but to the Israelites he doth not meddle with their sinnes which were many nor denounceth Gods iudgements against them but leauing that to their owne Prophets he applieth himselfe to his owne people by all meanes seeking to humble and bring them to true repentance and because this promise of saluation and mercy vnto the Iewes was effectuall to this purpose therefore he reciteth it that their hearts being wounded with griefe and emulation and their pride and insolency being beaten downe they might in some sort be prepared for true repentance And thus much for the vnderstanding of the first point The doctrines which from hence we learne are these First Doctrines That in common calamities God hath aspeciall care ouer the faithfull that when the Lord exerciseth his iudgements vpon the wicked he hath in the meane time a speciall care of the preseruation of those that feare and serue him to deliuer them out of the middest of common calamities as appeareth in this place for though he suffered the people of Israel to be ouerthrowne by their enemies yet he so curbeth them in with the strong raine of his prouidence that they could not enter into the next bordring countrie of Iuda whom they hated with equall malice albeit they were much fewer in number and weaker in power and in outward appearance altogether vnable to make any resistance And this is manifest by many such examples of like deliuerances out of common euils So was Noah preserued in the common deluge Lot in the destruction of Sodom the Israelites from the plagues of Egypt For the iust Iudge of heauen and earth will not destroy the iust with the wicked Gen. 18. 25. And the Lord knoweth to deliuer the godly out of tentation and to reserue the Gen. 18. 25. 2. Pet. 2. 9. vniust to be punished Secondly we here learne that though our sinnes be great Gods mercy to those that repent and our imperfections and corruptions manifold yet this will not withhold from vs the course of Gods mercies if we turne to God by repentance The Iewes were not much behinde the Israelites in rebellion idolatry and all wickednes and yet because they often forsooke their wicked waies either when they were admonished by Gods Prophets or exercised with afflictions and turned vnto God by true repentance therefore the Lord promiseth vnto them mercy and deliuerance whereas the Israelites who continued obstinately in their impenitency were giuen ouer of God to vtter destruction The like example we haue in Saul and Manasse Peter and Iudas and many others Thirdly we learne that it is a notable argument to moue the Lord to spare a people when as they maintaine amongst God spareth those who maintaine his pure worship though they be polluted with many corruptions them Gods pure and sincere worship and seruice notwithstanding they are polluted with many corruptions and imperfections but when as true religion is banished or despised when Gods sincere worship is neglected and idolatry and superstition erected this is a strong motiue to cause the Lord to powre downe his fearefull iudgements as appeareth in the example of the Israelites and the Iewes Whilest the wise continueth her loue and mariage fidelity towards her husband he is content to beare with many infirmities and to put vp many iniuries but if she violate her faith and place her loue vpon a stranger he is kindled with rage and iealousie and will neuer indure such intolerable wickednesse so whilest the Church which is Gods spouse continueth in her loue and obserueth her mariage promise that she will obey and respect him aboue all he is content to spare her though she be full of corruptions and imperfections but when she withdraweth her loue and setteth it vpon idols and disclaiming her promised obedience neglecteth his pure religiō sincere worship and seruice then will his iealousie burne like fire and his wrath wil suddenly breake forth and vtterly consume her being now no better then an adulterous harlot It is true indeed that where Gods true religion is established and his Gospell sincerely preached there if the people doe not liue according to their professiō bring forth the fruits thereof it will not priuiledge them from afflictions and punishments nay rather the Lord will first visit them because they are of his owne family as appeareth 1. Pet. 4. 17. Ier. 25. 29. Heb. 12. 6. Apoc. 3. 19. But these visitations are in 1. Pet. 4. 17. Ier. 25. 29. Heb 12 6. Apoc 3. 19. 1. Cor. 11. 32. mercy that by his fatherly chastisements he may reclaime them lest running on in their sinnes they should be condemned with the world as it is 1. Cor. 11. 32. But yet so long as they doe not withdraw their loue from God nor violate their faith by neglecting Gods true religion and his sincere worship and seruice and erecting idolatry and superstition the Lord will not vtterly forsake them nor altogether withdraw his mercy from them as we may see in the example of the Iewes and haue sufficiently learned by our owne experience Fourthly we here learne that no vice is more intolerable God abaseth the proud in Gods sight then when by our prosperity and Gods gratious and free benefits we be puffed so vp in pride and selfe-confidence that we despise oppresse and insolently insult auer those who are in affliction and misery For this was the cause which moued the Lord to withdraw his mercies and benefits from the Israelites when as they abused them to pride and to bestow them vpon the Iewes who were contemned and oppressed by them And thus much for the first point The second is the benefits promised to the house of Iuda first in generall that he Exposition will haue mercie vpon them secondly that he will in mercy saue and preserue them from their enemies In which benenefits promised there is a secret antithesis vnto the iudgement threatned against the house of Israel in the former verse they should bee lo-ruchamah such as should haue no mercie but the house of Iuda should bee ruchamah that is such as should obtaine mercie they should be vtterly taken away and neuer returne out of their captiuitie but these how they should also be led captiue yet they should continue but a while in their seruitude and at the end of 70. yeeres be againe restored into their owne countrie The which benefits promised were accordingly performed First in the daies of Ahaz when they were deliuered out of the hands of Rezin King of Aram and Pecah the sonne of Remaliah as it is Isai 7. 1. and also in the daies of Ezechias when as the Lord gaue vnto them a meruailous deliuerance by sending his Angell to destroy the host of Senacharib euen 185000. men as appeareth 2. King 18. and 2. King 18. 19. Esa 36. 37.
And if we his children should not liue together with him though he is a God yet he should not be a father sauing of his onely begotten sonne Iesus Christ seeing there is a mutuall relation betweene a father and children And thus much for the meaning of the words The doctrines The doctrines which arise out of them are diuers First we may obserue The largenes of Gods Church the amplitude and largenes of Gods Church in the time of the Gospell seeing it is not now confined within the borders of Canaan but extendeth it selfe ouer the whole earth to all nations and countries without any restraint or exception For in euery nation he that feareth God and worketh righteousnesse is accepted of him as it is Act. 10. 35. Act. 10. 35. Secondly we are to obserue that there first goeth an exclusion Our adoption and saluation is of Gods free grace from being Gods people before an admission to the being his sonnes by which order the Lord would signifie that our adoption and saluation commeth of his free grace and goodnesse and not of any worthinesse and merit in vs the Israelites were so wicked that they were thrust out of Gods seruice and the Gentiles so prophane and sinfull that they were altogether vnworthie to be admitted into it and therfore both farre from meriting any thing but death and condemnation and yet such was Gods infinit mercie that when they were in this case vnworthy of the least glimpse of his fauour he caused the bright beames of his loue with full raies to shine on both by the death of his sonne reconciling them vnto himselfe who before were strangers and enemies And this the Apostle notablie sheweth Rom. 3. 23. There is saith he Rom. 3 23. 24. no difference namely betweene Iew and Gentile for all haue sinned and are depriued of the glorie of God 24. And are iustified freely by his grace through the redemptiō that is in Christ Iesus If the Israelites had still been retained in the couenant of workes they would haue ascribed their saluation to their workes and worthinesse God therefore when they had many times broken this couenant excluded them out of it that so they might be receiued into the couenant of grace and learne to attribute their saluation not to their legall obedience but to the free mercie and vndeserued grace of God Thirdly we learne what is the instrument and means wherby The ministery of the word the instrument of our adoption we become the sons of God not by our own works or any thing which we could do but by the ministery of the word and preaching of the Gospel which being made effectual by the inward operation of Gods spirit begetteth true faith whereby we lay hold vpon Christ and are ingrafted into his mystical body and so in him who is the naturall son of God we become the sons of God by adoption grace The consideration wherof should moue vs highly to esteem this pretious pearle and with all care and conscience to receiue and lay it vp in our hearts seeing it is the only ordinarie meanes whereby we become the adopted sons of God and heires of euerlasting life If therfore we highly value the means of our worldly aduancement to some momentany patrimony how should we esteeme of the preaching of the Gospell which intitleth vs to this dignitie of being the sonnes of the euerliuing God and heires of his glorious kingdome And if this estimate were made by all then would neither the people for small occasions refraine from hearing the word preached neither would the Ministers of the Gospell for their worldly ease and pleasure liue idly and vnprofitable in their Ministerie nor for any inconueniences sinne onely excepted leaue their callings and desist from preaching Christ crucified seeing it is the onely ordinarie meanes of the saluation of soules and of adopting men to be the children of God Fourthly we may obserue vnto what dignitie and high degree of excellencie we are exalted in the new couenant vnder the kingdome of Iesus Christ when as we are admitted not only the people and seruants but the sonnes and heires of the glorious King of heauen and earth The which prerogatiue is not now appropriated to the Iewes but common vnto al nations and all sorts of men who receiue Christ by a liuely faith Ioh. 1. 12. As many as receiued him to them John 1. 12. 2. Cor. 6. 18. he gaue right to be the sonnes of God 2. Cor. 6. 18. I will bee a father vnto you and yee shall be my sonnes and daughters saith the Lord almightie Gal. 3. 26. Ye are all the sonnes of God by Gal. 3. 26. 4. 6. faith in Christ Iesus Chap. 4. 6. Where we may note the infinite mercie of God who taketh God taketh occasion of mens sinnes to shew his goodnesse occasion euen of mens sinnes and his owne punishments to shew and extend vnto them his bountie and goodnesse for he reiected the people of Israel out of the couenant of workes that he might receiue them into his couenant of grace hee casteth them off from being his people that he might entertaine them to be his sons and not them alone but together with them the Gentiles also And for this purpose he scattereth them amongst the Gentiles that by occasion of calling them vnto the kingdome of Christ by whom the lost sheep of the house of Israel were to be gathered together he might with them call the Gentiles likewise for the Israelites by a certaine right in regard of Gods promises made to their forefathers were to haue the first ofter of Gods mercies and in the first place to bee called into the couenant of grace and therefore God in his infinite wisedome and mercie scattereth them amongst all nations that vpon the occasion of their calling hee might call the Gentiles together with them Whereby the infinitnesse of Gods bountie and his vnsearchable Gods mercy in iudgement wisedome appeareth hee executeth his punishments that he may inlarge his mercies hee abaseth his people that he may exalt thē to higher dignitie he diminisheth the number of his Church that hee may the more increase their multitude and like the good husbandman he scattereth his seed the naturall sons of Iacob ouer the face of the whole earth that they may multiplie and returne vnto him with great increase the Gentiles being added vnto them He shutteth them out of the couenant of works that he may receiue them into the couenant of grace and denieth them to be his people and seruants that he may make them his sons and heires In a word he shutteth all both Iewes and Gentiles in vnbeleefe and in the state of condemnation that hee may haue mercie on all and deriue vnto them eternall saluation Rom. 11. 32. And therefore we haue iust occasion to Rom. 11. 32. 33 exclaime with the Apostle vers 33. O the deepenes of the riches both of the
are to liue like Gods subiects and doe seruice to their Lord and Sauiour who hath redeemed them to this purpose 1. Cor. 6. 20. and then to the kingdome of glorie where they shall receiue a rich reward for their seruice euen a crowne of glorie and euerlasting happinesse First then they must ascend out of the kingdome of darkenes Of our comming out of the power of darkenesse by vocation and iustification sinne and Satan into the kingdome of grace which is done first when as Iesus Christ hath effectually called them gathered them into his Church and vnited them vnto himselfe making them members of his owne body by vertue of his holy spirit and the fruit thereof a liuely faith By which vnion they haue right and propriety vnto the righteousnes death and merits of Christ their head whereby they are iustified in the sight of God for the iustice of God being fullie satisfied by the death and merits of Christ and the debt of our sinnes being discharged they are pardoned and done away and we being clothed with his righteousnesse and actuall obedience are accepted and reputed of God as iust and so reconciled vnto him and adopted for his sonnes in Christ And this is the first kind of our ascending out of the land and kingdome of darkenesse when as we are freed and deliuered out of the power of Satan and sinne in respect both of the guilt and punishment thereof so that now it cannot condemne vs nor any longer detaine vs as prisoners vnder the arrest of the law in the prison of death and vtter darkenesse And of this ascension the Apostle speaketh Ephes 2. 4. 5. 6. Secondly they ascend out of the kingdom of sin Satan Ephes 2. 4. 5 6. Our cumming out of the power of sinne by sanctification into the kingdom of Christ when as being vnited vnto him they haue part in his death and resurrection by the vertue and power whereof sinne is mortified in them and they raised from the death of sinne to holinesse and newnesse of life so that now their harts and affections their words and actions their life and conuersation is quite changed for whereas whilest they liued in the land of darkenesse vnder the kingdome of sinne and Satan they were wholly earthlie carnall and diabolicall now being ascended out of the land into the kingdome of Christ they are spirituall and heauenly their heart and affections which in former times did lie groueling on the earth minding nothing but worldlie and carnall things are now mounted aloft so that though their bodies be on the earth yet their conuersation is in heauen from whence they expect their Sauiour the Lord Iesus Christ Phil. 3. 20. And being risen with Christ they doe not Phil. 3. 20. seeke those things which are on the earth but those things which are aboue as the Apostle speaketh Col. 3. 1. And as Col. 3. 1. they rise aloft in heart and affections so also in words and actions which are not as in former times carnall and earthly but spirituall and heauenly Of this ascension the Apostle speaketh Rom. 6. 4. 5. 6. And this is that first resurrection of Rom. 6. 4. 5. 6. which Iohn speaketh in which whosoeuer haue their part are blessed because on such the second death hath no power Apoc. 20. 6. Apoc. 20. 6. And thus the Church and people of God ascend out of the land of darkenesse and the kingdome of sinne and Satan first by their iustification whereby they are freed from the imputation guilt and punishment of sinne so that it cannot Rom. 8. 