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

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the rest of this Chapter it hath no great difficulty in it if by the innumerable multitude in white robes and palmes in their hands wee vnderstand the Saints already glorified who though compared with the rest of the world they be but a little flocke yet simply considered they are a great multitude they haue palmes in their hands in token of victory And whereas in speaking of the wicked Chap. 6 hee concludeth with their misery in respect of the wrath of the Lambe here answerably it is concluded with the felicity of the godly washed in the bloud of the Lambe and euerlastingly comforted by him the phrases of leading forth to waters and wiping away all teares being adaptated to set forth the same CHAP. VIII THE whole compasse of time from the beginning of the Gospell to the last end of the world hauing beene set forth with the most remarkable accidents in one kinde of vision Chap. 6 7. here followeth another vpon the opening of the seuenth seale which yet remained in this eighth and the ninth tenth and eleuenth Chapters Wherein after preparation to attention and a preludium of Gods gracious acceptance of the prayers of the Saints and of his terriblenesse to the wicked seuen Angels sound their trumpets to call on the hosts of Gods iudgements to waste both land and sea to infect their waters whereof they dranke and the aire wherein they breathed his hosts of hurtfull beasts comming out of the bottomlesse pit and of men brought from afarre vpon horses for their destruction the last of the seuen summoning all to iudgement and making the very dead to come forth for then the trumpet shall blow 1 Cor. 15. and the dead shall rise In the particular opening of the seuerall passages there is very great difficulty Quest 1. And when he had opened the seuenth seale Vers 1. there was silence in heauen as it were halfe an houre What is meant by this silence Answ Some that will haue these visions to set forth things done successiuely Brightman assigne the opening of this seale to Constantines time when the Church had peace and quietnesse for a short time being broken off againe by the Arrians Some referre it to the time after Antichrists destruction when they say the Church shall bee quiet fiue and forty dayes before the dry of iudgement Rupertus Beda Anfelm Richard de Sancto Victore Pannonius c. grounding vpon that of Daniel 12.11 where 1290. dayes hauing beene spoken of for the censing of the daily sacrifice hee is pronounced blessed that attaineth to 1335. Some referre it to the time of Iulians persecution which was not by fire and sword but by other subtill meanes Blas Viegas nameth thi● exposition yet they were debarred from all publike seruice of God and so there was silence in the Church but it was a very short time he reign●ng but two yeeres Others vnderstand this silence of attention Bullinger Pareus Forbs Viegas F●x c. or a kinde of stupour making all silent for a time at the appearing of the seuen Angels with their trumpets the iudgements to come when they should blow being so great and strange as that the beholders were in some sort a stonied hereby and interrupted in their heauenly harmony as it is wont to be with vs when any strange thing happeneth and as it was with Iobs friends comming to visit him they sate downe in silence by him seuen dayes Lastly one addeth further Fox that the generall peace when Christ is borne is hereby signified To this of admiration and attention do I subscribe but I doe not thinke any other signification to bee in this silence The peace of the Chureh cannot be hereby meant for a time because the future troubles are not of the Church but of the wicked as is plainly expressed vnder the fift trumpet the Locusts hurt onely such as had not the marke of God in their forehead much lesse can it bee vnderstood of the quiet after Antichrist destroyed for then the day of iudgement should immediatly haue succeeded as it doth not but six trumpets first As for Iulians time it were too great a leape to come to that at the first of this vision all the time preceding being omitted Augustine Primasius Marlorat and whereas some expound it of the rest to come that being euerlasting it cannot be so taken Note that the iudgements against wicked persecutors of the Church and people of God are so stupendious that the very Saints and Angels in heauen stand amazed at them being but in figures represented vnto them Quest 2. And I saw the seuen Angels which stand before God Vers 2. Who are these Angels Answ There may seeme to be such an analogy betwixt this and that Chap. 1.4 Seuen spirits before the throne that these Angels and those spirits may seeme to be all one and that in the apocryphall book of Tobit soundeth likewise Tobit 12.15 I am Raphael one of the seuen Angels which present the prayers of the Saints c. But as I shewed there those seuen spirits are not Angels but them anifold gifts of the spirit and here by the seuen Angels wee are not to vnderstand such a number onely standing before God for thousand thousands stand before him and minister vnto him but seuen of them appointed now to this ministery and therefore they haue trumpets giuen vnto them It is contrary to plaine Scripture and derogatory from the Lord Iesus to hold that there are some Angels which haue an office as it were to receiue and present our prayers before God for Christ onely is our intercessour in heauen if the Angels and Saints doe any thing for vs it is out of their generall loue and affection to the Church a solliciting of the Lord for the good of vs all in common that aduersaries may be confounded the Gospell may enioy a free passage and the chosen of God may be gathered together till their number be made vp Quest 3. And another Angell came and stood by the Altar Vers 3. hauing a golden censer c. What Angell is this who is said so particularly to offer odours with the prayers of the Saints and what is meant by the thunders lightnings and voices following vpon his casting of fire vpon the earth from off the same Altar Answ Most Expositours agree that Christ is figured out by this Angell for he is called the Angell of the Testament Malac. 3. neither can it agree to any Angell as an high Priest thus alone to goe to the Altar and offer there for all the Saints the Altar some will haue also to be Christ as Bullinger and Pareus and Forbs Bullingers Pareus Forbs Beda Primasius Haimo some the Church of God well called an Altar because a spirituall sacrifice is herein daily offered to God as Beda Primasius Haimo c. The golden Censer some will haue to bee his humane nature wherein he offereth as both the same
after this they shall be cast into the Wine-presse of Gods wrath there to be crushed and squeesed in infinite multitudes an infinite long time set forth by the bloud running out in so great abundance arguing both many grapes and a long time of pressing There is no ground by the reaping of the haruest to vnderstand the gathering in of the godly as some would haue it taken for Tares are amongst the Corne and this similitude howsoeuer it doth sometime set forth the putting of an end to this temporall life in all men yet sometime with a particular respect vnto the wicked only as here and Ioel 3.13 and then it is only to be so farre forth applied as it setteth forth a cutting off or destroying from off the face of the earth and if wee shall goe a little further in applying it it must be in that which is vnderstood but in other places further added viz. in respect of that part of the haruest which is to be burnt with fire the tares and the chaffe which it may be is also intimated here by the Angell which is said to be ouer the fire whose office haply it was when the other Angell had destroyed the world temporally to cast the bundles of tares into vnquenchable fire and the grapes which were sharpe and sowre into the Wine-presse of Gods wrath for euermore And this Angell commeth from the Altar fitly because fire is vsually taken from thence for the destruction of the wicked as Chap. 8.5 from whence haply he may be thus described as afterwards hee that powreth out his Viall vpon the waters is said immediatly to be the Angell of the waters Chap. 16.5 so this the Angell of the fire or that had power ouer the fire If any man shall further demand but why doth not Christ appeare the second time like the Sonne of man but an Angell is said to appeare if both apparitions serue to expresse the same thing I answer that in the destruction of the world at the last day two things are to be considered the Iudge by whose power and authority it shall be acted and the instruments which shall be imployed herein the first is the Sonne of man the second the Angels spoken of as one here to shew their going about this ministery as one and according to this twofold consideration there are two diuers appearances of the Sonne of man sitting and crowned and of an Angell neither sitting nor crowned whereby wee are to vnderstand the Lord and Master of this great Haruest and Vintage is Christ Iesus hee onely giueth power to cut downe and a fruit of his iust wrath is the wickeds suffering of endlesse torments but hee doth instrumentally act both the one iudgement and the other by his holy Angels the sentence giuing is omitted here the iust manner of the whole proceeding at that day being sufficiently declared elsewhere He shall come in a Cloud hauing a sharpe sickle in his hand that is being ready to condemne the wicked world and to cut them off with the breath of his mouth as with a sharpe sickle then the Angels with all readinesse as his Ministers shall destroy the world and after sentence by him giuen leauing the godly who are inuited into the Kingdome of Heauen they shall cast the wicked into their place of torment in innumerable multitudes And thus I thinke that all hitherto is made most plaine There remaineth only the space of ground without the City where the Wine-presse is trodden being 1600. furlongs to be considered touching which I finde that most Exposi●ors content themselues with this generall that here is set forth the great abundance of those that shall be destroyed so that if men on horsebacke would looke out to it their bloud couereth the ground such a distance and so deepe as that it commeth vp to the horse bridles it being alluded vnto Esa 66.24 where somewhat a like phrase is vsed But one besides Brightman before spoken of Napier who applieth it to England expoundeth it particularly of the time when this great iudgement shall be viz. ann 1600. from the time of this vision that is about ann 1699. But here is nothing to intimate any time but the greatnesse of the place where this Wine-presse standeth Rabbi Menahen Rabbi Menahen vpon Gen. fol. 60. saith that the land of Canaan was 1600. furlongs in length now for so much as all things are carried here on in an Allegory to the Temple the Altar and the holy City which were of the Iewes I doubt not but in this space without the City it is also alluded vnto that Country such an innumerable multitude are destroyed as if such a slaughter of men were made as would ouerflow in this depth all the whole land of Canaan The valley of Iehoshaphat hath beene of old set forth to be the place of iudgement and Tophet Ioel 3. Esa 30. which is in that Country to be wide and large where there is wood enough and the breath of the Lord as a riuer of brimstone kindling it It is without the City of the Saints which is much greater euen 12000. furlongs square Chap. 21.16 not for that the number with shall be tormented together is lesse than the number of those that shall be saued but because to be streightened is an addition to paine to be inlarged an addition to ioy and comfort Touching the Angell of the fire I doe not thinke with some that either here or Chap. 16. where the Angell of the waters is spoken of it can be iustly gathered that diuers things are assigned to diuers Angels to rule ouer for they together are ministring Spirits to execute the will of God sometime in one kinde and sometime in another and because this Angell before Chap. 8.5 is said to take a Censer full of fiery coales from the Altar he may now be brought in by this Periphrasis tacitly implying what shall become of the haruest of the wicked before said to be reaped and hee that afterwards is called the Angell of the waters is plainly so called because he powred out his Viall vpon the waters Note Note that when the godly who haue suffered and beene toiled in this world shall rest most sweetly from all trauell and labour the wicked followers of the beast of Rome and all wicked persons come to burning and pressing with intolerable pangs neither can there be any auoiding of it because the Lord Iesus and his holy Angels from whom none can lie hid and not men who may be deceiued shall be actors in adiudging and compelling them into the Wine-presse CHAP. XV. ANd I saw another great wonder in Heauen Quest 1 Vers 1 2 c. seuen Angels hauing the seuen last plagues c. Vers 2. And I saw as it were a glassie sea mingled with fire c. To what time is this to be referred what is this glassie Sea whereupon the Harpers stand and what is the song of Moses which they
that is he stirreth vp the Pope a secret enemy in the West and the Turke an open enemy in the East by fire and sword to destroy the company of those that stand for the truth which howsoeuer it hath beene in a great part fulfilled already yet the most remarkable time is to come wherein being gathered together in greatest multitudes they shall be by the immediate hand of God destroyed as with fire from Heauen so that they shall neuer be able to make head againe as was before set forth vnder the sixt Viall Chap. 16.16 by the place called Harmageddon into which they should bee gathered Which time the Deuill being concluded in hell should not in such manner seduce any more till the comming of the Lord to iudgement which is next set forth And I hold with those that say the phrase here is borrowed from Ez●echiel because of the similitude of that which was then done and now Then the people of God being returned from the captiuity were assaulted by Seleucus and Nicanor and Antiochus c. out of Asia Minor and Syria but were mightily deliuered by Iudas Machabeus and his brethren being extraordinarily stirred vp and assisted from Heauen Ezech. 38.22 Ezech. 29.6 and therefore their ouerthrow that came against them is set forth by fire and brimstone and againe by a fire which the Lord threatneth to send vpon Magog For in like manner the people of God in these latter daies being come out of the captiuity of Popery are assaulted with innumerable enemies but the Lord doth mightily preserue them and disappoint their enemies of their purpose and will we doubt not when greatest need shall be at the last yet more miraculously saue his by destroying their enemies both Turkes and Papists when they shall be in an highest attempt against them That the Scythians came of Magog who are the present Tukes and Tartars is agreed by all Writers and that Meshech and Tubal ouer which Gog is said to be the chiefe Prince are Iberia that is Spaine and Cappadocia Ieron de inter Heb. nom Ierome sheweth De interpr nominum Hebr. Touching other exposi●ions and first for that of enemies in generall it is too large and taketh away from the light giuen here to see more particularly into this matter for that which restreineth it to the Turkes onely seeing two names are here vsed I see no reason why both should be referred to one sort of enemies especially there being two that continually infest the Church of God so aptly figured out by them Touching the fire and the casting of the Deuill into the lake of fire and brimstone I cannot thinke it is to bee meant of the last iudgement and of the fire of that great day of the Lord because when that day shall come there shall be a generall security eating and drinking marrying and giuing in marriage and not warring and sighting for if an end of these warres should be made by the Lords comming to iudgement how should the faithfull haue time here to reioyce and to giue thankes vnto to God for their greatest enemies ouerthrowne It is true there may be some relikes of the Antichristian Sect after this 2 Thess 2.8 in regard of which it is said that Antichrist shall bee abolished by the brightnesse of the Lords comming but that hee shall stand to be able to make so great a power as is here described is most improbable The Turkes haue had hitherto great successe in their warres against Christians but they whom they haue fought against haue beene as bad as themselues or worse and therefore they haue beene armed to become a scourge vnto them as was shewed chap. 9. But when they shall come in their greatest power against the true Christians of the Reformed Religion though the Papists shall ioyne with them to make their Armies innumerable God will from Heauen fight against them and confound them In confidence whereof let vs be resolute and comfort our selues if we should see greater preparations of warre made by all our enemies for we shall vndoubtedly triumph ouer them all at the last Quest Vers 11. 4. What is meant by the appearance of a great white Throne and the comming together of all before him that sate vpon it and the fleeting away of Heauen and Earth from before him what are the Bookes and the other booke called The Booke of life according to the contents whereof all were iudged and according to their workes and how are death and hell cast into the lake of fire Answ Brightman There is no great difference amongst Expositors here onely some turne all that is said into an allegory of the conuersion of the Iewes holding that by the dead here set forth to rise together they are meant who haue beene all this time dead as it were in infidelity But the place is so plainly of the generall resurrection at the last day and the arguments so sleighty to cause vs to vary from the common receiued exposition which is of the generall resurrection and the exposition which applyeth it to the Iewes in the particular passages here is so wrested and forced Pareus as one a learned Writer hath well noted as that this may by no meanes be admitted The chiefe reason of this interpretation is drawne from that which followeth Chap. 21.22 because the Authour of it conceiueth that the description of the new Ierusalem with the circumstances cannot agree to the state of the Church triumphant in heauen and therefore a famous Church to come vpon earth must needs be pointed at there but how these may be applied to the state of the Church triumphant in heauen shall appeare in their proper place In the meane season I follow the common exposition of all Writers holding that the generall resurrection and proceedings which shall bee at the last day are here set forth for euery place of Scripture is properly to be vnderstood vnlesse there be a necessity of admitting a figure because otherwise either some absurdity will follow or it will not agree with the analogy of faith neither of which can be iustly said here He that sitteth vpon a great white Throne is the Lord Iesus who appeareth thus to shew his glory for white is a signe of glory Mat. 17.1 the heauen and earth are said to fly away from before him to declare the fiercenesse and intolerablenesse of his anger at that day which is such that neither earth nor heauen are able to beare it a circumstance very vnfit to bee applied to that most notable worke of grace in bringing the Iewes home to the faith They shall fly away in regard of their externall forme and figure for they shall be changed as a vesture the heauens melting with heat and the earth flaming with fire but their substance shall still remaine after this called a new heauen and a new earth as most hold The dead that stand before the Iudge are both great and small