33. 34. accuse and condemne them and secondly by their sanctification when by vertue of Gods spirit dwelling in them and applying vnto them the death and resurrection of Christ they doe by little and little subdue and mortifie the power of sinne so that it doth no longer reigne and rule in them as Rom. 6. 12. in former times and hauing lessened and abated the corruption doe begin to rise from the death of sinne to newnesse of life yeelding voluntarie obedience to Gods commandements The second manner of the Churches going vp or ascending Of our ascending out of the land of darkenesse into the kingdome of glorie out of the land of darkenesse the kingdome of sinne and Satan is when they ascend into the kingdome of glorie whereof there are three degrees the first whereof is in this life which is onely in hope and in respect of the certaine assurance of their full and perfect deliuerance out of the kingdome of sinne and Satan and of their entrance into and possession of the kingdome of heauen The which their hope and assurance is grounded vpon their vnion with Christ for being assured that Christ their head clothed with their flesh is ascended into heauen they haue no lesse assurance that they his members shall also ascend thither seeing the vnion betweene them is inseparable And this is that ascension of which the Apostle speaketh Ephes 2. 4. 5. Of which in respect Ephes 2. 4. 5. of the certaintie of faith Gods people haue such full assurance that they are said not onely to hope for it but alreadie to haue entred into it and to haue taken possession of it Ioh. Ioh. 3. 36. 3. 36. He that beleeueth in the Sonne hath euerlasting life So 1. Ioh. 3. 14. We know that we are translated from death to life 1. Joh. 3. 14. because we loue the brethren The second degree of their ascension out of the kingdome of sinne and Satan into the kingdome of glorie is at the time of their dissolution when their bodies resting in the graue their soules haue entrance into a reall possession of the heauenly ioyes And of this the Wise man speaketh Eccles 12. 7. And dust returnes to the earth as it Eccles 12. 7. was and the spirit returnes to God that gaue it And the Apostle Paul thus desireth to bee dissolued that his soule might be with Christ Phil. 1. 23. Phil. 1. 23. The last degree is their full and perfect liberty which shall be at the day of the generall resurrection when as body and The last degree of our liberty soule shall be vnited together and being fully freed from the power of Satan sinne death and corruption shall for euer inherit the vnspeakeable ioyes of Gods Kingdome And this also they attaine vnto by vertue of that vnion which they haue with Christ whereby their bodies and soules being inseparably ioyned vnto him they by vertue of his spirit dwelling in them and applying vnto them the power of his resurrection are also raised and ascend into heauen that where he their head is there they his members may be also And of this the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8. 11. But if the spirit of him Rom. 8. 11. that raised vp Iesus from the dead dwell in you hee that raised vp Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortall bodies
welles of water which they had digged in the daies of Abraham c. that is he redigged them But as I take it the word in this place hath a greater emphasis in it and signifieth thus much that howsoeuer the Lord seemed by his long deferring of punishment and by the continuance of his mercie in suffering them still to enioy his gifts either to approue or at least not to regard their wickednes and grosse abuse of his benefits yet now he would take a new course with them so as they should see that he was a iust God who would not let sin for euer go vnpunished In former times the Lord had multiplied his gifts vpon them as their corne wine oyle c. and that oftentimes beyond all hope and expectation in respect of naturall causes that so they might not rest vpon the starres and planets nor feare the signes according to the custome of the Gentiles but relie vpon his al-sufficient prouidence as himselfe commandeth them Ier. 10. 2. And hauing Jerem. 10. 2. his blessings powred vpon them as it were with his owne immediate hand they might learne hereby to acknowledge and praise him as the author of these his gifts But when notwithstanding all this they would not learne hereby to praise the Lord as being the cause of all their benefits but ascribed them to their Idols the Lord threatneth that hee would returne and alter his former course by depriuing them of all his blessings euen when in respect of inferiour causes and meanes they seemed most assured of them that so if his extraordinarie manner of bestowing them would not yet his extraordinarie taking them away might moue them to acknowledge that he alone was the bestower of them Now the things of which the Lord threatneth to depriue them of are their corne and wine their wooll and flaxe all which before they had ascribed to their Idols and abused to their seruice vnder which particulars here as before wee are to vnderstand not only all things appertaining to their food and apparell but all other commodities belonging to this life So 1. Tim. 6. 8. When we haue food and raiment let vs therewith 1. Tim. 6. 8. be content And further wee are to note that the Lord calleth these things his my corne and my wine c. whereby hee meeteth with the erroneous conceit of the Israelites who imagined that these blessings of God were giuen vnto them by their Idols as a reward of their seruice and therefore that they were so become their owne that they might vse or rather abuse them at their pleasure vers 5. But the Lord telleth them that they were not their Idols gifts but his blessings which because they did not hold of him as of the grand Lord and owner of them therefore hee would as hee iustly might take away from them these things which were his owne vnto which they had no right that so they might learne to giue vnto him the praise of his owne gifts The time also when the Lord threatneth to resume his gifts is expressed I will take away my corne in the time thereof that is in the time of their haruest and my wine in the season thereof that is in the vintage as though he should say When most especially they expect these benefits I will frustrate their hope and so make their affliction more intolerable because it shall come vnlooked for and in such a time wherein they made sure account of plentie And I will bring such a scarcitie amongst them of these blessings that there shal be a want of them euen in the time of haruest and vintage when they vsually most abound and therefore if they wanted in the time of their greatest plentie how great was their penurie like to be when that small store they had was spent and consumed The which dearth was caused either by the curse of God vpon their land so as it could not yeeld her increase which is threatned Leuit. 26. 20. or through the abundance Leuit. 26. 20. of caterpillers grashoppers wormes drought of which wee reade Deut. 28. 23. 24. 38. 39. c. Ioel 1. 4. or by their enemies Deut. 28. 23. Ioel 1. 4. who vsually at the time of haruest goe into the field because then they may most endamage them against whom they make warre by wasting their countrie furnish themselues with all prouision which the Lord threatneth Deut. Deut. 28. 33. Ioel 2. 3. 28. 33. Ioel. 2. 3. And I will recouer my wooll c. The word here vsed signifieth with strong hand to plucke away from one that which he vniustly possesseth It is vsed Gen. 31. 9. where Iacob saith Gen. 31. 9. that God had taken away Labans substance and giuen them vnto him because it was wrongfully possessed by Laban seeing it belonged vnto Iacob as a reward of his painfull seruice So the Israelites are commanded to take away the Egyptians goods and to spoyle them because they wrongfully withheld them in their hands from the Israelites seeing they were due to thē for their great paines and tedious bondage Exod. 3. 22. Others translate it thus I will free and set at libertie my Exod. 3. 22. wooll and my flaxe c. which commeth all to the same end for when the creatures of God are vniustly possessed and abused to other ends then those for which God hath giuen them they may bee said to bee in a kinde of bondage from which they are freed when God plucketh them from such Rom 8 22. Hab. 2. 11. vniust owners So Rom. 8. 22. Hab. 2. 11. The meaning therefore of these words is that the Lord would plucke out of the hands of the idolatrous Israelites these his blessings because they vniustly possessed them and abused them to wicked purposes They possessed them vniustly because they did not acknowledge them as held of the Lord the true owner of heauen and earth for as he hath no right to his lands which are held in capite of the Prince who will not acknowledge him his grand Lord but rather some forraine enemie and therefore is iustly dispossessed so in this case And as he who hauing receiued either authoritie or riches from his King that hereby hee may th● better be enabled to serue him if he abuse his Princes gifts by vsing them against him and seruing his enemies is iustly stript of all so here c. Lent to couer her shame The word here vsed signifieth her nakednesse and more especially the nakednesse of the secret parts Whereby some vnderstand that these idolaters abused the gifts of God to couer their spirituall nakednesse and did hide their sinnes vnder the vaile of Gods benefits But as I take it the more simple and plaine interpretation is best and most agreeable to the text namely that the Lord would take away from her his wooll and flaxe because whereas hee had giuen vnto them these things that they might with them apparell
themselues and hide their nakednesse they abused them for the decking and adorning of their Idols As it may plainly appeare if we cōpare this verse with the former and with Ezech. 16. 16. 17. 18. So that these words are added to shew the lawfull vse of these benefits for which God gaue Ezech. 16. 16. 17. them that their grosse abuse of them might the better appeare And this is the meaning of these words Out of which we The Do ∣ ctrines may obserue first that howsoeuer the Lord in his patience and long-suffering doth deferre our iustly deserued punishments Impenitencie moueth the Lord to turne mercie into iudgement and in stead of them giues vnto vs the fruition of manifold benefits yet if this his mercie will not mooue vs to feare him and to repent of our sinnes he will not for euer spare vs but he will returne and alter his course stripping vs of all his benefits and turning mercie into iudgement An example whereof wee haue in the Israelites in this place in the time of our Sauiour Christ as also in the primitiue Churches of Rome Corinth Galatin c. Secondly we learne that our vnthankfulnesse in not ascribing Our vnthankfulnes moueth the Lord to strip vs of his gifts of Gods benefits vnto him or in ascribing them to other causes besides him or ioyntly with him doth moue the Lord to take his gifts away from vs that so if wee cannot know and acknowledge him the Lord and owner of them when they abound we may learne this dutie by the want of them For such is our corruption and ignorant vnthankfulnesse that wee are more readie to acknowledge the Lord the author of all the good things which we enioy when hee taketh them away then when he bestoweth them he is better knowne and acknowledged to be the feeder of his creatures in the time of dearth then in the time of plentie to bee the author of health in the time of sicknes then when wee are whole and sound to be the giuer of riches in the time of pouertie then in abundance to be our preseruer rather in the middest of dangers then when wee are most secure So that Gods gifts make vs forget the giuer and with forgetfulnesse is ioyned his vsuall companion vnthankfulnesse And this is one speciall cause why the Lord taketh them from vs because his iudgements doe better teach vs then his mercies And therfore if we would not be stripped of Gods benefits let vs learne to acknowledge him the fountain of them whilest we enioy them and yeeld vnto him the whole praise of his owne gifts And to this end let vs remember the example of Pharaoh Nebuchadnezzar Herod c. Thirdly we here learne that the Lord is the true and absolute The Lord is the absolute owner of all the good things which we enioy Psal 24. 1. owner of all the benefits which wee possesse for so hee calleth them here my corne my wine c. so that we are not absolute Lords of those things which we vsually call our own but only the Lords bailiefs and stewards and therefore shall one day be called to a reckoning how we haue vsed and imployed them The consideration whereof should moue vs to vse the Lords goods to the glorie of the owner and the good of our fellow seruants as he hath commanded vs neither must we imagine that we haue absolute authoritie ouer the things we possesse to doe with them what we list seeing the Lord hath chiefe interest in them And if this were well thought of men would not be so close handed to their poore brethren for what steward can answere it to his Lord if he suffer his fellow-seruant to pine for want withholding from him his portion which his master hath allotted him neither would they be so open handed to mispend Gods gifts to his dishonour by gaming gluttonie and excesse brauerie in apparell and such like abuses For this will be but a bad reckoning in the day of our generall accounts when we shall say so much laid out on vnlawfull pleasures so much spent in gorgeous attire so much consumed in law to haue my will vpon my neighbour c. For this will be thought far worse then with the vnprofitable seruant to haue hid our talent in a napkin c. Fourthly we learne that there is no certaintie nor sufficient That there is no certaintie in the possession of temporarie benefits cause of securitie in these worldly and temporarie benefits seeing God oftentimes depriues vs of them when wee thinke our selues most assured to enioy them Innumerable be the vnlooked for accidents which may spoile the fruits of the earth both in seed time winter spring and summer as too much raine too much drought wormes cankers caterpillers blastings mildewes and such like But though they escape all these yet can they promise vnto vs no certaintie of enioying them seeing the Lord for our sinnes can take away our corne in the time of haruest and our wine in the vintage either by vnseasonable weather or the inuasion of our enemies He can sincke the ship in the hauen as well as in the middest of the ocean and he can pluck back his benefits from vs euen when we are readie to stretch out the hand to receiue them The consideration wherof should make vs neuer to promise vnto our selues securitie and certaintie of these benefits so long as liuing in our sinnes without repentance we iustly prouoke the Lord to strip vs of them And secondly we may hereby be moued not to put our trust and confidence in these worldly things for our preseruation seeing they are most vncertaine but to place our whole affiance in the Lord who will neuer faile them in time of need who rest and relie themselues vpon his prouidence Fiftly we may heere obserue that all those who doe not Those are vsurpers of hold the benefits which they enioy as from the Lord but ascribe them to their friends their owne wit labour and industrie Gods gifts who do not acknowledge that they hold them frō him they are vniustly possessed of them because they hold them by an vnlawfull tenure and therefore may at the will of the grand-Lord of heauen and earth be iustly euery minute dispossessed of them And though he suffer them for a time to hold them in their custodie yet they are not to be esteemed true owners but vsurpers and intruders into that which belongeth not vnto them and therefore in the great day of assises they shall answere for it c. ANd so much concerning the first punishment here denounced Vers 10 The second followeth vers 10. And now will I discouer her leaudnes in the sight of her louers and no man shall deliuer her out of mine hand In which words the Lord The exposition meeteth with a corrupt conceit and wicked hope of the Israelites namely that though the Lord should oppose against them yet they