c. pag. 79. Text 16. Chap. 2. Vers 13. Be ye subiect to euery humane ordinance for the Lord whether to the King as to the chiefe or to the Rulers c. pag. 92. Text. 17. Chap. 3. Vers 3. Whose apparell let it not bee any outward thing of the broidring of the haire or of putting gold about or the ornaments of apparell c. pag. 97. Text 18. Chap. 3 Vers 13. And who will hurt you if ye be followers of that which is good but if ye suffer for righteousnesse ye are blessed c. pag. 102. Text 19. Chap. 3. Vers 18. Being put to death in the flesh but quickned in the spirit wherein he went and preached to the spirits in prison c. pag. 106. Text 20. Chap. 4. Vers 1 2. Christ therefore hauing suffered in the flesh for vs put vpon you the same minde also c. pag. 117. Text. 21. Chap. 4. Vers 12. Estrange not your selues from the fiery triall which is amongst you to proue you pag. 121. Text. 22. Chap. 5. Vers 13. The Church that is at Babylon saluteth you greet ye one another with a kisse c. pag. 127. Text 23. 2 Peter 1. Vers 4 5. Whereby are giuen to vs exceeding great and precious promises that by them ye might be partakers of the diuine nature pag. 131 Text 24. Chap. 1. Vers 19. We haue a more sure word of prophesie to which yee doe well that yee take heed pag. 139. Text 25. Chap. 2. Vers 1. Which shall bring in Heresies that destroy denying the Lord that bought them c. pag. 145. Text 26. Chap. 2. Vers 11. The Angels being greater both in might and power beare not blasphemous iudgement against them c. pag. 150. Text 27. Chap. 2. Vers 20. For if escaping the filthinesse of the world in the knowledge of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ c. pag. 152. Text 28. 2 Pet. 3. Vers 5. They are willingly ignorant of this that the Heauens were of old and the earth set out of the waters by the waters c. pag. 155. Text 29. Chap. 3. Vers 8. I would not haue this one thing hidden from you that 1000 yeeres is with the Lord as one day and one day as a 1000. yeeres c. pag. 161. Text 30. Chap. 3. Vers 15. And count the long suffering of our Lord saluation as our beloued brother Paul hath written to you c. pag. 168. Text 31. 1 Iohn 1. Vers 1. That which was from the beginning which we haue heard seene c. p. 156 Text 32. Chap. 2. Vers 2. He is the propitiation for our sins not for ours only but for the whole world vers 7. I write no new Commandement c. p. 182. Text 33. Chap. 2. Vers 12. I write vnto you children because your sinnes are forgiuen you through his name Vers 13. I write to you fathers c. p. 186. Text 34. Chap. 2. Vers 18. Little children it is the last houre as ye haue heard that Antichrist commeth there are now also many Antichrists c. pag. 189. Text 35. Chap. 3. Vers 1. For this the world knoweth vs not because it knoweth not him Beloued now ye are the sonnes of God c. pag. 198. Text 36. Chap. 3. Vers 5. Ye know that he was manifested to take away our sinnes who so abideth in him sinneth not c. pag. 200. Text 37. Chap. 3. Vers 21. If our heart condemne vs not we haue boldnesse towards God c. pag. 203. Text 38. Chap. 4. Vers 2. Euery spirit that confesseth Iesus Christ to haue come in the flesh is of God c. pag 206. Text 39. Chap. 4. Vers 8. He that loueth not knoweth not God for God is loue c. pag. 208. Text 40. Chap. 5. Vers 2. Hereby we know that wee loue the children of God when wee loue God c. pag. 212. Text 41. Chap. 5. Vers 6. This is hee that came by water and bloud euen Iesus Christ c. pag. 214. Text 42. Chap. 5. Vers 16. If any man seeth his brother sinne a sinne vnto death let him aske and hee shall giue life c. pag. 217. Text. 43. 2 Iohn 1. The Elder to the Elect Lady p. 224. Text 44. Iude Vers 4. For certaine men are crept in which of old were proscribed to iudgement p. 232. Text 45. Vers 8. Likewise also these dreamers doe defile the flesh they set light by authoritie and blaspheme glories c. pag. 236. Text 46. Vers 14. Enoch the seuenth from Adam prophesied of them saying Behold the Lord commeth with thousands of his Saints c. pag. 241. THE CATHOLIKE EPISTLE OF THE Apostle IAMES THis Epistle together with the six following haue gone vnder the name of Catholike Epistles amongst the Greekes and of Canonicall amongst the Latines a long time but vpon what reason it is vncertaine saith Pareus Pareus in Iac. Epist Lyra Oecum Gorran The reason which is yeelded by Lyra Oecumenius and Gorran that they haue the name of Catholike from the vniuersality of those to whom they are directed either to all the Iewes dispersed into all countries or to all Christian people in all Countries of the world whereas Saint Pauls Epistles are directed to particular Countries seemeth vnto him to be no good reason because so the Epistle to the Hebrewes being written to all the Iewes wheresoeuer should haue beene intituled Catholike likewise and the two latter Epistles of Saint Iohn being to particular persons could not by this reason be called Catholike And touching the name canonicall it is more disliked by Beza also Beza because not these seuen Epistles but all the rest are canonicall alike But the reason of the name Catholike seemeth to me to bee good notwithstanding the exceptions alledged for the Epistle to the Hebrewes haply was sent to Ierusalem the proper place of the Hebrewes where they still offered their Sacrifices as seemeth by the Argument of the Epistle and therefore might not so well be intituled Catholike but onely The Epistle to the Hebrewes as that to the Romans The Epistle to the Romans but this of Iames is named to the Iewes scattered in all parts And touching the two latter Epistles of Saint Iohn although they are directed to particular persons yet the Argument of them is Catholike or Vniuersall alike concerning all Christians and not particular as the Arguments of the Epistles of Paul for the most part of euery of them are For although euen in them generall duties concerning all are set forth yet each of them is principally directed to particular points to dispute of which particular occasion was ministred by the Christians of that place to which the Epistle was sent This Epistle in order is the first not because Iames is to be preferred before Peter who was the first ●●d chiefe of the Apostles Gorran if there were any such but as some haue well noted because this Epistle is to all Iewes in
and 1000. yeares vnto which this conceit can no way be fitted It is a thing generally agreed vpon by all that these words of Peter seeme to proue that it is not such a long time before the day of Iudgement since it was spoken of vnder the Gospel as being at the doores for though according to mans account it be long thus many hundred yeares being already past yet according to God it is a very short time with whom 1000 yeares are but as one day I would not rashly affirme any thing in a matter so doubtfull but yet it seemeth probable especially considering the times computed in the Reuelation that about the expiration of 6000. yeares from the Creation the world shall haue an end To the second doubt it is generally answered that Gods will is either voluntas signi or voluntas bene-placiti the one reuealed the other secret by the first he would haue all men come to repentance be saued not by the secōd But so there should be a contrariety betwixt the will of God reuealed secret which I thinke ought not to be admitted There is therefore another distinction God is said to will any thing Anthropopathôs after the manner of men as he is said to repent to be grieued or to be angry because hee doth as man is wont to doe when he repenteth c. so hee is said to will the saluation of all because he affordeth vnto them the meanes of saluation and doth earnestly inuite them to repent and beleeue that they may be saued and in this his willing hee is serious and not deluding though in the end he damneth many euen as the Mariner seriously desireth the sauing of the goods in his ship and yet vpon extremity casteth them out into the Sea and this his willing is not vaine but effectuall because by the setting forth thus of his grace such as are appointed vnto life are conuerted and saued the louing kindnesse of the Lord mouing them to repentance To the third doubt some haue deliuered strange coniectures hereabout Ambros Compsae Episc in 2 Pet. cap. 3. as that the very starry heauens shall be dissolued and not the acrean heauen onely because after mention made of the heauens hee speaketh of the Elements that is the aire c. whereby it appeareth certainly that the heauens here are one thing and the aire another Neither can the words which are vsed here and verse 10. and in sundry other places without forcing be otherwise expounded as Heb. 1.11 Psal 90. Reuel 21. Esa 65. and 51. The heauens shall passe away as smoake and Matth. 5. Heauen and earth shall passe away And touching the earth likewise they hold that it shall be burnt vp and then formed anew as after these heauens dissolued there shall be a new heauen and because in vaine there should be a new earth if there were none to inhabit it they hold that this new earth shall be inhabited by Infants dying before Baptisme who haue neither done any thing worthy of hell nor receiued the Faith of Christ that they might attaine Heauen Hitherto Ambros Comps who saith that many were of the same minde but yet acknowledgeth that there is need of a reuelation to know this and that it is but a pious coniecture But Clement bringeth in this our Apostle Peter disputing with Simon Magus Clem. Recognit 3. and speaking almost to the same effect Simon Tell me if this Heauen shall bee dissolued as thou teachest why was it made at the first Peter It was made for this present life of men that there might be a distinction lest men vnworthy should see the Throne of God which is to be seene onely by those that are pure in heart Simon But if God be good and the Heauens which hee hath made are good how shall it come to passe that a good God will dissolue them but if hee dissolueth them as euill how shall he seeme to be good who hath made euill Peter If the Heauens had beene made for themselues but not for another vse it were true indeed that thou sayest but they were made to hide from the sight of mortall men the Throne of God which yet must necessarily one day appeare and then they must be dissolued for this end as the shell of an Egge though it bee curiously made yet must be broken that the forme of the Chicken within for which it was made might appeare and the Chicken come forth a Hil. cant 4. in Mat. Enar. Psal 122. Coelum hoc quod visui nostro subiacet quod tanquam fumum solidatum firmamenti naturam nomen accepit praeteribit non erit sedes autem domini coelum sc in quo Deus habitat manet in aeternum Hilary also saith This Heauen which we see with our eyes as a solid fume obtaining therefore the name and nature of a Firmament shall passe away and be no more but the Seat of the Lord that is the Heauen in which God dwelleth remaineth for euer Of this opinion also b Hieron lib. 14. in Esa Ierome speaketh affirming that it was followed by many and proued by this place of Peter and where by Paul it is said c 2. Cor. 4.18 That