and in the right poeticall vaine vnlesse they bee stuffed with the names of Heathen idols as Iupiter Apollo Pallas Venus Cupid and such like sometime also in a prophane deuotion inuocating their helpe for the perfecting of their poesie but accursed be that vaine wit or eloquence which sacrilegiously robbeth God of his honor bestoweth it vpon idols whether it be done in iest or earnest So likewise here is condemned their practise who sweare by the idoll of the Masse by the Rhood and such like idols for what is this but to renue their credit by an honorable remembrance of them and after an idolatrous manner to seate them in Gods place which we are not so much as to name without branding them with some note of hatred and detestation ANd so much concerning the third benefit which the Lord promiseth to the Church The fourth followeth which is peace tranquillitie and immunitie from dangers Vers 18. And in that day will I make a couenant for them with Vers 18 the wilde beasts and with the fowles of the heauen and with that that creepeth vpon the earth and I will breake the bow and the sword and the battell out of the earth and will make them to sleepe safely In which words the Lord promiseth that he wil The exposition so watch ouer his Church and people with his prouidence that they shall haue securitie and peaceable rest though they be compassed about with dangers and manifold euils and amongst others he maketh choice of two to signifie all the rest namely that he would deliuer them first from the brutish rage and violence of vnreasonable creatures and secondly from the force and violence of men who shall oppose against them The first is expressed in these words I will make in that day a couenāt for them with the wilde beasts Where the Lord sheweth that when his people were conuerted and reconciled vnto him he would not only bestow vpon them his benefits both spirituall and corporall but also defend them from dangers so that no euill should come vnto them and particularly he promiseth to protect them from vnreasonable creatures which are all referred to three sorts first beasts as Beares Lions Tigres Wolues c. secondly the fowles of heauen by which hee vnderstandeth all rauenous and harmefull birds thirdly creeping things as serpents canker wormes locusts caterpillers and such like All which creatures before the fall were by Gods appointment vnder mans lordship and dominion yeelding vnto him voluntarie and free obedience but after by his sinne and rebellion man had made God his enemie he lost his soueraigntie the creatures rebelling against him who was a rebell to their great Lord and Creator and pulling their necks out of the yoke of their subiection and whereas before they peaceably obeyed him now they were willing to bee the Lords readie instruments to inflict deserued punishments and bring man to destruction the water to drowne him as it did the whole world the fire to burne him as it did Sodome the aire to poyson and infect him as in the time of the pestilence the earth to swallow him as it did Dathan and his followers the beares to deuoure him as 2. King 17. 25. Numb 21. 6. they did the 42. children at the prayer of Elisha the lions to destroy him as they did the Samaritanes Serpents to sting him as they did the Israelites yea euen the basest creatures haue both will power enough when God giueth signe of battel as frogs caterpillers lice as we may see in the plagues of Egypt and in the example of Herod deuoured by lice Act. 12. And therefore when the Lord mustereth and marshalleth vp together his armie of iudgements wherewith he punisheth the rebellion and sin of man cruell and noisome beasts are one choice band wherewith he assaulteth him as appeareth Leuit. 26. 22. Ezech. 14. 15. But when as man in Christ is Leuit. 26. 27. Ezech. 14 15. reconciled vnto God then also the Lord beginneth to restore vnto him his dominion ouer the creatures and maketh a couenant with them for man that is causeth them to become harmelesse so that they shall not be either willing or able to hurt any of his children And this is that which the Lord promiseth to those that feare him Psal 91. 13. Ezech. Psal 91. 13. Ezech. 34. 25. 34. 25. So also Eliphaz speaketh notably to this purpose Iob 5. 22. 23. Howsoeuer therefore Gods children are compassed Iob. 5. 22. 23. about with dangers yet they shall be safe vnder the shadow of his wings Psal 91. 1. 4. And in the middest of turmoyles Psal 91. 1. 4. and molestations their soule shall dwell at ease as it is Psal 25. 13. Psal 25. 13. But it may be demanded how this promise is accomplished How the faithful haue peace with the brute creatures seeing the godly man hath these beasts in subiection no more then the wicked and oftentimes they are alike hurtfull and pernitious vnto both I answere first that the Lord doth performe this promise as hee doth all other concerning worldly and temporall benefits and deliuerances namely not absolutely but conditionally so farre foorth as they will stand with his glorie and the good and saluation of his children and if at any time it fall out otherwise then though he inflicteth vpon them the contrarie afflictions troubles and dangers yet hee sanctifieth them for the accomplishing of these maine ends the furthering of his owne glorie and their saluation so as they are not hurtful but exceeding good and profitable vnto them And thus the Lord performeth his promise of preseruing his children from bruite beasts and such like dangers so that either they may be assured of deliuerance from them which vsually the Lord granteth as wee may see in the example of Daniel in the lions denne and Dan. 6. Act. 28. 5. Paul whom the viper could not hurt or otherwise if they be ouertaken of these dangers it is for their good seeing all things euen afflictions themselues worke together for the best to Gods elect Rom. 8. 28. Rom. 8. 28. Secondly wee are to know that the Lord doth vsually in the old Testament vnder the promises of temporall benefits and deliuerances with which the people were best acquainted shadow out vnto them his spirituall grace and protection and so here particularly he promiseth protection and deliuerance from brute and sauage beasts with which the Israelites were much vexed and indangered that by this benefit which they could feelingly apprehend he might leade them as it were by the hand and bring them to a full assurance of his protection and carefull prouidence alwaies watching ouer them for their deliuerance out of all dangers especially from the furie and malice of our spirituall enemies sinne Satan and the world who neuer cease assaulting of Gods elect 1. Pet. 5. 8. 1. Pet. 5. 8. Thirdly this couenant of peace and harmelesnesse may be said
greatnesse and in respect of our owne base vilenesse and vnworthinesse Lastly the wiues ignorance of her husbands perfections 6. The Lord marrieth his Church in knowledge whereby shee neither knoweth nor acknowledgeth his excellencies and good parts and whereby as she is often ready to vnderualue his worthinesse so also with an ouerweening conceit to ouerprize the gifts and qualities of strangers is a notable meanes to alienate her mind from her husband as being vnworthie of her loue and to moue her to affect others so the ignorance of the spouse the Church of Gods excellencie mercie goodnes and all perfections is a chiefe cause that moueth her to leaue the Lord and to follow her louers for if she did but know the Lord she should need no other arguments to rauish her heart with his loue nor any further inducement to moue her to forsake all others and to embrace him alone with constant affection And therefore the Lord in the last place promiseth that he will eternize the mariage betweene him and his Church by illuminating her mind with a true knowledge of him whereupon it must necessarily follow that shee will preferre him aboue all idols and false gods seeing she clearely perceiueth that he infinitly excelleth them all in goodnesse perfection and all true worthinesse The like promise we haue Esay 54. 13. And all thy children shall be taught of the Lord Ier. 31. 34. And they shal teach Esay 54. 13. Jer. 31. 34. no more euery man his neighbour and euery man his brother saying know the Lord for they shall all know me from the least of them to the greatest of them saith the Lord. So Ioel. 2. 28. 29. which was accomplished Act. 2. 17. Joel 2. 28. Act 2. 17. Now this knowledge of which he here speaketh is not so much what Christ is in himselfe namely most infinite most mightie most wise c. but especially what he is vnto vs to wit a carefull head and a most louing husband who hath not only created vs but also redeemed vs with his precious blood shead and hereby obtained for vs the pardon of our sinnes reconciliation sanctification and eternall saluation who giueth vnto vs also all benefits spirituall and temporal and protecteth vs frō all dangers With which sauing knowledge whosoeuer are indued it is impossible they should forsake Christ their husband or preferre a strange loue before the loue of him who hath so dearely loued them And thus haue I shewed the meaning of the words and The Do ∣ ctrines the chiefe points contained in them In the next place wee are to consider of those doctrines which arise out of them both for our instruction and consolation And first out of Gods couenant is grounded vpon his vndeserued grace goodnesse this contract of mariage wee may obserue that the couenant of grace betweene God and his Church is grounded vpon Gods free mercie and vndeserued goodnesse without any condition of our owne workes and worthinesse Neither is it here said that hee would marrie the Church if she were iust holy faithfull and worthie his loue but hee absolutely promiseth without all conditions that hee will marrie her and being married will endow her with righteousnesse iudgement pardon of her sinnes faithfulnesse so that these are not the causes mouing the Lord to espouse the Church but because in his free loue he hath married her therefore hee will prosecute her with his loue and bestow all these graces and benefits vpon her But this most cleerely appeareth whereas hee saith hee will marrie her in benignitie and mercie for benignitie presupposeth the Churches want and pouertie and mercie presupposeth her miserie neither if she were rich in her selfe should she neede the Lords beneficence nor if she were in happie estate should she neede mercie and compassion Secondly wee may obserue that the Lord alone is the author of this spirituall mariage for when wee neither seeke nor desire it hee wooes vs and also inclines vs to grant his suite And therefore let the Lord haue the whole glorie of his owne worke and let not vs rob him of any part thereof by ascribing it to our owne free will merits or worthinesse Thirdly we here leanre what is the great dignitie and excellencie The dignitie of the faithfull of the Church and of euery faithfull man for howsoeuer they are basely esteemed of in the world and accounted the very ofscouring of al things yet in truth there is none equall with them in honour and worthinesse seeing it hath pleased the Lord of Lords and King of Kings to espouse them vnto himselfe When Saul offered Dauid his daughter in mariage hee thought it such an high degree of honour as he was altogether vnworthie of so that in sight of his owne meannesse he crieth out What am I and what is my life or the 1. Sam. 18. 18. familie of my father in Israel that I should be sonne in law to the King how much more then may we filled with rauishing wonder exclaime what are we dust and ashes miserable and wretched men that wee should be aduanced to this royall dignitie as to be the spouse of the glorious King of heauen and earth The vse which we are to make hereof is that if we are not We must desire the spirituall honour of the faithful as yet inuested with this honour we labour to attaine vnto it for if we doe as it is the nature of all men desire honour and preferment why doe wee follow a shadow and neglect the substance why doe we like children runne after the bubble of vaine and momentanie glorie and in the meane time neuer seeke after that superexcellent and eternall glorie of being espoused vnto God especially considering that worldly honour is vncertaine both in getting and in the keeping and seeing if wee labour after this honour of being married vnto God wee shall most surely attaine vnto it for the Lord himselfe publisheth and offereth this contract and there can no impediment hinder it vnlesse we our selues forbid the banes And secondly those that are aduanced alreadie vnto this height of honour must neuer forget to be truly thankfull vnto him who is the author of their aduancement when they deserued by their sinner ignominie and disgrace Fourthly wee may heere learne that the poorest faithfull The poorest faithfull man richer then the wealthiest worldling man is in better estate and possessed of more rich treasures then the wealthiest Mammonist in the world for they haue Christ himselfe and all his benefits they are true owners of the treasures of his righteousnesse and obedience yea and by vertue of this spirituall mariage they haue right and interest not only to all the temporall benefits of this life but they also haue the ioynter of Gods kingdome assured vnto them Fiftly being espoused to God let vs euer remembring this We ought to behaue our selues as it becommeth the spouse of Christ honourable aduancement
consciences for the recouerie of our health c. The vse hereof serueth for the refuting of a twofold error Ignorāt ideots and carnal hypocrites confuted the first of secure worldlings who liuing in their ignorance and naturall blindnesse content themselues with their good meaning the other of hypocrites and carnall Gospellers who thinke it sufficient if they haue knowledge enough to discourse of religiō though they make no vse of their knowledge either for the sanctifying of their affections or the reforming of their life and conuersation The first sort are to know that whosoeuer are espoused vnto Christ they are also indued with knowledge of him and his truth of which being vtterly ignorant they cannot challenge Christ for their husband and consequently can make no claime to any of his goods blessings and benefits Neither can they haue any assurance that they are of the Church howsoeuer they are in the Church seeing the Lord hath certainly promised that euery member thereof shall know him from the least to the greatest of them Iere. 31. 34. And the other are to remember that Ier. 31. 34. Christ hath not onely married his Church vnto himselfe in knowledge but also in righteousnesse and faithfulnesse that he hath not only espoused vnto himselfe our tongues lips but also our hearts and hands and therefore they who are vnfaithfull destitute of righteousnesse impure in their hearts and prophane in their actions and conuersation they haue no title or interest in Christ nor in any thing which belongeth vnto him ANd so much concerning the fifth benefit which is the mariage of Christ with his Church The sixth followeth which is that being ioyned vnto Christ in this neere bond of mariage he will gratiously heare all her suites grant her requests and supplie all her wants with the riches of his benefits Vers 21. And in that day I will heare saith the Lord I Vers 21 will euen heare the heauens they shall heare the earth 22. And the earth shall heare the corne and the wine and the oyle and they shall heare Israel The which words doe well depend vpon The exposition the former for as the wife by vertue of that neere vnion betweene her and her husband may iustly challenge a fauourable hearing of her suites and requests in such things as are lawfull and conuenient and take vpon her the rule of the familie next and immediatly vnder her husband and the vse of his goods with which he hath endowed her so Christ being married vnto the Church promiseth to heare her suites and seeing he is Lord of heauen and earth to grant vnto her rule ouer his creatures so as they shall become seruiceable vnto her and be readie to supplie all her wants So the Apostle speaketh 1. Cor. 3. 22. 23. All are yours and ye are Christs and Christ Gods 1. Cor. 3. 22. 23. But let vs come to the words themselues wherein is set downe the time when God would endow his Church with these benefits In that day that is in the time of the Gospell when he had made with her his new couenant of grace and had knit her vnto himselfe in this neere vnion of mariage Secondly the author of these gifts namely the Lord of hosts vnder whose rule and conduct all the whole armie of the creatures are subiected Thirdly here is expressed the benefit promised namely that he will make all his creatures both in heauen and earth to become his instruments and meanes to deriue his blessings benefits vnto his spouse the Church in these words I will heare the heauens c. Where he alludeth to the contrarie curse threatned against the transgressors of the law Deut. 28. 