those things that are seeue are temporall but those that are not seene eternall Hee also saith that it was the opinion of some Philosophers And d Euseb praeparat Euang. li. 15. Aug. de Ciuit lib. 20. cap 24. Eusebius that it was the Doctrine of the Stoicks amongst whom the most ancient Zeno Cleanthes and Chrysippus held that all visible things after a long circuit of time should be resolued into fire What others hold wee may see in the Text before going for Augustine as Oecumenius holdeth that by the Heauens and Earth are meant onely this inferiour world consisting of the Earth and the Aire which were once before destroyed by the Floud and what others follow either opinion I haue declared at large vpon Rom. 8.19 where I haue shewed If the Heauens and the Earth shall be destroyed yet it shall not be to their abolition but that they may be restored to more splendor and glory according to that passage Rom. 8.19 and seeing it is hereabout agreed amongst those that follow this opinion there needeth to be no great difference about the particulars that shall be destroyed whether the starry or the aerean Heauens or both But vpon further consideration I doe now rather incline to the opinion of those that hold that this Earth and all the Heauens which we see shall be quite consumed for they shall be changed as a vesture which is not to be renued vnto better but to be vtterly destroyed neither if they should remaine can it be conceiued to what vse when there shall be no inhabitants And so I come to the fourth doubt To what end these new Heauens and Earth shall serue when there shall be no inhabitants remaining for men which are good
hereafter CHAP. XIV AND behold a Lambe standing vpon mount Zion Quest 1 Vers 1. and with him an hundred forty and foure thousand hauing his Fathers name written on their foreheads c. Who are these and to what time is this to be referred What is that musicall voyce which commeth from heauen and the new song sung there which none could learne but these one hundred forty and foure thousand And what is meant by saying that they are virgins and follow the Lambe and that they are the first fruits vnto God and that no guile is found in their mouth c. Answ I will not delay the Reader much here with diuersity of expositions for this place as I take it is parallel to that in the seuenth Chapter so that as there after much violence and bloud-shed of the seruants of God spoken of before it is added as a comfort that of euery tribe were sealed twelue thousand making vp all together this number of one hundred forty and foure thousand In calling him the Lambe he taketh vp the speech vsed Chap. 7.8 All worship the beast whose names were not written in the booke of life of the Lambe which stood fast vnto the truth of God notwithstanding the danger of those persecuting times solikewise here after the beasts bloudy proceedings against all that would not worship him spoken of in the fore-going chapter this comfort is added that the Lambe Christ Iesus all the time of Antichrists reigne standeth vpon mount Zion that is is vigilant ouer his Church to preserue it from perishing and hee hath still with him euen in these times of greatest streights and hundred forty and foure thousand followers that is many thousands thorowout the twelue tribes of his whole Church dispersed ouer the world set forth thus in allusion to the old Church of God vnder the Law And these followers of his are vnmoueable as mount Zion that is most fixedly adhering to his truth for so the firme standing of the faithfull is described by the Psalmist saying Psal 125.1 They that trust in the Lord shall be as mount Zion that can neuer be remoued And they haue Gods name in their forehead to set forth their constant confident professing of the truth of God all superstitions of Popery which are a marke vpon the forehead of those that follow the beast being vtterly abandoned And as after the sealing there an infinite multitude are brought in with white robes and palmes praising God with whom the Angels ioyne making a most sweet consent it being a representation of the ioyfull condition in heauen of such as haue suffered for Christ in this world but now are triumphing there that the languishing spirits of such as are yet militant vpon earth might be recreated the more cheerefully to beare the terrible brunts of hottest persecutions who were before set forth by the sealed ones so here is an intimation of an infinite multitude already reioycing in heauen in that he saith that hee heard the voyce as it were of many waters and of a great thunder and of harpers which sung a new song for these speeches may well set forth an infinite multitude whose noise is as the noise of great waters and great thunders but this seemeth to be spoken of their congregating together to this heauenly harmony which is performed as it were by harpes and singing of a new song that is a most rare and excellent song of the praise of God and of the Lord Iesus Christ which song the faithfull here doe learne but none else because none but they doe praise God all others magnifie the beast but these by their praising of God from honest and sincere hearts sanctified by the truth begin euen now to come into the quite of heauen to which they and none but they shall be vndoubtedly ioyned at the last praising God for their deliuerance perfected as now they doe for the fountaine and beginnings hereof the Lord Iesus Christ and his spirituall graces and the ioy of the holy Ghost resulting here-from whereby they doe euen now as it were sit together in heauenly places And as there an Angell is brought in questioning with Iohn and telling him who these were and of their perfect holinesse through the bloud of the Lambe set forth by white robes washed therein and of the Lambes being in the midst of them and leading them forth to the waters of life so here Iohn is directly informed that these one hundred forty and foure thousand of the Church militant are most excellent and worthy persons all immaculate and vnspotted before God both for that he imputeth no sinne vnto them being iustified by faith in the bloud of the Lambe and for that they haue kept themselues virgins vnto God not hauing committed fornication with the beast by idolatry who is afterwards called also the great whore and haue a simple honest heart like Nathaneel who is said to be without guile so that they could not be blamed either for the common vice of others by fornicating in such manner nor for hypocrisie and double dealing in professing the truth as aiming at some sinister end or by yeelding in shew vnto those idolatries thinking that as long as their hearts were right they might in shew be such for the safeguard of their liues These were not too blame any of these wayes for they were ready in giuing witnesse to the truth to lay downe their liues And they are said to be redeemed from the earth and from amongst men to note the power from whence they were inabled vnto this in what a most happy condition different from other men they are when others as men of the earth perish at the destruction of the earth and earthly things these are by the Lambe deliuered and made partakers of that fulnesse of ioy that makes their fellow seruants who went into heauen before to play and sing in such an admirable harmony And these are led forth by the Lambe for they follow him whither soeuer he goeth they follow him in suffering and they follow him into glory that where he is they may alwayes be Napier Pareus Brightman Fox c. That this is parallel to that in Chap. 7. most consent and it setteth forth the number of such as were not carried away with the common streame of corruptions preuailing in the time of Popery and the Lord Iesus appeareth most significantly as a Lambe because he yet suffered his enemies in their persecuting but he standeth to shew his vigilant care ouer his Church Arethas Some thinke that this is a diuers thing from that in Chap. 7. there being set forth the sealed amongst the Iewes here the sealed amongst the Gentiles some hold Alcasar that the faithfull vnder the persecuting Emperours are set forth but all things so fitly agreeing and this comming immediatly after the description of the beast as a thing contemporanean with him I can see no ground of such opinion It is
it is to be noted that it is spoken in the plurall number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 righteousnesses intimating as one hath well obserued Brightman Vers 8. both the righteousnesse that is by faith imputatiuely and that holinesse which by the spirit of grace is wrought in the Saints for inherent holinesse is imperfect in the best and therefore cannot iustifie and faith where this is wanting is feeble and dead and so vnable to iustifie That we may therefore be fully iustified both are necessary faith to lay hold vpon the perfect righteousnesse of Christ who is our iustification and inherent holinesse to make this garment of righteousnesse shine before men Nothing is more vsuall in this booke than by white and pure cloathing to set forth the sanctity and innocency of Gods seruants see Chap. 3. vers 4. vers 18. Here some in Sardis are commended for that they had not defiled their garments and they of Laodicea are counselled to get them white garments by reforming their wickednesse in respect of which they were said before to be naked yet wee are not here with the Iesuice to conceiue Ribera that the Saints are iust before God by their owne righteousnesse for this is contrary to the whole course of Scripture whereby euery one yea the best is concluded to be a sinner But by the Spirit of God wee are sanctified and so prepared for the Bride groome so many as beleeue and by beleeuing lay hold vpon the bloud of Christ without which our garment of sanctity is spo●ted but with which it is washed white as is said of the martyred Saints They washed their robes white in the bloud of the Lambe Reuel 7.14 Let no man then trust to his owne righteousnesse nor yet to the righteousnesse of Christ which he thinketh is imputatiuely made his if there be in him a naked and bare faith onely but consider that the cloathing of the Bride is righteousnes and therefore let him so rest vpon the one as that he neglect not the other relie onely vpon Christs righteousnesse to saluation but vnto this get sanctity of heart and life because otherwise it is dead and profiteth not vnto saluation In that Iohn falling downe and worshipping the Angell that talked with him is reproued and bidden to worship God onely Vers ● it is plaine that all religions falling downe before any creature how excellent soeuer is vnlawfull and by all meanes to be auoided The reason why hee would not be worshipped of Iohn is because he was his fellow seruant and of them that haue the testimony of Iesus for the testimony of Iesus is the Spirit of prophecie If because hee was a Spirit comming from the Lord with this reuelation he were conceiued to be worthy of worship it must be vnderstood that euen in this hee was the fellow of Iohn and the rest of the Apostles to whom the secrets of God were reuealed also and so they had that within them which was as excellent as an Angell for in that they had the testimony of Iesus they had the spirit of prophecy and hauing such a spirit they were no vnderlings that ought a duty to the Angels in heauen but euen fellowes vnto them And if they be fellow seruants to the Apostles then to all the faithfull also seeing they all make but one body in Christ That which followeth touching one sitting vpon a white horse Vers 11. who appeared vnto Iohn the heauen being opened it is generally agreed that he is Christ Iesus Hee doth not now appeare in this manner Bullinger as if according to the order of this vision he did not begin till now to fight against the enemies of his truth for how should Babylon then haue fallen and the beast haue beene destroyed But this fall and destruction hauing beene hitherto set forth in the proper place vnder the figure of Angels powring out their vials and cutting downe with sharpe sickles and by a voyce calling vpon the kings of the earth to be reuenged which they act accordingly now as was needfull the Captaine of these armies imployed in these warres commeth at the last to be described both by the place of his residence heauen the forme wherein he goeth to the warres vpon a white horse the name by which hee is called faithfull and true iudging the word of God the Lord of lords and King of kings his parts and apparell eyes like flames of fire a mouth out of which went a two-edged sword many crownes vpon his head a vesture dipt in bloud and also by his traine the armies of heauen following him vpon white horses and his dominion he ruleth all nations with a rod of iron Whereas his name is said to be such Pareus that no man knew it but himselfe and yet by and by it is said that his name is the word of God it is to be vnderstood that no man could know Christ to be the Word and God but by reuelation The last iudgement hath beene often mentioned before but the Iudge hath neuer beene described wherefore it was necessary now at the last to set downe this ample description of him The Angell that standeth in the Sunne Vers 7. crying to the fowles to gather themselues together to the Supper of the great God doth set forth nothing else Bullinger but how open and manifest a destruction of Antichrist and his adherents shall be made when the time of their finall ouerthrow shall come it shall be as manifest to all the world as the Sunne in the firmament That whereunto the fowles are inuited is the supper of God Vers 18. consisting of the flesh of Kings and Captaines and of mighty men and horses c. this is altogether allegoricall being taken out of Ezechiel the meaning is Ezech. 39.17 Bullinger Pareus c. that as when men are destroyed in the warres their cakasses of all estates and degrees lie as a prey to the fowles of the aire theirs and their horses and retinues and when it falleth out to be thus it is a signe of their vtter destruction so the Lord would hereby haue it vnderstood that Antichrist and his followers the Kings and others that shall still obstinately cleaue to him when by others repenting and reuolting from him he shall be impugned and weakened shall haue a day when as re-uniting their forces to repaire the broken state they shall be vtterly destroyed neuer being able to make head againe till the comming of the Lord to iudgement at what time they shall be taken and cast into euerlasting fire Bullinger Pareus Brightman So that here the end of the gathering together of the kings into Harmageddon vnder the Angell with the sixt viall seemeth to bee fully set forth which was but intimated there Whereas in the next place Vers 20. the beast and false prophet are said to be taken and cast aliue into the lake burning with fire and brimstone and then the remnant
A Catalogue of those Authors out of whom any thing is taken in the following Expositions AMbrosius Artopaeus Augustinus Anselmus Athanasius Aretius Adam Sasbout Alcasar Ambros Compsae Abbot Andreas Alphonsus Arethas Abbas Ioachim Basilius magnus Beda Brightman Beza Bernard Blasius Viegas Baronius Bibliander Bullinger Bellarmine Beard Brocardus Chrysostomus Clemens Alexand. Cicillus Alexand. Caietan Caelius Clemens 1. Chitreus Collado Catharinus Dydimus Dionysius Dent. Epiphanius Eusebius Erasmus Forbs Franciscus Breus Fox Fulke Faber Stapul Franc. Lambert Gregorius Magnus Glossa Ordin Glos Interlin Graeca Scholia Gagnaeus Giffard Gorran Grasserus Hieronymus Haimo Herodotus Hugo Irenaeus Iosephus Ioan. Leonard Illiricus Iunius Luther Lioy Lyranus Lorinus Methodius Marlorat Mason Nicephorus Napier Osiander Oecumenius Origen Orosius Petrus Aureolus Pareus Petrus Damascen Piscator Petrus du Moulin Pirkins Primasius Pannonius Prosper Aquitan Ribera Rupertus Richard de Sancto Victore Ruffinus Syrus Interpres Strabo Sebastianus Meyer Sixtus Senensis Scaliger Sabellicus Suarez Sleiden Surius Thomas Aquinas Tertullian Ticonius Tremelius Tossanus Turrianus Vict. Zeger Viterbiensis Victor Vticensis Victor Antioch Whitaker TO THE HIGH AND MIGHTY CHARLES by the grace of God of great Britaine France and Ireland King Defender of the Faith c. Grace Mercy and Peace in Christ Iesus DRead Soueraigne for so much as J haue now a long time deuoted my selfe by writing to doe some seruice to this Church whereof the great God of Heauen hath made your Maiesty vnder his Sonne Christ supreme Head and Gouernour J haue thought it my duty now that by the Diuine assistance J haue finished this difficult Worke which is the first that J haue put forth since your Maiesties auspicious comming to the Crowne to present it to your Royall hands as being the best way that J haue to expresse my vnfained hearty loue and affection and exceeding great ioy for the happy Inauguration of another very Dauid againe for courage after such a Solomon for wisdome of another Iosuah after Moses after a Writer a Fighter of the Lords battels Onely J pray that he who alone moderateth the warres would likewise grant Victories to our Iosuah and to his Forces and Confederates that no idolatrous Amorites may be able to stand before him but now that their wickednesse is come to such an height they may be confounded and dissipated This must be their end as the Fountaine of all profound wisdome did long agoe reueale vnto Iohn neither can it bee long before they come to this end as the following expositions vpon Iohn I hope will make plaine to euery intelligent Reader The Reuelation the expounding of which is the chiefe part of this Worke was a Booke into the mysteries whereof your Maiesties Father of blessed memory delighted much to search as appeareth by that most worthy Monument which he hath left to all posterities hereupon and I doubt not but your Maiesty being Inheritor not onely of your Fathers Dominions but also of his Vertues is likewise affected with such holy Studies being indeed as a furtherance of courage and resolution so of true blessednesse as is peculiarly by the Spirit pronounced vpon this Booke saying Reuel 1.3 Blessed is hee that readeth and they that heare the words of this Booke The distractions of Kings I grant are great by reason of their manifold most important affaires yet it is the constitution of the King of Kings that they should haue his Word before them Deut. 17.18 and be reading therein all the daies of their liues that they might learne to feare God and not haue their hearts lifted vp aboue their brethren The marke at which he would haue them to aime is the feare of God and humility amidst so many and great temptations to pride and contempt the meanes to helpe to these glorious ornaments is daily reading My hope therefore is that my seruice tendred in this kinde though by the meanest amongst many will not be vnacecptable to your Royall Maiesty but that notwithstanding the great and diuers present distractions there shall be some times spared to meditate vpon these Expositions That speech of Chrysostome was notable to secular men Chrysost conc de Lazaro making their continuall worldly imploiments a Supersedeas to the reading of the Scriptures What sayest thou O man that thou hast no leisure by reason of thy worldly businesses to reade the Word of God the more thy distractions are the more need hast thou to reade that amidst the tossings of these tempestuous waues thou mayst enioy the perpetuall comforts and directions of the Scriptures Theodosius the second Theodos 2. though his distractions could not but bee great through the amplitude of his Dominions yet spared so much time in his priuate Closet to the Word of God that hee wrote the new Testament ouer with his owne hand and Alphonsus Alphonsus King of Spaine and Naples is said to haue read the Bible with the ordinary glosse fourteene times ouer Which things J mention not most Gracious Soueraigne but onely to adde fuell to your fire and oyle vnto your flame that the zeale which your Maiesty is well knowne to haue vnto the Word of God and to the truth therein set forth may bee yet increased till it commeth to be doubled as the spirit of Elijah was vpon Elishah For what seruice is there that wee the Ministers of Christs Gospell can doe comparable to this of seeking the through Sanctification of the Lords Anointed ouer vs and of polishing the rich Diamonds of grace vpon his Crowne that they be more and more resplendent and shining The bent of our Prayers both publike and priuate is daily this way and therefore let my Lord the King pardon the zeale of his seruants if when they can get any opportunity their exhortations bend this way also We reade of Gods blessings vpon the people of Israel vnder Dauid Solomon and Iosiah and generally how in the dayes of all the godly Kings and Gouernours that haue beene the Graces shining in them haue beene so acceptable as that the Lord hath delighted to doe good to the whole Kingdome for their sakes Your Maiesty is the very breath of our nosthrils and the light of our eyes that great Tree mentioned in Daniel vnder which we your Subiects as beasts and birds doe shroud our selues and make our nests being alone worth 10000. of vs. Jt is therefore the height of our ambition in our inward desires and outward endeuours that your Maiesty may be vpright hearted and valiant as Dauid wise as Solomon and of ardent zeale like vnto Iosiah And to this end doe we presse as into the Court of Heauen by our Prayers so into your Maiesties Court with Exhortations Treatises Discourses and Expositions not passing for any toile and labour any carping and cauilling of censorious Critikes or any enmity of Sycophants so that what we doe may be cordiall to him to behold whose vertues increase with his yeeres our eyes and hearts are all fixed The times are