23. And the heauen which is ouer thy head shall be brasse and Deut. 28. 23. 24 the earth that is vnder thee iron 24. And the Lord shall giue thee for raine of thy land dust and ashes c. And sheweth that after he hath made his new couenant with his Church and is reconciled vnto her in Christ his curse shall be turned into a blessing Now vnder this particular of hearing his Church in the time of dearth he doth synecdochically promise that he will heare and relieue her in all her wants and necessities according to that Ioh. 16. 23. And vnder these speciall benefits Joh. 16. 23. of corne wine and oyle are vnderstood all temporall benefits necessarie for the vse and comfort of Gods Church so Psal 4. 7. Yea vnder them wee are typically to vnderstand all Psal 4. 7. spirituall gifts and graces for it was vsuall in the time of the law to prefigure the kingdome of Christ vnder the kingdom of Dauid spirituall peace vnder worldly peace eternall life vnder old age the riches of heauen vnder the riches of the earth our heauenly patrimonie and inheritance vnder the possession of the land of Canaan and the earthly Ierusalem Fourthly here is set down the maner how and the meanes whereby he would deriue these blessings by a notable gradation I will heare the heauen and the heauen shall heare the earth c. Where it is implied that the meanes of obtaining thē shall be prayer the which by an hyperbolical metaphor and wonderfull loftinesse of speech is ascribed to vnreasonable and vnsensible creatures though it properly appertain vnto man that it might after a more emphaticall manner moue the mindes of the faithfull The like figure is vsed in many other places as Psal 93. 3. 98. 8. 107. 21. 27. Hab. 2. 11. Psal 93. 3. 98. 8. 10● 21 Hab. 2. 11. Rom. 8. 22. Esa 1. 2. Rom. 8. 22. Esa 1. 2. So heere the Prophet bringeth in man calling for corne wine and oyle these praying to the earth the earth to heauen and heauen to God For the vnderstanding whereof we are to know that man is said to call vpon food when as there is dearth and scarcitie and corne wine and oyle are said to heare him or as the word here vsed signifieth hearing to answere him when as they offer themselues vnto him for the supplying of his wants in great plentie and abundance And corne wine and oyle are said to call vpon the earth when as the earth doth not bring them foorth but through her barrennesse maketh a scarcitie of them and contrariwise the earth is said to heare them when by her vertue strength and moisture she affoordeth store of these blessings And so the earth is said to pray vnto the heauens when as wanting moisture she gapeth and as it were earnestly desireth the first and latter raine whereby she may become fruitfull and the heauen is said to heare the earth when accordingly she distilleth her seasonable and pleasant shewers whereby the earth and the fruites thereof are refreshed The heauen is said to pray vnto God when as her cloudes and vapours are dried vp or restrained so as she cannot gratifie the earth with her moisture and the Lord is said to
heare her when as he giueth vnto her vertue to gather cloudes and vapours and open her windowes floodgates so as she may distill her sweete drops to water the earth The last thing here expressed is the persons vpon whom the Lord will bestow these benefits namely all his elect and faithfull ones whom hee hath espoused vnto himselfe and these are comprehended vnder the name Iizreel the signification of which word is here changed neither is it here taken in the euill part as it was Ch. 1. 4. to wit for the seed of God whom he would scatter and cast away but in the better sense for the seed of God whom he would gather into his Church and store vp in his garner of euerlasting happinesse By which change of the signification the Lord would shew that his wrath was changed into mercie and his iudgements into benefits in the time of the Gospell And that this name is so to be taken it appeareth by the verse following where the Lord following the allegorie saith that he will sow her that is this Iizreel his holy seed as also in that he changeth both the other names Lo-ruchamah into ruchamah Lo-ammi into ammi No mercie into Mercie and Not my people into Thou art my people And this is the meaning of these words The doctrines The Do ∣ ctrines which arise out of them are these First wee may here learne who is the author of all our blessings and benefits temporall The Lord is the author of all blessings and spirituall namely the Lord himselfe for he it is that giueth vs our corne wine and oyle he it is who causeth plentie and maketh dearth and out of the garners of his al-sufficient prouidence wee haue all our prouision and sustenance The eyes of all waite vpon him and he giueth them their meate in due season and if he shut his hand they all hunger and pine for want if he open it all things liuing are filled with plentie as it is Psal 145. 15. 16. Psalm 145. 15. 16. The consideration whereof should moue vs rather to depend vpon the Lord for our plentie and prouision then vpon the heauens the earth or the seasons of the yeere seeing he is the principall cause and these but his instruments and inferiour meanes which he vseth for our good Secondly if wee abound in these blessings let vs praise the Lord in the fruitiō of them and be readie out of our abundance to relieue the want and penurie of our poore brethren as the Lord hath inioyned vs for all these temporall benefits though good in themselues are not good vnto vs vnlesse they be receiued with thanksgiuing and sanctified to our vse by the word and prayer as it is 1. Tim. 4. 5. And if abounding with them we do 1. Tim. 4. 5. not communicate them with the poore we commit the sinne of the Sodomites as appeareth Ezech. 16. 49. and consequently Ezech. 16. 49. make our selues obnoxious to their punishments Secondly we may here obserue the time when the Lord The new Couenant is the fountaine of all our good bestoweth these benefits vpon his Church expressed in these words And in that day that is in the day of her espousals when she is married vnto Christ in righteousnes iudgement c. and by Christ reconciled vnto God for before this day we are not onely strangers but also enemies and so remaining subiect to Gods wrath we haue all the creatures opposed against vs but when wee are married vnto Christ and in him reconciled vnto God then all things work together for our good and nothing is wanting vnto vs which is profitable Rom. 8. 28. for vs to receiue From whence we learne that this new couenant of grace betweene God and vs and this spirituall marriage with Christ is the fountaine from which all blessings and benefits spring and flow vnto vs. And therefore if we would haue no good thing wanting which we can desire thē let vs in the first place seek to be espoused vnto Christ in righteousnesse iudgement benignitie and compassion and then the Lord will supplie all our wants and giue vs plentie of corne wine and oyle and all other his benefits And let vs auoid the practise of worldly men who in the first place seeke for glorie riches houses lands and pleasures and in the meane time neuer seeke to be espoused vnto Christ or in him to be reconciled vnto God deferring this as a matter of least importance to old age or the end of life but rather let vs In the first place seeke the kingdome of God and his righteousnesse Matth. 6. 33. and then all other things shall be cast vpon vs as our Sauiour hath promised Matth. 6. 33. Let vs first labour to be receiued into the couenant of grace and to be espoused vnto Christ Iesus and then he will inrich vs with the dowrie of all his temporall and spirituall benefits Thirdly we here learne that whatsoeuer vertue strēgth The creatures haue all their vertue from God whereby they benefit vs. is in any of the creatures to benefit sustaine and nourish vs they haue it wholly from the Lord as appeareth by this notable gradation for we cannot ordinarily liue without corne and food we cannot haue these vnlesse the earth bring them foorth for our vse the earth is barren and vnfruitfull vnlesse it be watered with the dew of heauen the heauens haue no power to distill their fruitfull and pleasant shewers vpon the earth vnlesse the Lord giue this vertue vnto them So that he is the principall cause and first mouer who setteth all inferiour meanes on worke and giueth them motion and strength to deriue his blessings and benefits vpon man neither can a drop of raine fall vpon the earth nor the earth bring foorth one graine of corne but by Gods prouidence and appointment and therfore we may conclude with the Apostle that In him we liue moue and haue our being Act. 17. 28. Is then Act. 27. 28. the earth fruitfull let vs ascribe the whole glorie vnto God haue we a fertill soyle let vs not rest vpon it but vpon Gods prouidence for he that hath giuen it this power and vertue can take it away make it barren Is there a dearth and scarcitie Psal 107. 34. in the land let vs not looke so much to the heauens clouds and weather as vnto God the ruler and disposer of them all expecting and begging plentie at his hands and so hee will heare the heauens and the heauens the earth the earth the fruits and the fruits will heare vs c. Fourthly we here learne that howsoeuer the Lord is the God bestoweth his blessings by inferiour meanes principall cause and chiefe author of all the benefits which we receiue yet we are not to expect them from his hand immediatly but mediatly by inferiour causes and instruments as appeareth by the gradation here vsed and therefore wee
are not idlie to expect food from Gods immediate prouidence neglecting the subordinate meanes as obseruing the seasons and husbanding the ground with labour and diligence for though he bee bountifull in bestowing his benefits yet he giueth them not to idle loyterers but to painfull labourers Gen. 3. 19. Genes 3. 19. Fiftly we may obserue the infinite wisdome of God who Gods wisdom an making his creatures to stand in need of one anothers helpe hath lincked his creatures together in such excellent order as they haue need of one anothers helpe and all depend vpon him as vpon the first mouer Man needeth food food is not prouided without the helpe of the earth the earth is not fruitfull without the dew of heauen that heauens cannot send their raine without Gods blessing appointment Where we may note that man who is Lord of the creatures standeth in need of the meanest of thē that whereas his soueraigntie might puffe him vp in pride his necessitie which maketh him stand beholding to the basest creature might teach him humilitie Sixthly wee may obserue that the chiefe meanes which the Praier the chiefe meanes of obtaining all blessings Church is enioyned to vse for obtaining of all benefits is prayer as is implied by the manner of speech here vsed And I will heare saith the Lord c. For howsoeuer the Lord hath determined to multiplie his mercies vpon the faithfull yet not without the meanes of prayer inuocatiō Because if we did not first see and feele our wants if seeing thē we did not earnestly desire to haue them supplied if to haue our desire satisfied we had not our recourse vnto God by prayer wee would neuer know nor acknowledge that we had receiued these gifts frō God nor bee thankfull vnto him for them nor for the time to come depend vpon his prouidence And thus do earthly parents deale with their childrē although they are willing to supply al their wants yet first they will be intreated that hereby their loue affection towards them may be endeared and that they may learne obedience and reuerence seeing their owne want of their parents helpe and their readines in granting succour and reliefe Seeing then praier is the meanes of obtaining all blessings We must pray continully from God the conduit whereby the cleare streames of graces and benefits are deriued frō God the fountaine of all goodnes and the hand wherewith we fill our emptie soules in the store-house of Gods rich mercie let vs continually exercise our selues in this holy dutie and seeing our wants are continuall Let vs pray continually as the Apostle exhorteth vs 1. Thes 5. 17. Are we 1. Thess 5. 17. destitute of Gods blessings praier obtaineth thē Ioh. 16. 23. 24. Ioh. 16. 23. haue we them in abundance prayer sanctifieth them to our vse 1. Tim. 4. 5. doe wee employ our selues in our busines prayer bringeth a blessing vpon our labours Gen. 24. 12. do we cease 1. Tim. 4. 5. Genes 24. 12. Numb 10. 36. from them prayer blesseth our rest Numb 10. 35. are we merrie prayer seasoneth our mirth are we sorrowfull prayer easeth our griefe Iam. 5. 13. are we in trouble praier obtaineth Jam. 5. 13. Psal 50. 15. 107. 10. 13. deliuerance Psal 50. 15. are we in any manner of extremitie prayer bringeth reliefe Psal 107. 6. 13. 19. 28. Seuenthly whereas he saith not that God will heare Iizreel Our corruption in depending vpon inferiour means but that he will heare the heauens c. and that the corne wine and oyle shall heare Iizreel he doth here intimate our corruption and imperfection which causeth vs in the time of our wants in the first place to thinke vpon the inferiour meanes and secondarie causes for the supplying our necessities as vpon the corne wine and oyle before in our cogitations we ascend vnto God begging for helpe and reliefe at his hands the which our infirmitie the Lord tolerateth if wee doe not rest in their inferiour meanes but ascend from one to another vntill we come to the supreme cause of all blessings God himselfe as when being in want penurie we think we must needs starue vnlesse we haue corne food then we must also remember that we cānot haue thē vnlesse the earth yeeld thē nor the earth yeeld thē vnlesse the heauēs make thē fruitful nor that the heauēs can do this vnlesse the Lord enable thē And therfore finding that he is the chiefe cause first mouer who setteth al the rest on work let vs chiefely labor by our praiers to moue him to succour vs assuring our selues that when he is inclined to help and releeue vs there wil be no want in the inferiour meanes as thus we are to ascend vnto God that wee may call vpon him so being possessed of his benefits we must likewise to ascend to returne him thankes Lastly we here learne that all Gods gifts and benefits are All benefits bestowed vpon man for the faithfuls sake grāted vnto mankind at the suite of Iizreel that is for the faithfull and elects sake and if it were not for them the heauens would be as brasse without raine and moisture and the earth as iron barren and vnfruitfull Iolatrous Laban is inriched for religious Iacobs sake and Putiphar hath a blessing vpon his whole Deut. 28. 23. house because Ioseph is one of his familie The murmuring Israelites gather Manna sent from heauen because the faithfull Israelites should not want the whole people fareth the better because they haue a Moses amongst them who in his feruent prayers commendeth their suits vnto God And contrariwise when the godly are seuered from the wicked there is nothing to be expected but plagues punishments When Noah is entred into the Arke the sloud drowneth the whole world Whē Lot is gone out of Sodome it is soone after consumed with fire and brimstone When Gods people haue seuered themselues from Corah the earth swalloweth vp him and his followers And when Iosias is gathered to his fathers then sinful Israel must expect captiuitie and desolation Notwithstanding such is the blind pride of wicked men and The wicked impute all their euils vnto the faithful their inueterate malice towards the faithfull that they are readie to ascribe their prosperitie vnto themselues their calamities vnto the godly Ahab thinketh himselfe innocent and condemneth Elias to be the troubler of Israel Saul supposeth that neither he nor his posteritie could prosper vnlesse Dauid were murthered and the Scribes and Pharisies shame not to affirme that if Christ were suffered all would beleeue in him and that hereupon must needs follow their destruction and the desolation of their countrey Ioh. 11. 48. Ioh. 11. 48. ANd so much concerning the sixth benefit The last followeth which is the propagation and multiplication of the Church in the time of the Gospell Vers 23. And I will sow her Vers 23 vnto me in
mind times of old wherein the Lord gaue vs sure testimonies of his loue and so from the immutabilitie of his loue mercy and goodnesse wee may receiue comfort So Dauid Psal 77. 11. Psal 77. 11. Secondly we may obserue how the Church behaueth her selfe when shee seemeth left and forsaken of God namely she sits downe like a desolate widdow and spendeth her time That we must not be carelesse and sencelesse in the time of affliction in mourning and lamentation whence we learne not to make light of this heauie affliction nor to walk vnder this waighty burthen with stiffe and stretched out necks but when God in the time of affliction seemeth to estrange and absent himselfe we must humble our soules with mourning and lamentation watch and waite for his returne and continually cry and call vpon him by hearty prayer desiring nothing in the world so much as that hee will hasten his comming and re-assure vs of his fauour And if we thus behaue our selues then shall we finde Gods promise verified Esa 54. 8. For a Esay 54. 8. little while haue I forsaken thee but with great compassion will I gather thee And by this meanes also shall we gather vnto our selues assurance that we are indeed espoused vnto God when as the Lord our husband hauing absented himselfe in some displeasure we doe not like strumpets rejoyce in his absence or if there be any little griefe seeke to put it off by haunting the company of vaine persons and by passing the time in sports and pastimes but like loyall and louing wiues bewayle his absence and displeasure taking delight in nothing till wee enjoy his loue againe in whom our soule delighteth Here therefore two extreames are to be auoyded for as we must not sincke and fall downe flat vnder the burthen of Gods displeasure so we must not stand vpright with stiffe and stretched out necks casting it aside without care or sorrow but we must take the middle course that is we must stoupe and buckle vnder our burthen as being weary of bearing it we must sit downe and mourne like a widdow forsaken and desolate delighting in nothing till wee feele and finde that God deligheth in vs and is reconciled vnto vs. An example hereof we haue in the Church Psal 137. 2. 3. Psal 237. 2. 3. Thirdly we are to obserue Gods wise mixture of Mercy and Iudgement that the Church might neyther be secure Gods wise mixture of Mercy and Iudgement and carelesse nor yet comfortlesse and without hope for whereas he saith that she shall sit mourning for many dayes herein is implyed that her afflictions should neyther bee very short nor very long First hee sheweth that they should not be very short for they should last for many dayes and then that they should not be very long for they should not last for many ages or many yeares but onely for many dayes He doth not reckon the time by minutes or houres for then they would haue beene secure and wretchlesse and so taking no care to arme themselues with patience they would haue beene altogether vnprepared when contrary to their hope their afflictions were tediously continued nor yet by yeares or ages least whilest he sought to arme them with patience he should disarme them of hope vvhich is our chiefe stay to keepe vs from sincking vnder affliction The vse which we are to make hereof is that vvhen vvee are in affliction vve doe neither expect present deliuerance nor yet imagine that God will forsake vs for euer For if our hopes be frustrate vve shall grow impatient and if vve haue no hope at all we shall grow desperate Fourthly vve may obserue that he saith the Israelits should That our afflictions are momentanie howsoeuer they seeme tedious to the flesh continue in their afflicted estate many dayes vvhereas in truth they continued diuers ages euen sixe hundred fourescore yeeres So hee saith that the Church of the Smirnians should haue tribulation for ten dayes Apoc. 2. 10. And that the Church should be fed in the vvildernesse of affliction a thousand two hundred and threescore dayes Chap. 11. 6. By vvhich computation hee teacheth vs how vve are to accompt of the time of affliction namely howsoeuer to the flesh it seeme long and tedious yet it is to be judged short momentanie in comparison of that eternall glory vvhich attendeth for vs after vve haue finished the short skirmish of afflictions When as therefore our troubles and crosses seeme so tedious as though they would neuer end let vs comfort our selues with this consideration that they are in truth but light short and momentanie in respect of that superexcellent and eternall waight of glorie which is reserued for vs. 2 Cor. 4. 17. 2 Cor. 4. 17. Fiftly whereas the Lord describing the widdowhood of the Church of Israell and the seperation betweene him and her doth after-wards expound himselfe and sheweth that it consisteth in the taking away of their King Magistrates The Magistracie and Ministerie signes of gods presence ciuill gouernment and the meanes of his publicke worship and seruice hence wee learne that Princes wisely ruling in the common wealth and godly and faithfull Ministers publickly executing their functions which concerne gods pure and sincere worship in the Church are notable signes representing vnto vs Gods owne presence So that where the Lord hath established a lawfull and vvise Magistracie and a godly learned and faithful Ministerie there himselfe is present ioyned in a neere communion with that church common-wealth where these are wanting from thence the Lord may be said to haue withdrawne himselfe and to haue made a seperation leauing such a people in the estate of an afflicted vviddow And this appeareth not onely in this but also in diuers other places of scripture For first for Kings and Magistrates they are said to be breathing and mortall gods and the children of the most high vvho in their gouernment after a more peculiar manner resemble their heauenly father Psal 82. 6. 7. In vvhose assemblies God standeth and Psal 82. 6. 7. judgeth righteous judgement ver 1. God standeth in the assemblie of gods he iudgeth among gods And for the ministery and publicke seruice of God vvee haue Christs promise That where two or three are gathered together in his name there is hee in the middest of them Mat. 18. 20. And howsoeuer Mat. 18. 20. being infinite he filleth heauen and earth vvith his presence yet after a more peculiar manner he walketh in the middest of the seauen golden candlestickes Apoc. 1. 13. that is he is present in his Church to rule defend and preserue it And hence it is that vvhen Dauid vvas banished from the Temple and debarred of the publike meanes of Gods worship hee complayneth that he vvas banished from Gods presence and cast Psal 42. 2. and 84. 1. 2. out of his sight Psal 42. 2. and 84. 1. 2. The vse hereof is first
refuge to flee vnto when our sinnes terrifie vs namely Gods free and vndeserued goodnesse for the shade of Gods mercy is our best shelter when as wee are scorched with the heat of his wrath and our best course when we are pursued by his Iustice is to flye to the throne of his grace and goodnes for pardon and forgiuenesse When therefore our consciences accuse vs for sinne let vs not flye vnto our owne righteousnes merits satisfactions for whatsoeuer wee haue done it was but our Luke 17. 10. duety and no man dischargeth one debt by paying another nor yet to the merits of Saints for they could merit nothing for themselues much lesse for others neyther haue we any proprietie vnto them nor they sufficiency to make satisfaction for the least sinne but we must flye vnto Gods goodnes and expect pardon onely through his free and vndeserued mercy and Christs all sufficient merits An Example hereof we haue in Dauid who hauing sinned doth not seeke for pardon by pleading that he had beene in former times a man according to Gods owne heart or by promising to make satisfaction by his future obedience but disclayming all opinion of desert he onely relyeth himselfe vpon Gods mercy Psal 51. 1. Psal 51. 1. Eightly out of the time of the accomplishing this promise concerning the conuersion and deliuerance of the afflicted Long afflictiōs often necessary for our humiliation Israelits namely that it should be after that they had a long time beene tryed with afflictions and in the last dayes hence we obserue first that such is the obstinacie and hardnes of hart euen sometimes of those that belong to Gods election that they had neede for their humiliation and conuersion to be afflicted not onely with grieuous but also long lasting miseries And therefore it is not alwayes expedient for vs to haue quicke deliuerance out of our afflictions vnlesse they haue wrought that good worke in vs for which they were inflicted that is humiliation and vnfayned repentance for it will little auaile vs to haue our soules wounded with sinne once or twise dressed if they bee so left before they bee perfectly cured because they will againe ranckle and become as dangerous as they were before it will nothing profit vs to haue ben cast into the fierie furnace of affliction if presently wee be taken out before wee be purged and purified from the drosse of our corruptions Secondly wee may obserue that howsoeuer the afflictions The Lord deliuereth out of tedious afflictions of gods elect being tediously continued doe seeme to threaten their vtter distruction yet in the end the Lord will graunt deliuerance cause them to further their conuersion and saluation it may be whilest we deferre our repentance the Lord will delay his helpe as though hee had vtterly forsaken vs but wee may assure our selues that though he bee long in comming to our ayde yet at length hee will come and graunt vnto vs a good issue out of all our trialls Examples hereof wee haue in the Israelits in the Aegyptian captiuitie in Babilon and Assiria in the three Children Daniell in the Lyons den and many others LECTVRES VPON THE FOVRTH CHAPTER OF THE PROPHECIE OF HOSEA THe Prophet hauing in the former Chapter The argument testified and approued the loue of God towards the people of Israell to the end that those who were long to continue in a grieuous Captiuitie might in the middest of their miseries be supported with some comfort doth now againe direct his speach to the Israelites of his owne times accusing and conuincing all states and conditions of diuers grieuous and enormious sinnes which raigned and ruled in the whole land and withall intermixeth such just and well deserued punishments as the Lord was purposed to inflict vpon them vnlesse they preuented them by their vnfained repentance And least the people of Iuda by following their practise should make themselues subiect to the like miseries he admonisheth them not to communicate with them in their sinnes that they might not be pertakers of their punishments And this is the maine argument of this Chapter the parts The generall Analysis of the Chapter thereof are two The first is an accusation or sharp reprehension of the people of Israell for their manifold haynous sinnes from the first Verse to the fifteenth The second is an admonition to the people of Iuda to auoid their sinnes that they may escape their punishments from the fifteenth Verse to the end of the Chapter The first part is expressed in a judiciall forme of proceeding wherein the people of Israel are summoned to appeare and arraigned before the Tribunall of Gods Iudgement to answere such things as should bee laid to their charge namely that they had by their capitall crimes and enormious sinnes offended against their soueraigne Lord the king of heauen and earth and so breaking his Lawes had made themselues guiltie and obnoxious to those punishments which were therin threatned All which their offences were comprized in foure seuerall bils of inditement of which being conuicted there is annexed to euery bill a forme of condemnation to suffer such punishments as they had justly deserued The first bill of inditement is contained Verse 1. and 2. the sentence of condemnation is affixed Verse 3. The second bill Verse 4. the sentence in the 5. The third bill and third sentence are intermixed Verse 6. 7. vnto the 11. The last bill Ver. 12. 13. the sentence of Iudgement in the latter part of the 13. Ver. and in the 14. And these are the speciall branches of this first generall The maine scope of this Prophecie part Now the generall scope of the Lord in all this is that the people who liued so securely in their sinnes that they little or nothing regarded eyther the person of the Prophets or their threatnings might at least be awakened out of their spirituall Lethargie when as they heard themselues summoned before Gods Iudgement Seate and perceiued that the Lord would no longer suffer his word to be contemned in the mouth of his seruants but would plead in his owne cause and examine and try the transgressours of his lawes before his owne Tribunall Seate of Iudgement and so proceed to the condemnation and execution of those whom he found guiltie BVt let vs come to speake of these speciall parts more particularly the first whereof is contayned in the three first verses wherein the people of Israell are by law conuicted and then by Gods just sentence condemned They are conuicted in these words verse 1. Heare the word of the Lord Verse 1 yee children of Israell for the Lord hath a controuersie with the inhabitants of the land because there is no truth nor mercy nor knowledge of God in the land verse 2. By swearing and lying and killing and stealing and whoring they brake out and bloud toucheth bloud Where is set downe first the summons and araignement of the people Heare the
word of the Lord ye Children of Israell Secondly the cause hereof which is a controuersie betweene the Lord of heauen and earth who is the party offended and both the plaintiffe and the judge and the Israelites who are the delinquents and parties offending For the Lord hath a controuersie with the inhabitants of the Land Thirdly the crimes whereof they are accused and conuicted which are the causes mouing the Lord to pursue them with his justice because there is no truth c. In the handling of which points I will obserue this order First I will expound the wordes Secondly obserue out of The order obserued in handling these verses them such instructions as they naturally offer vnto vs. Thirdly I will apply them to our owne times Concerning the First we are first to note the context and so come to shew the meaning of the words themselues In The context the former chapter the Lord vnder certaine types and Parables comforted those Israelits which were to be afflicted in a grieuous and tedious captiuitie by assuring them of his loue and that their miseries were but the chastisements of a louing father for their good and conuersion and not the punishments of an enemie for their hurt and destruction Now lest the secure Israelits of his owne times should take encouragement vnto them by the former doctrine of consolation to be moued thereby to continue in their impaenitencie hee sheweth that howsoeuer the Lord was purposed to be gracious vnto his elect Israelits in after ages yet he would in the meane time punish seuerely those haynous enormious sinnes as raigned amongst them vnlesse they preuented his judgements by their vnfained repentance And this is the context now let vs come to the meaning The peoples summons of the words Heare the word of the Lord ye children of Israell Wherein the Prophet summoneth the people to appeare before the Lord to answere vnto such things as should bee The exposition objected and laid to their charge For as judges before they suffer any to be accused or condemned doe cause their clarke or cryer to summon and call forth the partie to see what hee can answere for himselfe so doth the Lord take the same iudiciall course with sinners for the approouing of his righteous judgements that is hee citeth them before he accuseth them and accuseth them before hee condemneth them The which summons hee pronounceth sometimes immediately by himselfe as when he cited Adam to appeare before him Gen. 3. 9. in Paradise Gen. 3. 9. And thus hee summoneth men when as he speaketh vnto their harts consciences by his judgements and punishments And sometimes by his Ministers and that either men or Angels by men as by his Prophets ambassadors an example whereof we haue in this place the like whereof we haue Esa 1. 18. Ier. 2. 4. 5. Mich. 1. 2. Esay 1. 18. Iere. 2. 4. 5. Mich. 1. 2. and 6. 1. 2. 3. and 6. 1. 2. 3. c. By Angels either in this life when he maketh them his instruments and ministers of his afflictions judgements and punishments or at the end of the world when as the arch-Angell with the sound of his trumpet shall summon all men to appeare before the tribunall seate of Gods iudgement of which we may read Math. 24. 31. Mat. 24. 31. 1. Cor. 15 52. 1. Thes 4. 16. The drift of the summons 1 Cor. 15. 52. 1 Thes 4. 