Iesus Christ that is because his Resurrection is our iustification who by rising againe destroyed death and went vp into Heauen that we might haue a place there Here growth a great question whether Baptisme which is outward hath any effect to the sauing of the soule or whether all the vertue lieth not in Faith and internall grace sanctifying the soule and conscience But Christ hath cut off all this question by saying He that beleeueth and is baptized shall be saued thus ioyning them together so that it is vnlawfull for any to seuer them Baptisme is then perfect and salutiferous when the conscience is baptized there being an inward working of the Spirit to the purifying of the heart by Faith as water is outwardly vsed How is Baptisme an antitype of the Arke and how is it said to haue saued those eight persons by the water Thomas Aquinas hath already set downe fiue things wherein the Arke doth serue fitly to set forth Baptisme August lib. de vnitate Eccl. s cap. 5. Gagneus Augustine hath an Allegory in the pitching within and without holding that this setteth forth charity Gagneus saith that as the waters lifted vp the Arke and so they within were saued in like manner Baptisme lifting vs vp from the earth to Heauen in an heauenly conuersation saueth vs and as the Arke though it were tossed with tempests yet could not be drowned so the Church is saued through many afflictions neither can it bee ouerthrowne He that will may gather other notes of similitude also out of Pererius and Pagnan in Isagoge ad Scripturas Perer. lib. 10. in Gen. disp 11. Touching the sauing of those eight by the water it is meant of their corporall deliuerance for it is a question whether all their soules were saued or no it seemeth Chams was not By the water is expounded by some from the water by others in the water as per is vsually taken as a Ship is said to be safe going in the water and this I take to be the best Of the Angels powers and vertues subiected vnto Christ Vers 22. enough hath beene spoken already vpon Ephes 1.21 Note Note that he which suffereth vniustly doth not finally suffer for Christ suffering thus suffered in respect of the outward man his enemies could not touch his spirituall estate but that herein he liued still and was the more highly exalted and so shall we his members be Note againe Note that Baptisme which is outward is not like the Arke to saue all that come vnto it but euery one that is of discretion must haue an inward worke wrought in him that from a good and sanctified heart he may aske mercy of God through Iesus Christ who is risen againe and ascended into Heauen there presenting the prayers of such before his Father Therefore he that beleeueth not Mark 16.16 1 Ioh. 3.3 Vers 9. saith Christ shall bee damned though he be baptized and he that hath this hope purgeth himselfe and he that is borne of God sinneth not CHAP. IIII. THE Apostle hauing in the former Chapter propounded Christs example proceedeth here to presse it vnto them that as he suffered in the flesh so they being his members should approue themselues to suffer in the flesh by the mortifying of their corruptions and as hee was quickned in the Spirit leading a new spirituall life vers 1 2. First prosecuting that of suffering by the consideration of what they had formerly beene and what some still were for which they should giue account vers 3 4 5. and how the dead of whom hee spake before were not saued but by being iudged in the flesh vers 6. Secondly hee that setteth forth that which might moue them to a new life the end of all is at hand vers 7. and wherein it consisteth viz. in being wise and sober and praying and louing and hospitable c. from vers 7. to vers 12. where he returneth to speake of suffering againe being properly vnderstood by being persecuted and railed vpon as Christ was touching which first hee comforteth them with the glory and ioy after this to come vers 13 14. Secondly he giueth a caueat against doing ill whereby a man commeth to suffer vers 15. Thirdly whereas they might be troubled in thinking that the estate of the wicked was better for so much as they were not so subiect to sufferings he sheweth that the time of the Christians suffering was now but theirs should be hereafter when it would bee much more terrible vers 17 18. Lastly that they might bee without all trouble of minde about their sufferings he directeth them to God to whom they ought wholly to commit themselues in suffering as to a faithfull Creator vers 19. 1 PETER Chapter 4. Verse 1 2 3 c. Christ therefore hauing suffered in the flesh for vs put vpon you the same minde also for he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sinne c. FRom Christs suffering death as hee was man Oecumen in 1 Pet. 4. and led a naturall life here hee argueth that we ought to suffer that death which is vnto sinne for him that we might liue vnto righteousnesse and if we be dead vnto sinne or to the world there will be in vs a cessation from sinne 2 Tim. 2. To suffer in the flesh therefore is to be dead vnto sinne as Saint Paul elsewhere expresseth it to bee dead with Christ Some of the ancient Fathers haue expounded this of the Gospell preached to the dead of the dead vnto sinne Vers 6. holding that men are said to bee dead two waies first in sinne secondly vnto sinne and to the world by being made conformable to Christ in his death and these last by receiuing the Gospell are stirred vp to condemne themselues for their former carnall liuing which they doe when they leade a new life To suffer for Christ here Tho. Aquin. Gorran Isidor is either to subdue carnall concupiscence by taming the flesh or else by exposing the body to martyrdome for righteousnesse It is according to Isidor to suffer in the whole man as Christ suffered in the whole man both exteriour and interiour the inner is the soule wherein we suffer by contrition the outward is the body wherein we suffer by macerating it and by suffering both these waies wee cease from all sinnes both carnall and spirituall For this cause it was preached to the dead Verse 6. that is either yee ought not for this cause to regard the blasphemies of the wicked or else for the auoiding of the danger of the Day of Iudgement it was preached to such as are spiritually dead that iudging themselues for such things as they haue carnally done they might escape Gods iudgement and liue as 1 Cor. 11.31 To take the six former verses of this Chapter together Mayer wherein an exhortation is set forth from Christs death considered as I haue shewed in the Analysis Here are three doubts
in good workes The foundation of God indeed remaineth sure but our faith wil be but little sure if we be not carefull to leade a life worthy the faith and profession whereunto we are called And therefore they are deceiued that say so they haue true faith they care not in what a small measure they haue it and how little it be for to get as strong a faith as may be will be little enough seeing as hath beene shewed in the former Epistle euen the faithfull shall scarcely be saued But it is further demanded here Quest 2 Doe good workes then make vs sure that we are in the number of them that shall be saued and are we not then iustified hereby as well as by faith and is not euerlasting life a reward giuen for them Indeed the Papists teach so Lorinus and therefore they reade this place thus Giue all diligence to make your calling and election sure by your good workes And Lorinus findeth great fault with Caietan and Gagneus and others of that side that they follow rather this reading with vs wherein the mention of good workes is left out as it is also in the Greeke But hee needed not to haue beene so hot for though these words were in as Robertus Stephanus alleageth three Greeke Copies wherein they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. yet it maketh nothing for the proofe of our iustification in part by workes but onely declareth that a man cannot haue a firme and sure faith without good workes the want of them causing a want of solid argument to assure that we doe truly and rightly beleeue And thus onely and none otherwise doe our good works make sure our calling and election when we carefully attend vnto them Touching the question of iustification by workes and of the merit of workes I haue spoken already vpon Rom. 3.28 and Iam. 2. For that point of the necessity of good works vnto saluatiō which Lorinus inferreth here there is no man that I know that will contend with him about it For we hold teach that good workes are necessary for euery one that would be saued and that he hath but a vaine faith that is void of good workes yet they are not necessary as the meritorious cause of our saluation but as the next words vers 11. doe declare Vers 11. as the way and a plaine and wide open way to heauen for so he saith Thus a way shall be abundantly ministred vnto you to enter Ephes 2.10 c. See also Ephes 2.10 But yet a third question remaineth Quest 3 and that is whether a man can make his election sure so as that hee may certainly be assured of his owne saluation Lorinus gathereth from hence Lo●●n●● that a man cannot be certaine because such as are called and elected are bidden to make their election sure