16. Now the maine drift of these summons is to moue the people to heare with greater reuerence care and conscience the reprehensions and comminations which after follow for howsoeuer they might haue some reason to neglect and contemne them if they regarded the Prophets person and the meanesse of his qualitie condition yet there was great cause why they should heare them not onely with reuerence but also with feare and trembling if they considered that he was but a cryer who summoned them in the name and at the appointment of the supreame judge of heauen earth and but a meane ambassador who deliuered vnto them not his owne words but the ambassage of his glorious and most mighty king from whom he is sent But let vs more specially consider of those arguments The arguments here vsed to moue attention which are contained in these summons proclaimed by the Lords Cryer whereby he moueth them to receiue his message with attention feare and reuerence The first is taken from the manner of his speach which is vsed when matters of great waight and importance follow and therefore is not to be hearkened vnto negligently or lightly to be regarded The second is taken from the person of him from whom this message is deliuered namely because it is Iehouah that speaketh vnto them who created them and continually preserued them who is al-sufficient to reward those who harken vnto him and almighty to punish those who neglect his word who had giuen vnto them many testimonies of his loue and multiplyed vpon them all his benefits aboue all other nations of the earth who did not reprehend and punish them for mallice to their persons or other sinister respects but that he might preserue them from vtter destruction if they would repent and forsake their sinnes or glorifie his justice in their punishments if by no meanes they would be reclaimed but obstinately persist in their sins after they had so often warning The third reason to moue them to heare and obey the voyce of the Lord summoning them by his Prophet is taken from their owne persons to whom the message is deliuered in that they were the people of Isel descended of the holy Patriarkes chosen amongst all other nations to be Gods peculiar Church and people with whom God had made a couenant and had on his part most absolutely performed it preseruing them from their enimies and multiplying vpon them all his benefits And this is the peoples summons where by they who had The controuersie between the Lord and the people of Israell a long time neglected the word of the Lord in the mouth of his Prophets were now cited to answere their contempt before the Tribunall seat of Gods Iudgement Now followeth the cause of this summons which is for the tryall of a controuersie betweene the Lord and the people of Israell For the Lord hath a Controuersie with the Inhabitants of the Land Where first we are to consider the nature of this controuersie and secondly the parties betweene whom it is controuerted Gods controuersies with a people are eyther verball or reall Verball when as by his word eyther immediately pronounced by himselfe as we may see in the example of Cain or by his Ministers he reproueth conuinceth and condemneth a people for their sinnes and threatneth his Iudgements due vnto them Reall when as a people notwithstanding Gods reprehensions and threatnings continuing in their impenitencie haue deserued punishments inflicted vpon them Of both which kindes of controuersies
alreadie poysoned there-with but like a riuer which hath swelled ouer his bankes ouerfloweth a whole countrey And as the canker or gangreene hauing taken one member of the bodie if it be not presently cured or cut off doth corrupt the next vntill it haue rotted the whole body so if sinne hauing tainted some few members of a body politicke bee not by wholesome lawes and execution of justice killed and suppressed it will like the gangreene spread ouer and corrupt the whole bodie of the common wealth The vse hereof is First that if sinne haue made an entrance The vses into vs wee labour to cast it out before it haue taken full possession and that wee crush in peeces this Babilonish broode before they grow too strong for vs. Secondly it serueth for the confutation of the foolish conceit The follie of those who defer repentance and practise of worldly men who nourish their corruptions and deferre their repentance from yeare to yeare thinking that howsoeuer it is now some-what difficult to maister their sinnes yet hereafter they may do it at pleasure but let such know that the longer their sinnes grow vpon them the more hardly will they be subdued if now they seeme too strong for them let them assure themselues that in further processe of time they will grow altogether vnresistable neyther will any fence restraine them from running and rushing into the pleasant pastures of sinne and wickednesse Thirdly seeing sinne is of such a contagious spreading and ouerflowing nature this must make vs carefull to auoid the company of wicked men least vve be tainted with their corruptions and if it haue like a generall Deluge ouerflowed the whole country where vvee dwell then as Noah was preserued from drowning by keeping himselfe within the Arke so if vvee would not bee drenched and drowned in this Sea of corruption which ouer-spreadeth the whole earth vvee must keepe our selues in the Arke of Gods Church and frequent the company of Gods faithfull people for if we haunt the fellowship of the wicked we shall be surely caryed away in the streame both of their sin and also of their punishments Fourthly more particularly it teacheth Magistrates and Superiors must suppresse sinne before it bee growne too strong and violent Maisters of Families to suppresse sinne in those committed to their charge before it be growne ouer strong and violent least it make head against all lawes and good orders chalenge freedome and impunitie in respect of the multitude of those that offend and so grow to such audacious impudencie that it dareth to vaunt it selfe against goodnesse and to disdaine and scorne all vertue and godlinesse Let them therfore follow the example of Abraham and when they see an Ismaelite scoffing at the children of promise let them if there be no other meanes to reforme him cast him out of the familie If there be an Abimilech let him bee suppressed or remoued least hee destroy the whole linage of the godly and disturbe the Church common wealth Iudg. 9. Iudg. 9. If Eli know the wickednesse of Hophni and Phinehas and 1 Sam. 2. 3. will not correct them it will bring the heauie Iudgements of God vpon the whole posteritie If Dauid cocker Absalon 2 Sam. 15. and 16. and will not keepe him vnder in the end he will conspire against him and draw the whole people into his rebellion Let therefore all Magistrates and housholders propound Dauids practise for their patterne Psal 101. that is let Psal 101. them resolue not onely to suppresse the vvicked in the familie and common wealth but let them doe it betimes as hee protesteth vers 8. least as Dauid speaketh of the sonnes of Zeruiah they grow in the end too strong for them The last thing to bee obserued is that hee calleth their Sinne bringeth vpon vs the greatest guilt punishment hainous sinnes by the name of bloud to note both vnto them and vs that sin maketh vs subiect to the greatest guilt and punishment euen to the shedding of bloud yea our dearest life bloud So the Lord threatned our first parents Gen. 2. 17. In the day that yee eate thereof yee shall dye the death Gen. 2. 17. And Ezech. 18. he reckoneth vp diuers sinnes and concludeth Exech 18. 13. that he who committeth any of them shal dye the death and that his bloud shall be vpon him Verse 13. And this was signified by the sacrifices of the Law in which for the expiation of sinne was required the shedding of bloud for the the Apostle saith Heb. 9. 22. almost all things are by the Heb. 9. 22. law purged with bloud and without shedding of bloud there is no remission In the offring whereof the law prouided that Leu. 1. 4. and 3. 8. the offender should lay his hands vpon the head of the beast which vvas slaine thereby testifying that by his sinne hee had justly deserued that death which the poore beast suffered Not that the bloud of Buls and Goates could take away the guilt and punishment of sinne but onely the precious bloud of Christ which was therby signified and prefigured Heb. 9. 12. Heb. 9. 12. The vse of this serueth first to make vs most carefull in That we must carefully auoid sinne abstayning from all manner of knowne sinnes seeing they make vs subject to the greatest guilt and punishment and bring our dearest bloud vpon our owne heads There is no malefactour so desperate that would commit a capitall crime if he were assured that he could not escape the hands of his just Iudge but all our sinnes are capitall and deserue death both of body and soule neyther can wee flye the presence of the just Iudge of heauen and earth and therefore no pleasures riches nor preferments should perswade vs to commit sinne whereby vve make our selues liable to such heauie punishments Secondly if wee haue sinned this consideration should If we haue sinned we must carefully seeke reconciliation with God moue vs most earnestly to labour that Gods wrath may be appeased his justice satisfied and that we may be freed from the heauie burthen of sinne which maketh vs subiect to death and condemnation And considering that the guilt and punishment can not otherwise bee done away but by bloud euen by the precious bloud of Iesus Christ which alone purgeth away all sinne 1 Iohn 1. 7. Therefore when 1 Iohn 1. 7. our consciences are guilty of sinne let vs labour aboue all things in the world to apply vnto our selues the vertue of Christs bloud death and merits and hunger and thirst after his righteousnesse that thereby being justified we may stand righteous in his sight Lastly it serueth to confute the conceipt of the secure Their conceipt confuted who make light account of sinne men of the world who make but a May-game of sinne and imagine that they can appease Gods wrath for all their hainous wickednesse by a broken sigh
Gods heauy Iudgements for as it is the onely meanes to preserue vs free from punishment not to fall into sinne so it is the onely way of remouing punishments inflicted for sin to take away the cause thereof by vnfained repentance 2 Chron. 7. 14. Ezech. 18. 21. and 2. Chro. 7. 14. Ezech. 18. 21. 33. 14. 16. 33. 14. 16. The vse hereof serueth to teach vs what course is best to be taken for the remouing those judgements which lye heauie Repentance the best means to remoue iudgements vpon our land or at least haue displayed their coulours being ready to march against vs namely the Pestilence Invndations Dearth and Famine Surely we must not chiefly trust in humaine pollicies and preuentions or in the help of our bordering friends for all this will be to little purpose if we do not in the first place seeke reconciliation with God by forsaking our sinnes and turning vnto him by vnfained repentance The second vse serueth for the comfort of those that God protects those that mourne mourne in Sion and daily bewaile both their owne sins and the sinnes of their people for such are to know that the Lord will giue them a speciall priuiledge and protection whereby they shall be protected from the common calamities which he inflicteth vpon their nation or if as members Ier. 39. 16. 17. of this great body pollitick by reason of their communion they necessarily pertake in their miseries and afflictions yet the Lord will so sanctifie these crosses vnto them and will giue vnto them such a measure of strength faith patience and comfort that when vnrepentant sinners who neuer sighed nor groned vnder the burthen of sin doe now grone and languish vnder the waight of punishment they contrariwise who vpon their vnfained repentance are assured of the forgiuenesse of their sinnes shall not onely be patient but also rejoyce in their tribulations and their afflictions shall be vnto them as a Serpent without a sting Lastly this serueth to refute the practise of those who when they are justly punished for their sinnes in stead of remouing the cause by repentance doe adde sinne vnto sinne by vsing wicked vnlawfull meanes for the remouing The follie of those who by sinne labour to remoue punishment of their punishments as for example going vnto Witches Wizards and Sorcerers vsing falshoode and deceipt iniurie and oppression that so they may remoue the burthen which God hath laid vpon them vnto the shoulder of their neighbour But such are to know that this is not the way to giue them ease or to release them of their afflictions nay rather they are to expect that as they adde sinne vnto sinne so God will adde punishment vnto punishment vntill they which refuse to mourne for their sinnes faint and sinke vnder his heauie iudgements The third thing to be obserued is the senslesse hardnes The obdurate hardnesse of mans hart of mans heart and the secure impenitencie of our corrupt nature whereby it commeth to passe that neither Gods mercies nor judgements will any whit affect vs if the Lord giue vs ouer to our owne obdurate stubbernesse for euen when the senslesse and brutish creatures are in their kinde affected both with Gods mercies and judgements only man remayneth without sense and feeling The heauens vaile their face shed forth their teares the earth groneth shaketh the waters roare swell the beasts foules fishes mourne and hang down their heads shewing their inward griefe by that diuers language which God hath giuen them when as the Lord is angry and layeth his heauie hand vpon them onely man the chiefe rebell of the world smileth when God frowneth and though he be somewhat touched with sense of paine yet hee sorroweth onely because hee is punished and not because by his sinnes hee hath deserued punishment And hence it is that the Lord sometimes turneth his speach from man because he hath no eares to heare nor hart to vnderstand nor sense to feele and apprehend his mercies or judgements vnto the senselesse and brutish creatures to note vnto vs that the senselesse creatures are more sensible then a senselesse man So Esay 1. 2. 3. Ier. 22. 29. Esay 1. 2. 3. Ier. 22. 29. So it is sayd in this place that the land it selfe mourned and that the beasts birds and fishes bore their part in this sorrowfull song but the Inhabitants of the Land are sayde onely to haue languished vnder the burthen of their miseries and nothing is said of any sorrow or mourning vnder the heauie burthen of their sinne The like example we haue Gen. 4. 13. Exod. 8. 8. 15 1 Kin. 13. 6. 33 Mat. 11. 16. 17 and 23. 37. in Cain Gen. 4. 13. In Pharaoh Exod. 8. 8. 15. In Saul Ieroboam 1 King 13. 6. 33. And in the people of the Iewes Mat. 11. 16. 17. and 23. 37. But I shall not need to looke farre for examples to illustrate this point seeing our owne experience doth too manifestly proue it for howsoeuer like Bul-rushes we haue hanged downe our heads whilest the storme of Gods judgements did make vs bend and stoope yet vvee are presently ready to walk vnder the burthen of our sinnes with stiffe and stretched out necks when we see that the storme of Gods fury is a little ouerblowne The vse of this doctrine serueth first to teach vs that seeing naturally wee are hard hearted and so senselesly secure in our sins that we earnestly labour for a broken hart and contrite spirit and continually beg at the hands of God that he will take away our stonie hearts and giue vs hearts of flesh which will grieue and mourne when hee sheweth any signes of his displeasure and euen like the hart of Iosias melt at the hearing of the threatnings of his Law grounding these our prayers vpon his owne gracious promises Iere. Iere. 32. 39. Ezech. 11. 19. and 36. 26. 32. 39. Ezech. 11. 19. and 36. 26. Secondly it serueth for the reproofe of carnall worldlings who securely goe on in their sinnes foolishly imagining that they may repent when they list and so receiue their pardon from God but such are to know that as it is a worke of greatest necessity so also of greatest difficultie for if the Lord leaue them to their owne hardnesse of hart as he justly may seeing they haue abused his grace to wantonnesse and his mercy and long suffering to impenitencie well may they languish vnder punishment yet they shall bee further off from true repentance and vnfayned mourning for their sinnes then the senselesse earth or brutish Creatures Thirdly we are to obserue that the sinne of man is not onely hurtfull and pernitious to himselfe but euen to the Sin is pernitious to all the Creatures whole earth and all the Creatures therein contained In the Creation the Lord blessed the earth and her Inhabitants but sinne turned this blessing into a curse Gen. 3. 17. Gods Gen.
they the adjuncts as the vices the subject of the Soule And further this proannesse is called a spirit Metonimically to point out vnto vs the chiefe authour and fountaine from whence it is diriued euen Sathan the spirit of all wickednesse Moreouer it is called the spirit of fornications rather then the spirit of idolatrie not onely because he would persist in the former allegorie of marriage but also that hereby he might point out as it were in liuely colours the disposition of idolaters As though he would say it fareth with these filthy idolaters as with vncleane adulterers who are so blinded and inflamed with their lust and so besotted and hardned by their vice that without either shame or wit like brute beasts they runne headlong into their sinne and into all those mischeifes which doe accompany it as though they were vtterly depriued of all judgement and vnderstanding And for this cause also he vseth the plurall number fornications rather then the singular to note both their furious earnestnesse and their accustomed practise in committing this sinne Whereby he plainly sheweth that howsoeuer their Priests vtterly neglected their duty yet were not the people hereby excused of their sinnes both because they gaue themselues to voluptuous pleasures and thereby were depriued of their vnderstandings and became proane vnto all wickednes and also because they were not onely outwardly mislead by their false teachers but also had inwardly in themselues a spirit of fornications that is a vehement pronesse vnto idolatry wherwith they were wholy besotted Finally he addeth And they haue gone a Whoring from vnder their God that is they haue quite shaken off the marriage yoke and with-drawing themselues from vnder the gouernment and subjection of God their lawfull husband haue wholy giuen themselues ouer to spirituall vncleannes and to commit whordome with their impure Idols The which words may be vnderstood as a cause of the former that they therefore forsooke the Lord and gaue themselues ouer to be ruled by their Idols because they were possessed with a spirit of fornications which caused them to fall into these grosse and absurde errours or as an effect that therefore they were mislead by the spirit of fornications because hauing forsaken the Lord and his truth he had giuen them ouer to a reprobate sense suffred them to be deluded by a spirit of errour with strong delusions because they would not imbrace nor loue the truth For these are mutual and reciprocall causes to imbrace false worship idolatrie to forsake God for when the idolater beginneth to worship his idols hee renounceth the worship of God and when he will not loue nor delight himselfe in Gods true worship and seruice then the Lord giueth vp him to a reprobate sense and to be deluded with strong delusions as the Apostle sheweth Rom. 1. 23. 24. 2 Thes 2. 11. Rom. 1. 23. 24. 2. Thes 2. 11. And so much concerning the meaning of the words the The doctrines doctrines which arise out of them are diuers First we may obserue that it is no true honour to grace vs nor any sound The title of Gods people doth not grace or profit vs vnlesie we liue like the people of God benefit to profit and comfort vs that wee beare the title of Gods people and abound in his temporall gifts and blessings if our life be not conformable to our titles and priuiledges and if wee doe not thankfully imploy Gods benefits bestowed vpon vs to the aduancement of his glory the good of his Church and the furthering of our owne saluation yea contrariwise if wee vse them as incouragements to harten vs in our sinnes and vngratefully abuse them to Gods dishonour and the disgrace of our profession making them serue as vayles vnder which we may more cunningly hide our leprous sores of sinne and close acted wickednesse then are they so farre from gracing vs that they wholy tend to our discredit and so farre from being truely profitable that they serue as so many arguments to aggrauate our sinnes and to approue the justice of Gods righteous judgements when as hee taketh the most rigourous course in inflicting punishments It was an high priuiledge of honour to the people of Israell to be intitled the people of God but when they contemned his true worship forsooke the Lord and consulted with Idols all this tended to their vtter disgrace and to make their idolatrie much more abhominable then the idolatrie of the Gentils So it was a great dignitie to the wicked Angels that they were created the most excellent of the creatures and were made the immediate Ministers of God and as it were courtiars to the great King of heauen and earth but when as they most vngratfully sinned against such as gratious creator their excellencie did not benefit them but aggrauated their sinne and plunged them into the deepest bottome of just condemnation It was a great mercie of God vouchsafed to the Sodomites that they were placed in Gen. 13. 8. the garden of the world where they abounded in all Gods temporall blessings but when they abused Gods goodnesse and by his benefits became more rebellious they were not hereby priuiledged from punishment but inflamed Gods Gen. 19. more fearefull wrath against themselues which caused fire and brimstone to raine downe from heauen and consume them It was a great priuiledge to the Israelites to be the vineyard of the Lord which he had hedged in from the rest of the world for his owne vse and delight but when they answered not to Gods mercy in their obedience but in stead of the sweet grapes of righteousnes brought forth the sowre Esay 5. grapes of sinne the Lord did not onely forsake it but also pull downe the hedge and layde it open to the common spoyle It was a singular prerogatiue vnto them that they had amongst them the profession of Religion and the Temple of God the place of Gods worship but when they abused it as a visard of hypocrisie to countenance their sinne and as a shield to fence off all Gods threatnings of punishment God sendeth them to Shilo to see a patterne of his fearefull Ier. 7. 4. 12. vengeance which should also ouer-take them vnlesse they repented Finally it was a great dignitie and royall priuiledge to the people of the Iewes that they injoyed all earthly benefits in the land of Canaan that they were Gods peculiar people with whom he had made his couenant his chosen nation his royall Priest-hood the treasurers of his word the keepers of his seales and that they had the first offer of eternall saluation by Christ and of the joyfull tidings of the Gospell but when they abused this rich mercy by continuing in their rebellion by stopping their eares to Christs heauenly Sermons by crucifying the Lord of Life and by continuing in finall impenitencie after they were long called there vnto by the preaching of the Apostles all Gods patience long-suffering
innumerable benefits serued but as so many arguments to aggrauate their sinnes to bring vpon them more fearefull punishments and to make their condemnation more horrible and grieuous as may plainely appeare by these places Math. 11. 21. Luke 13. 34. 35. Mat. 11. 21. Luk. 13. 34. Rom. 2. 4. 5. Rom. 2. 4. 5. By all which it appeareth that Gods benefits are not blessings Gods blessings abused doe aggrauate our sinnes vnto vs if we doe abuse them as motiues vnto sinne but rather they make our sinnes out of measure sinfull and our punishments more intollerable And of this the reason is most apparant for as it excuseth the neglect of dutie when the partie to whom it is to be performed is but a meere stranger and extenuateth the fault when as it is committed against an enimie so it doth much aggrauate it if he be a familiar acquaintance or neere friend vnto whom we are deepely indebted for many benefits if the wife do misdemeane her selfe towards a crabbed and perverse husband though it doth not altogether excuse her yet it extenuateth her fault but if she thus behaue her selfe towards a husband who is most kinde and louing and omitteth no good duty which can be required of him the world is ready to crie shame against such misbehauior If the seruant neglecteth his duty to such a maister as performeth no duty vnto him but defraudeth him of his wages and daily oppresseth him with new injuries although it will not justifie his doings yet it will lessen his faults but if this neglect be towards such a one as is louing and liberall it deserueth justly a sharper censure and more seuere punishment So if the Lord were vnto vs as a stranger or enimie a bitter husband or cruell maister we might haue som-what to say for the neglect of our duty but seeing he is most bountifull and benigne requiting euery dramme of loue with a pound of kindnesse and rewarding euery penny-worth of seruice with a talent of wages yea seeing he preuenteth vs with his free grace and beginneth and continueth and multiplyeth his benefits without any manner of our deserts if after all this we neglect our duties to such a God so gracious and infinite in mercy yea and contrariwise abuse his owne gifts to his dishonour and take occasion by his benefits the more to prouoke his wrath by our sinnes what judgements are too heauy what punishments too grieuous for such vnthankfull wretches The vse hereof serueth to teach vs not to content ous selues We must not content our selues with the priuiledges of Christians vnlesse we liue their liues with the priuileges of Christians vnlesse we liue the liues of Christians not to rest in Gods temporall benefits as being sufficient arguments of his loue or vndoubted pledges of our saluation vnlesse we haue also the grace giuen vs to imploy them to the aduancement of Gods glorie and to vse them to those good and holy ends for which God hath bestowed them For it will nothing avayle vs that we are chosen out of the rest of the world to be Gods peculiar people vnlesse as it becommeth the inheritance of God we be purged from our iniquities and be zealous of good workes it will Tit. 2. 14. not profit vs to be intertayned into Gods owne familie if we doe not behaue our selues as it becommeth his children and seruants nor to haue the couenant and the seales thereof the glorious Gospell of Iesus Christ and the Sacraments of Baptisme and the Lords supper vnlesse this couenant be as well written in our harts as in our bookes and be as fruitfully practized as it is faithfully deliuered In a word wee shall be neuer the better for the abundance of temporall benefits as peace plenty health libertie and the rest vnlesse as wee surpasse others in these priuiledges and pledges of Gods loue so also we doe excell them in loue towards God zeale thankfulnesse and holy obedience yea contrariwise if God haue sowen amongst vs the seeds of his mercies with a liberall hand expecting a fruitfull haruest of holynesse righteousnesse and we in stead hereof returne vnto him the ta●es and cockle of sinne and wickednesse we shall bee but the nearer vnto a curse and his great bounty and innumerable benefits shall serue as so many arguments to aggrauate our sinnes and multiply our punishments That the Papists in vaine boast of the priuiledges of their Church Secondly it serueth to beate downe the glorious braggs of the Papists and sinagogue of Rome who boast themselues as being the peculiar people and Church of God vpon whom the Lord hath multiplyed manifold benefits spiritual temporal and in whose custody still remaine the treasure of Gods word and his seales the Sacraments but though it should be graunted vnto them that their Church in former times hath had these priuiledges and that yet there remaine some steps and prints of them this doth not any whit commend them or make their state the better yea rather it serueth to aggrauate their fearfull Apostasie their haynous rebellion and abhominable idolatrie in which they liue and perseuere notwithstanding the Lord hath formerly dealt so gratiously with them and presently doth not take that just vengeance of their sinnes which they long agoe deserued For howsoeuer the Lord hath caused the light of the Gospell to shine vnto them whereby he hath discouered the sottish grosenes of their idolatrie and superstitions yet they will not forsake their idols and turne to the liuing God Acts. 14. 15. who hath made heauen and earth but like vnto the Israelites here spoken of they worship their images of wood stone and daily commit more then heathenish idolatrie they consult with their idols in all their difficulties and dangers going on pilgrimage vnto them for their counsaile and direction they make vowes vnto them offer them oblations in euery high place that is in the innumerable temples which they haue erected for this purpose and they are so wholy seduced by the spirit of fornications that if any man gaine say them in these their wicked courses they are ready to pursue and persecute him with sword fire and fagot In a word they haue wholy corrupted Gods worship and seruice and are become more sottish in their superstitions and idolatrie then either the Turkes or Pagans So that if they will needes vaunt themselues of their titles that they are Gods people and Church and in their priuiledges which they haue aboue others they doe but glory in their shame seeing they are so many arguments to aggrauate their sinnes and vngratefull wickednesse in that they are worse then the Turkes and infidels in her idolatrie and superstition especially in this resspect that they haue had many singular meanes graunted them by God for their conversion and reformation which the other haue wanted and yet notwithstanding all Gods mercies persist in their apostacie and rebellion The second thing to be obserued is that
cause hereof is the corruption of mans nature which is exceedingly addicted to this idolatrie and superstition partly through grosenesse of vnderstanding affecting a palpable deitie and diuine worship which is subject to the senses and partly through pride preferring his owne inuentions and wil-worship before the will of God reuealed in his word The vse hereof is that we doe not onely flee from idolatrie We must flye the first beginnings of idolatrie in the grosest kinde but also that wee shunne the first beginnings thereof for if in the least degree we giue way vnto it we shall from one degree ascend vnto another till we come to the highest partly because we are naturally possessed with a spirit of fornications which carrieth vs headlong into this sin and partly because the Lord will giue vs vp to a reprobate sense and to be deluded with strong delusions if wee doe not imbrace and loue his truth but incline to wil-worship and Idolatry The third thing to be obserued is that our good intentions Good intentions hauing no sound ground no better then wil-worship in Gods seruice which haue no ground in his word are nothing else but wil-worship and superstition The Israelites made choyse to worship in the groues and vnder the greene trees because the shadow thereof was good that is because they thought these pleasant places and delightfull shade in the sweet and open ayre were most fit and conuenient for religious worship but because this their good intention was contrary to Gods word which restrayned publike seruice sacrifices vnto the Temple at Ierusalem their good meaning could not priuiledge them from the just censure of Idolatrie and Superstition So Aaron in a good intention made Exod. 32. 1. 5. a golden calfe Exod. 32. 1. 5. But it was condemned and punished as grose Idolatry Gedeon in a good intention made Iudg. 8. 27. an Ephod of the Midianitish pray but it was an occasion of Idolatry and the ruine of his house and Micahs mother in a good intention made a moulten Image Iudg. 17. 3. and Iudg. 17. 3. Micah himselfe consecrated one of his sonnes to be a priest vnto it Verse 5. and entertained a Leuite for the same purpose with the like good meaning and yet neuerthelesse all this was but grose superstition and Idolatry in Gods sight The vse hereof is that we be not deluded with this conceipt that the Lord will accept of any manner of seruice so it proceed from a good meaning intention for if it haue no warrant out of Gods Word but bee repugnant therevnto vvhatsoeuer our meaning and intention bee it is but vvil-worship superstition and Idolatry in Gods sight And therefore we must not examine what we intend but what God requireth not what we like as most fit and couenient but what is pleasing vnto God And this examination is to be made not according to our owne phantasies and carnall wisdome which as the Apostle saith is emnitie against God but Rom. 8. 7. according to the canon and rule of Gods word which that we may the rather doe let these reasons perswade vs first because the Lord hath straightly forbidden and condemned all manner of vvil-worship and in his seruice hath precisely restrayned vs to his word for our direction Deu. 5. 32. Take Deut. 5. 32. and 12. 8. 32. heed that you doe as the Lord your God hath commanded turne not aside to the right hand nor to the left And 12. 8. Yee shall not doe after all these things that we doe here this day that is euery man what seemeth him good in his owne eyes And Vers 32. Whatsoeuer I command you take heede you doe it thou shalt Num. 15. 39. Prou. 39. 5. 6. Ezech. 20. 18. Col. 2. 20. The causes why the Lord forbiddeth all wil-worship put nothing thereto nor take ought there from So Numb 15. 39 Pro. 30. 5. 6. Ezech. 20. 18. Col. 2. 20. Now the causes why the Lord doth so earnestly forbid all manner of vvil-worship are principally two first it doth exceedingly derogate from his wisedome when as men doe not think his lawes sufficient for their gouernment direction but labour to perfect them by their owne inventions as though they were wiser then God himselfe Now if it be an odious thing to an earthly prince that his subjects should take vpon them to alter or adde or detract from his Lawes or in stead of submitting themselues to be gouerned thereby should make their owne vvill a law though they should make neuer so faire a shew of their good meaning intentions then how odious and abhorninable a thing is it for vs thus to demeane our selues towards God who is infinite in wisedome and the supreame king of heauen and earth Secondly because where wil-worship and humane inventions Wil-worship banisheth the true seruice of God are intertayned there soone after the true worship of God is expelled and banished for such is the aversenesse of mans corrupt nature towards the true worship of God and proannesse vnto humane inventions and superstitions that when they are both together he nourisheth and maketh high esteeme of wil-worship as being the birth of his owne brain and vtterly neglecteth Gods pure and sincere seruice which in his word he hath prescribed as though it were the child of a stranger And this is a notable fruit of pride and selfe loue when as men preferre the wisedome of the flesh before the wisedome of God and their owne inventious before his commandements The which was the sinne of the Scribes and Pharisies who as our Sauiour charged them made the commandements of God of no authority whilest they established their owne traditions Mat. 15. 16. And vvhilest they vvere Mat. 15. 16. and 23. 23. ouer busie in tithing Mint Annis and Commin they were vvholy negligent in the vvaightie matters of Gods Law as Iudgement Mercy and Fidelitie as it is Mat. 23. 23. Secondly it behoueth vs to imbrace Gods pure and sincere Wil-worship is vaine and vnprofitable vvorship prescribed in his vvord and to auoide vvil-vvorship our owne superstitious deuotions because when vve haue spent our time and euen tyred our selues in these things all our labour will bee spent in vaine So the Lord himselfe saith Mat. 15. 9. In vaine they worship mee teaching Mat 15. 9. for doctrines mens precepts And the Apostle saith that humain inventions and traditions as touch not taste not handle not doe perish in the vsing Col. 2. 22. For if we would haue Col. 2. 22. any wages for our labour vve must doe the Lords vvorke vvhich himselfe hath commaunded otherwise hee vvill demaund of vs as hee did of the Israelits Esay 1 12. Who hath Esay 1. 12. required these things at your hands And vvill say vnto vs as he did to the Priests and people of Israell Zach. 7. 5. When yee Zach. 7. 5. fasted and mourned did ye fast vnto me