which they should not be if by faith which is wrought in a mans calling he were sure already But this is a meere cauill of a man wilfully blindfolding his eyes against the light It is true indeed that a man is not sure so soone as he is effectually called to beleeue for there is a weaker faith and a stronger faith faith in the very first beginning giueth some assurance but this assurance is confirmed more in time by goods workes Though he which is conuerted at the first doth beleeue yet being so newly come out of a sinfull estate he cannot but be full of doubtings and feares through which his beleefe may yet be called vnbeleefe as he that came to Christ for his childe spake of himselfe Lord I beleeue helpe mine vnbeleefe And in this case it is that Peter biddeth to vse all diligence to make our calling and election sure Or rather because he that seemeth to be called and elected may haply be outwardly called only he willeth vs to approue our calling by a vertuous and holy life that so we may be sure whereas otherwise we should be deceiued The true collection to be made from hence is that a man may be sure and certaine of his saluation and that he ought not to rest till he hath attained vnto it by applying himselfe with all his power to liue so as becommeth his Christian and holy calling For otherwise it were a vaine precept to endeuour to become sure if this were not to be attained vnto I grant that the law indeed requireth that which man cannot attaine to touching doing and yet not in vaine because hereby wee are continually remembred what man was by creation and now finding it to be otherwise with him hereby occasion is giuen the same charge still lying vpon him to seeke out to another that is Christ in and through whom hee may attaine to the perfect fulfilling of the Law But the precept of the Gospell which is to beleeue and to be strengthened in the faith through godly liuing so that we may become sure of our saluation is not such a thing but that it may be fulfilled being the last refuge left for man fallen now to recouer life againe or else it were a vaine charge euen as a man that is no way able to pay his debts if hee be bidden to build a Church or to deliuer vp such an house and ground to his Creditor which he hath not and so he shal be exempt from going to prison should be but vainly conditioned withall but being bidden to goe of his errand an hundred miles he bearing his charges by the way also and so all shall be forgiuen him as there is no reasonable man that hath a minde to forgiue his debtor vpon some condition but will set such a condition as he can performe he can performe what is inioyned him But of this point of a certaine assurance of saluation to be attained by faith I haue written already at large vpon Romans 8.38 Note Note that a wicked man loseth all the benefit of his baptisme and Christian profession he hath indeed beene once washed from his sinnes by baptisme but all that benefit is now as a thing quite gone and forgotten and he hath lost his way to heauen Note againe that faith whereby we are iustified and saued Note is more certaine or vncertaine as our care to leade a godly life is more or lesse Only the godly Christian that from his heart-root desireth and laboureth to liue in the feare of God and to be alwaies doing of good can be sure that he is elected All others may iustly feare a reprobation The consideration of this election breedeth much anxiety in many who are much troubled about it in searching whether they be elected or no. But they begin at the wrong end if any man would be sure in this regard let him goe to worke as S. Peter here teacheth liue godlily and holily for otherwise to search about it is but to enter in a Labyrinth or Maze without euer finding an end CHAP. 1. VERS 19. And we haue a more
one that hath originally erred for such are not lightly brought home by repentance and they are commonly most infest enemies to the truth and therefore as a relapse into a great sicknesse so their case is most dangerous CHAP. III. 2 PETER Chapter 3. Verse 5. They are willingly ignorant of this that the Heauens were of old and the earth set out of the water and by the water by the Word of God Vers 6. Whereby the world that then was being ouerwhelmed with water was destroyed Vers 7. But the heauens and the earth that now are are by the same word treasured vp being kept for the fire to the Day of Iudgement IN the History of the Creation it appeareth Oecumen in 2 Pet. 3. how the Heauens and the Earth were set out of the waters for God commanded that a Firmament should be in the midst of the waters that is a more firme existence of waters and this he called Heauen and when as the earth was ouerwhelmed with waters he likewise commanded the waters to gather together that it might appeare and thus the earth was set out of the waters the materiall cause being hereby designed and by the waters noting out the finall and as the earth came out of the waters at Gods command so likewise the Heauens For both are made out of the waters the aire called Heauen out of their exhalation and the earth out of their concretion The earth therefore is out of the water because made out of it and by the water because hereby as by a kinde of glue is as it were cemented and made to hang together which otherwise would dissolue and vanish into dust and aire And as the Heauens and Earth had their beginning at the first from waters so the force whereby vnder God commanding groweth the concretion of the one and the exhalation of the other is fire Wherefore as from these two all things had their beginning so for sinne they haue beene destroyed by water and shall againe be destroyed by fire as not only Christians teach but also Hyraclitus Ephesius and Empedocles Etneus The Heauens and the Earth c. that is such things as are vsefull for the sustentation of mans life as Corne Grasse Trees and Beasts c. and not the substance of the Heauens and Earth For man hauing grieuously sinned the world is said to haue beene destroyed therefore by water yet it was not consumed so hauing beene replenished againe and both by Law and Gospell men being dealt withall to walke in obedience to God but yet few profiting hereby it is kept to be destroyed by fire yet that as when a man purgeth things in the fire to fine them or buildeth his house anew by vsing still the former materials so when the Lord saith that he will make a new Heauen and a new Earth and that this world shall be burnt vp with fire it is meant only that the vtensils hereof which serue for a corporall life shall be consumed by fire of which there shall be no further vse seeing we shall all then be spirituall and thus a new face of all things shall appeare in which regard it is called a new Heauen and a new Earth because those growing things which would then be superfluous being taken away whatsoeuer auaileth to the adorning and beautifying of this world and is needfull to the incorruptible life to come shall be added That these outward things are corruptible and subiect to destruction appeareth by their daily increasing and dying againe The reason why the world made in an excellent manner at the first hath beene and shall bee againe destroyed is the sinne of man whereby the creatures become subiect vnto vanity Whereby the world that then was being ouerwhelmed with water perished 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is by which Heauen and Earth for the windowes of Heauen were opened and the fountaines of the deepe were broken vp and so the world was drowned Th. Aquinas in 2 Peter 3. By the Heauens here is to be vnderstood the aire for thus the Fowles are called the Fowles of Heauen they are said to haue beene of old because they were amongst the first of the creatures and in another manner then now that is calme and free from cold winds and tempests and so was the earth more plaine and fertill consisting out of the water that is by being discouered when at the Word of God the waters were gathered together and by the water that is as Beda hath it Beda because by the diuine disposition it is all full of veines of water euen as a mans body is full of bloud otherwise it could not stand but would be reduced into dust according to Philosophy in regard of the great drinesse thereof Or else the earth is said to be out of the waters as the matter thereof and by the waters because without water it could not be fruitfull By which that is in which parts of aire and earth the world that then was perished that is in respect of the inhabitants and the outward forme of the aire which by reason of the waters long occupying the place thereof was made grosser and the earth more muddy and the water thicker by reason of the long commixion of the earth and water together But the heauens and earth that now are that is not differing in substance from that those were before but in quality are reserued that is restored to their proper place and condition for the vse of the creatures And the aire is here still called the Heauens in the plurall number in respect of the diuers Regions and Hemispheres thereof These are to be purged by fire This they are willingly ignorant of that is Luther in 2 Pet. 3. though they cannot but know it yet they wilfully shut their eyes against it for hereby they could not but learne the power of God supporting the world which would otherwise bee ouerwhelmed with waters and the iustice of God against sinne destroying by water plainly intimating another most fearefull destruction to come at the last day seeing it is so plainly threatned as that was The Heauen and Earth that then were stood out of the water and by the water that is the Heauen out of the water because it was made of water and the earth by the water because it standeth in the waters by the Word and command of God or else it could not so doe but haue long agoe beene drowned yet neuerthelesse the world that then was perished Vers 6. and so vpon the sudden all things in Heauen and Earth shall perish by fire all being turned into a fiery flame and burnt to ashes as then all things were changed by the waters The exposition of this place is easie enough in all other things but onely for these words the Heauens were of old Mayer and the Earth set out of the waters and by the waters by the Word of God August de Ciuit Dei l. 20. c. 18.