off the yoke of his gouernment and stubbornely opposed his will and as it were in sauage and brutish manner made head against him Now what could be a more forcible disswasion to restraine all amongst the people of Iuda in whō there was any sparke of grace or dramme of goodnesse from consorting with the Israelites in neere familiaritie and much more in their Heathenish idolatrie then this that they were barbarous yea brutish rebels against the soueraigne Maiestie and most mightie King of heauen and earth who after an audacious manner resisted and opposed against God as it were to his face and who had separated themselues from Gods true Church and from the communion of Saints to ioyne with the Heathen people in their idolatrie and that not being vrged through any necessitie but of a waiward will and vnruly wantonnesse vnto which they were come through the wicked and vngratefull abuse of Gods blessings and plentifull benefits wherewith they were fed and pampered according to that Deut. 32. 15. But he that should haue bin vpright when hee waxed fat spurned with his heele Thou art fat thou art Deut. 32. 15. grosse thou art laden with fatnesse therefore hee forsooke God that made him and regarded not the strong God of his saluation Amos 4. 1. And this was the first reason to disswade the men of Iuda Amos 4. 1. from consorting with the idolatrous Israelites The second argument is taken from their punishment in these words Now the Lord will feed them as a lambe in a large place Wherby is signified that the Lord would bring vpon the people of Israel all kinde of miserable calamities in the land of their captiuitie wherewith he would tame their stubborne vnrulinesse and humble their haughtie pride But let vs descend vnto more particulars In this punishment here threatned two things are to be considered first the time whē it should be inflicted secondly the punishmēt it selfe The time is expressed in the present tense Now the Lord will feede them Whereby is signified that seeing they were growen to such haughtie stubbornnesse in their rebellion God would no longer indure it but would take a speedie course to abate their pride master their vnruly stubbornnesse and to tame their wantonnesse by loading them as it were with calamities The punishment it selfe is expressed by way of allegorie for as before he had signified their vnrulinesse and rebellion by a similitude of an vnruly heifer so now he setteth downe their abiect and miserable condition vnder the similitude of a sillie wandring lambe in a desert place As though hee should say Because whilest I fed them plentifully with my benefits they behaued themselues like wanton stubborne and vnruly beasts I will out of hand strip them of my gifts wherewith they are too much pampered and so loade them with miseries and calamities that they shall become as mild and tame as sillie lambes wandring in the wildernesse and forsaken both of damme and shepheard By which similitude the Prophet doth in most liuely maner decipher the miserable condition of the people of Israel for first whereas sheepe being sociable creatures delight in companie and loue to be in the flocke it is vnto them irksome and tedious when being straied from the rest they wander alone in desert places but such tediousnesse of life the Lord threatneth against the Israelites for seeing they would not associate themselues with the rest of his flocke the people of Iuda nor would bee content to be infolded in his Temple as it were in their safe sheepfould but behaued themselues rather like wanton heifers then like the Lords sheep taking delight in gadding from the rest of their companie and leaping into forbidden pastures therefore the Lord threatneth that seeing through wantonnesse they delighted in separation he would so scatter them amongst the Heathen that they should not haue any flock to ioine themselues vnto nor no fellowship or communion one with an other but should become like single sheepe scattered here and there in vast and desert places And this is implied whereas hee vseth the singular number saying that they should be feede not as lambes flocking together but as a lambe seuered from the rest of his companie Againe the good and saferie of the sillie lambe herein consisteth when as hee is vnder the gouernment and protection of his carefull shepheard and may satisfie his hunger either by sucking his damme or by nibling the sweet grasse in a pleasant pasture on the other side no greater miserie can befall the sillie lambe then to be forsaken of the shepheard abandoned of the damme and to goe wandring in the wildernesse amongst wolues and other sauage beasts especially being sillie and simple in wit vnable to make any shift by policie to escape danger feeble and weake not able to make resistance against the least violence and slow of pace hauing no hope to saue himselfe by flight For what can the poore lambe doe in this case but wander vp and downe fearing euery shadow and trembling at euery noise till he haue spent his strength with bleating and crying for hopelesse helpe or is pined with hunger or is made a pray of some rauenous beast But this the Lord threatneth should be the condition of the rebellious Israelites for because they would not bee ruled by him their louing and carefull shepheard hee excluded them out of his fould and thrust them from vnder his gouernment and protection because they despised their mother the true Church he seuers and scatters them from her so as they could not any longer sucke her breasts nor receiue the milke of the word and Sacraments for the relieuing their spirituall hunger because they could not be content to liue in that fruitfull pasture the land of Canaan but like vnruly heifers tooke their chiefe pleasure in ranging abroad hee threatneth that hee would prouide a place for them large enough for they should haue the whole world to wander in after they were led into captiuity where their commons should be no lesse hard then full of danger for it should not be vnto them like the land of Israel and Iuda which was like a pleasant pasture hedged about on euerie side with the strong fence of Gods mightie power and euer watching prouidence but like a vast and desert wildernesse which being drie and barren should affoord vnto thē but bare and slender prouision to sustaine their liues and being full of cruell and wicked men as it were with so many wolues beares tigres and lions should giue vnto them continuall cause of feare of being deuoured and destroyed both in respect of their rauenous rage and powerfull malice and also their owne feeble weaknesse in making any resistance And this also was an effectuall argument to disswade the men of Iuda from associating themselues with the wicked Israelites seeing if they were copartners with them in their defection and rebellion forsaking Gods true Church Temple and religion to ioyne with them
instruct admonish and rebuke them that so we may reclaime them from their wicked waies and conuert them vnto God for which purpose our Sauiour kept company with publicans and sinners this end is taken away through their contemptuous stubbornensse and obstinate contempt of all these holy meanes of their conuersion for here our Sauiour Christs rule taketh place that wee must not cast holy things vnto dogs nor pearles before swine lest they treade these precious iewels vnder their filthie feet and turning againe all to rent vs as it is Matth. 7. 6. And his example also Matth. 7. 6. serueth for our direction for when the Scribes and Pharisies obstinately opposed against the meanes of their conuersion and rebelliously set themselues against Gods reuealed will he giueth ouer their company and consorteth himselfe with publicans and sinners And secondly when there is no hope of conuerting them from their sinnes in regard of their obstinacie and stiffenes in rebellion there is great feare lest they will peruert vs in respect of our frailtie and faint weaknes in good courses And therfore as all wise men being in health do auoid the company of those who being infected with the plague haue the markes and tokens appearing vpon them because there is great danger of their infection but no hope of the others recouerie so if wee bee endued with any sparke of spirituall wisdome we will carefully auoid those who are deeply infected with the contagious diseases of sinne especially when as by their stubborne contemning of all holy admonitions and wholesome reprehensions they euidently shew that they are marked to destruction and haue the plaine tokens of reprobation appearing vpon them seeing there is more danger that we shal be infected by their contagion then there is hope that they should be cured by our admonitiōs And this was holy Dauids practise as appeareth Psal 26. 4. I haue not haunted with vaine persons neither kept company with the dissemblers 5. I haue hated the assemblie of the euil and haue not companied with the wicked And Psal 119. 115. Away from me you wicked for Psalm 26. 4 5. 119. 115. I will keep the commandements of my God Again the imminent danger of Gods fearful punishmēts which hang ouer the heads of wicked men should be an effectuall reason to perswade the faithfull to auoid their company seeing that as the Lord doth often spare the wicked for the godlies sake as appeareth Gen. 18. 32. so hee doth sometimes inflict temporall punishments vpon the faithful because they are in the companie of vngodly men as appeareth in the example of Lot consorting himselfe with the Act. 27. 24. Gen. 18. 32. 14 19. 1. King 22. Sodomites Gen. 14. 19. and of Iehosaphat entertaining neere familiaritie and friendship with wicked Ahab 1. King 22. Those therefore who would not be destroyed with Corah and his accomplices must separate themselues frō them Numb 16. 26. and they must come out of Babylon who will not Numb 16. 26. Apoc. 18. 4. be partakers of her plagues Apoc. 18. 4. The vse hereof serueth to reproue such as consort themselues Those reproued who cōfort with wicked men in neere familiaritie and fellowship with those who by their daily practise shew their vnrecouerable and desperate rebellion against God and their prophane contempt of all goodnes seeing hereby they notablie bewray their impietie towards God and their extreme follie in regard of themselues For if they had any true loue of God or zeale of his glorie they would not be familiar with those that hate him nor yet grace such gracelesse impes with their companie who spend their whole liues to his dishonor and if they had any dramme of true wisdome to prouide for their owne safetie they would not range thēselues in the forlorne hope nor venture their liues in that ship which is readie to sinck nor ioyne themselues with such wicked companions who hauing committed high treason against the great King of heauen and earth are daily in danger to bee attached condemned and led to execution Thirdly we may here obserue that customable liuing in Customable sinning maketh men brutish in their wickednes sinne doth make men to become not only inhumane and barbarous but brutish in wickednesse and therefore it is vsuall with the holy Ghost to decipher the disposition of sinners by comparing them vnto brute beasts as in this place he setteth forth the stubborne rebellion of the Israelites by likening them to an vnrulie heifer who casting off the yoke is readie with violence to run against her master So the sottish follie of the adulterer is deciphered when as he is compared to an oxe led to the slaughter Pro. 7. 22. and his beastly filthinesse Prou. 7. 22. when as hee is likened to an horse neighing after his neighbours wife Ier. 5. 8. The Prophet Esay compareth sinners Jerem. 5. 8. before their conuersion vnto sauage beasts as Lions Leopards Wolues Beares Aspes and Cockatrices Esa 11. 6. 7. 8. Esay 11. 6. 7. 8. And our Sauiour Christ likeneth incorrigible sinners to filthie swine and fierce bandogs Matth. 7. 6. So the Apostle Matth. 7. 6. Peter compareth those who after some shew and profession of religion do make a relapse into their old sins vnto a dog returning to his vomit and to a sow which being washed walloweth againe in the mire 2. Pet. 2. 22. Yea the Prophet 2. Pet. 2. 22. Esay goeth further and affirmeth that vngratefull and rebellious sinners are worse then the brute beasts Esay 1. 3. The Esay 1. 3. oxe saith he knoweth his owner and the asse his masters crib but Israel hath not knowne my people hath not vnderstood The vse hereof serueth to shew the wretched and base estate of rebellious and vnrepentant sinners seeing howsoeuer The wretched estate of impenitent sinners they may ruffle it in their brauerie be honorable in their titles and haue the first place and chiefe seate wheresoeuer they come yet are they no better then brute beasts yea in truth they are far worse as being in their disposition whilest they liue more malicious vngratefull and rebellious and after death far more miserable for well were it with them if after they haue led a brutish life they might in their death be like vnto the beasts which perish but it shall be farre otherwise their death being vnto them but an entrance into death eternall and a passage into the torments of hell fire Secondly this sheweth the malignant qualitie of sinne The malignant qualitie of sinners which like Circe her poysonous potions transformeth men into beasts and maketh those who were created according to the most beautifull image of God to be more vgly and deformed in Gods sight then the most bruitish and basest creature The consideration whereof as it should make vs most carefull in auoiding sinne with all the baites allurements and prouocations which incite vs thereunto so when
we are defiled and deformed with the foule and filthy spots of our transgressions we should be as carefull to applie vnto vs the precious blood of Christ by a liuely faith that thereby being cleansed and purged we may be restored to our former beautie and perfection Fourthly we may here obserue that when a people professing Those who will not serue God shall be made slaues to their enemies religion doe cast off the yoke of Gods gouernment and in the pride and stubbornesse of their hearts contemne all meanes of their conuersion then the iudgements of God lie waiting at the dore and are readie to enter vpon them and because they will not submit themselues to be ruled by the scepter of Gods kingdome he will thrust them from vnder his protection cause them to be led into captiuitie and suffer their enemies to tyrrannize insult ouer them So in this place because the Israelites were become like vnrulie Heifers and would not beare the yoke of Gods gouernement he threatneth that they should become the captiues and slaues of their enemies and vnder their tyrannical thraldome indure manifold miseries and calamities Many examples might be brought to cleare this point In the time of the Iudges when the people rebelled against the Lord contemned his word and denied him their seruice and allegeance hee gaue them ouer into the hands of their enemies as the Canaanites Midianites Philistines and diuers others When the Iewes would not serue the Lord their soueraigne King hee made them serue tyrannicall Lords in a strange countrie both before and since the comming of Christ When Manasses and Zedechias would not regard the word of the Lord but persecuted his Prophets and made warre as it were against Heauen the Lord pulled downe their pride and broke their stubborne and rebellious hearts with the manifold calamities of a miserable captiuitie And this is that which the Lord threatneth against the rebellious potentates of the earth who in furious rage combined themselues against the kingdome of Iesus Christ namely that he would vexe them in his sore displeasure and because they would not be ruled by the scepter of his word he would crash them with his scepter of yron and breake them in peeces like a potters vessell Psalm 2. 2. 5. 9. So our Psal 2. 2. 5. 9. Sauiour Christ hath taught vs that those his enemies who had shaken off the yoke of his gouernement and would not let him raigne ouer them should be haled into his presence and slaine before his face Luk. 19. 27. Luk. 19. 27. And surely this is iust with God that those who deny vnto him their obedience and allegeance which is the Lords lawfull right both in respect of their creation continuall preseruation and of those manifold benefits which they haue receiued vnder his gouernement should be vsed as rebellious traitors and feele the extreamest rigour of his righteous lawes that those who will not bee ruled by the scepter of his word should be cut off with the sword of iustice and that they who will not serue their gracious Lord who richly rewardeth their imperfect seruice with the vnderserued wages of both temporall benefits in this life and eternall glorie in the life to come should in their bodies be yeelded vp to the tyrannicall gouernement of their insolent enemies who will reward their seruice with iniuries indignities and manifold calamities and both in bodie and soule become the vassals and slaues of sinne Satan the world and their owne vnrulie lusts whose wages is eternall death after a wretched and miserable life The vse hereof is that we labour to conforme our selues in holy obedience vnto the will of our heauenly King and submit our selues to be ruled by the scepter of his word and then he will keepe vs vnder his protection defend vs from the malice and furie of all our enemies and greatly inrich vs with his blessings and benefits Whereas on the other side if we deny vnto him our allegeance he will take no further charge of vs but will lay vs open to the common spoyle if we be proude he will finde meanes to humble vs if stubborne and vnrulie he will take a speedie course to tame and rule vs and if like vntamed heifers we shake off the yoke of his gouernement which is light and easie hee can hamper vs well enough by laying vpon our neckes the yron yoke of our tyrannical enemies which will gall vs not onely to the quicke but euen to the heart Lastly wee may here obserue how wretched and miserable The miserable estate of those who are thrust from vnder Gods protection their estate is who for their rebellious stubburnnesse are thrust from vnder Gods gouernement and protection For they shall be as a lambe in a large place that is as the poore lambe is in a most desperate condition which wandreth alone in some vast wildernesse without any sheepheard to tend defend him or damme to feed him in danger either of pining or of deuouring so alike wretched is their estate who for their stubburnnesse and vnrulinesse are thrust out of Christs sheepfold from vnder his gouernement and protection For whereas whilest they were at his guiding hee led them into his greene pastures feeding them with his sweete milke and pleasant grasse of his word and Sacraments now they are depriued of this food of their soules so spiritually pined and starued whereas he fenced them in and kept them from wandring with the strong hedges of his benefits and gentle chastisements now the fence being taken away they stray abroad and wander vp and downe in the desert of this world both pinched with want of all spirituall foode and exposed to all maner of desperate danger whereas whilest they were vnder his direction they were vnder his protection also who by his prouidence and power defended them from worldly wolues and beares and from that ramping and roaring Lion fierce red Dragon Satan who daily assailed and earnestly laboured to deuoure them now being disarmed of his assistance they lie open to the common spoile being altogether vnable either to slie away or make resistance And this was the state of the first rebellious sheepe our great grandfather Adam when as by his Gen. 3. 7. sinne he had made himselfe naked this was the case of the Lords flocke the people of Israel when as they also had Exod. 32. 25. made themselues naked by their idolatry whilest they were in the wildernesse and into this condition they often brought themselues in the time of the Iudges For howsoeuer whilest they serued the Lord they had prosperitie peace plentie of all things and were so hedged in on all sides that all their enemies could not hurt them yet when as they made a desection from vnder his gouernment and for their grieuous sinnes were disarmed of his protection how speedily did their enemies inuade them how sharply did they assault them and how easily did