Many vnderstand the participle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 set out as equally belonging to the Heauen and the Earth and so expound out of the waters and by the waters of them both as you may see in the exposition of Oecumenius Erasin Beda and Luther and Erasmus alleageth Beda reading it thus The Heauens were constituted of old out of the water and by the water But Thomas Aquinas referreth these words Out of the water and by the water onely to the earth Beza and Beza making the distinction at these words The Heauens were of old and then adding and the Earth consisting out of the waters c. affirming that in the most ancient Copies consenting in one it is thus and our new Translation That by the Word of God the Heauens-were of old and then after a point of distinction and the Earth standing out of the waters Piscator c. Beza and Piscator for by the waters reade in the waters Gagneus as also 1 Pet. 3.20 Gagneus a iudicious though a Popish writer although he be altogether against that reading of Erasmus as being contrary to all Greeke Copies yet he saith That the Greekes generally vnderstood the matter out of which the Heauens were made to be here intimated and hee saith that he verily thinketh nothing else to be meant heare but that the Heauens and the Earth were made of water for saith he if his drift touching the Heauens should be onely to teach that they were of old Caietan who knoweth not that Caietan saith That the Heauens and the Earth are said to be out of the water because these creatures which are of the aire and they which liue vpon the earth also haue their beginning from water but this is forced I subscribe to Beza for the reading as indeed none can deny it but with Gagneus and the Greeks I hold that as the earth was set out of the waters and consisteth by the waters because at the first no earth appeared but all was couered with water but the waters being commanded to gather together the earth appeared and it is by the waters as it were cemented and conglutinated as Oecumenius speaketh which is in short here expressed so because in the History of Genesis to which this place hath reference the making of the Heauens is so set forth as that we may easily gather how they are out of the water and by the water I cannot hold this to be also intimated here For the Firmament betweene the waters and the waters is called Heauen this was out of the waters because before the diuision betwixt the waters aboue and the waters beneath it appeared not but after it came out betwixt them both it is by the waters because in the midst of them by being as much as in So that when he saith The heauens were of old it is to be vnderstood constituted out of the teaters by or in the waters quod enim subint elligitur non deest Whereas it is obiected by some that though by the Heauen the Aire bee vnderstood yet by Heauens in the plurall number it is neuer so taken I answer that it may well be set forth in the plurall number in respect of the diuers Regions neither is there any word in the Hebrew signifying Heauen but in the plurall number Touching the drift of the Apostle here thus mentioning the first originall of the Heauens and the Earth it is very aptly and pertinently done for as by the power of God and according to his Word the Heauens and the Earth were made at the first and wonderfully separated from the waters being no lesse miraculously preserued in that estate so by waters all things were drowned againe and once more by the same diuine appointment shall all things be destroyed by fire for he that by his Word hath done these things already how shall it be doubted but hauing said it he will burne vp the world with fire also Touching the next words vers 6. whereby Vers 6. Beza readeth it wherefore Luther neuerthelesse Piscator followeth Beza But 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth properly signifie whereby or by which things and that exposition pleaseth me best which referreth it to the Heauens and the Earth because from Heauen aboue and from the earth beneath the waters flowed and the world of creatures both terrestriall and aeriall were drowned and perished euen all that were out of the Arke For by the world cannot be meant the substance of the Earth and Aire seeing this remained still and so it shall after the next and last destruction by fire as Oecumenius hath well set it forth but reade more of this Rom. 8.19 For the words vsed are reserued for fire being treasured vp by the same word Vers 7. Tho. Aquin. Thomas Aquinas will haue them meant of the restitution of all things to their forme againe after that drowning by water till that they shall againe be destroyed by fire Th. Aquinas but others vnderstand them as wicked men are said to treasure vp vnto themselues wrath against the day of wrath Rom. 2.4 subiected vnto Gods power vntill this time of burning shall come which is the most probable Touching that fire destroying the wicked mention is made in some other places also as 2 Thes 1.7 8. Psal 50.3 Psal 96.3 but there is a question amongst Expositors whether it shall be at the time of the iudgement before or after If at the iudgement time it should seeme to bee an hinderance to the proceedings if before then the godly shall bee yet mixed together with the wicked and feele the paine of burning which is improbable and after it is not likely because the wicked are immediatly sent into hell fire Yet some of great note hold that it shall be after August Prosper Anselm as August lib. 20. de Ciuit. c. 16. Prosper in dimid temp c. 19 20. and Ansel in elucidat c. but the words imply that it shall be before reserued to the fire vnto the day of iudgement and 1 Cor. 3.11 it is set forth as the case of euery one that hee must passe thorow the fire and 2 Thes 1.7 the Lord is said to come in flaming fire so that the beginning of the iudgement is by fire hereby the wicked shall be first destroyed that is burnt and tormented but he that could cause a flame of fire to bee in the bush without burning it can and will prouide that the godly though in the midst of the fire shall feele no burning for they shall at that instant be changed becomming of naturall spirituall so that a materiall fire shall not affect them at all Then there being in all likelihood some cessation of this burning the iudgement shall succeed after which the wicked shall goe into euerlasting flames and therefore though they be said to be destroyed yet they are not so destroyed but they remaine still to endure further torment Martin
shall goe into Heauen the wicked into Hell the creatures shall be consumed with the fire Vers 13. It is said We looke for a new Heauen and a new Earth wherein dwelleth righteousnesse Beza that is as Beza hath it either which are the habitation of the iust or an immunity from iniustice and iniquity whereas the Heauens and the Earth that now are are stained with all manner of sinne or lastly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may haue reference to vs in whom the righteousnesse of Christ dwelleth by Faith This last is too much strained but the first is most genuine the Author of all holinesse and righteousnesse dwelleth there and none with him but his Saints and holy Angels These and all such shall dwell in this new Earth and Heauens and because hee speaketh of them in the present tense wherein dwelleth righteousnesse and it is certaine that the new heauen the abode of God and of his Angels is now it is probable that the new earth is now also but as the one so the other lyeth hid from our eyes vntill the time shall come when these visible heauens and earth being done away they shall appeare being rightly called a new heauen and a new earth because neuer appearing before Luther in 2 Pet. 3. Coelum terra in vnum Paradisum cessura sunt in qua Deus habitabit electicum eo Aug. de Ciuit. lib. 20. cap. 16. Illa conflagratione mundana elementorum corruptibilium qualitates quae corruptibilibus congruebant ardendo penitùs inter ibunt Atque ipsa substantia eas qualitates habebit quae corporibus immortalibus mirabili mutatione conuenient vt sc mundus in melius innouatus aptè accomodetur hominibus etiam carne in melius in innouatis And if the heauens and the earth to come be such eleuated farre aboue all these heauens which we see it may easily be conceiued to what vse the new earth shall be viz. together with the new heauens for the habitation of the Saints the one not being remote but contiguous to the other as shall be vsefull for the incorruptible life to come as Oecumenius hath partly touched before And Augustine more fully saith By that burning of the world the qualities of the corruptible elements which did agree with our corruptible bodies shall be quite consumed by burning and the substance it selfe shall haue such qualities which shall agree with immortall bodies by a wonderfull change that the world being renued vnto better may fitly agree vnto men being renued vnto better in their bodies In these words that learned Father acknowledgeth such a condition of the earth to come as shall agree to immortall and incorruptible bodies though hee seemeth to hold that this same earth shall be the new earth when it is thus altered and changed and therefore that the Saints shall haue it for their habitation But because it is said 1 Thes 4. that wee shall be taken vp and euer remaine with the Lord and the habitation of the Saints is aboue I thinke that this earth shall not be their habitation but rather a new Heauen and a new Earth aboue which comming in stead of this Earth and Heauen which we now see Rom. 8. the whole creation is said to be restored to the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God because in the whole world that then shall be there shall be no generation and corruption no vanity as now That conceit of those that hold that Infants dying without Baptisme shall inhabit here I leaue to the Authors of it the Pelagians as Augustine sheweth Aug. de haer c. 88. Ambros de statu puer orum sine baptis mort neere vnto which is that of Ambrose holding that they shall enioy an earthly Paradise followed by Catharinus Albertus and Pighius For this is a meere humane inuention without any ground in the Word of God because they could not conceiue how otherwise this Earth should be inhabited Note hence Note that it is neuer a whit the more improbable that the Lord will come to iudgement because it hath beene so long a time since it hath beene spoken of as being at hand and yet is not come for 1000. yeeres are but as a day yea as a watch in the night all this delay therefore is but as it were of a day or two and so that time is neuerthelesse to be expected to the terrour of wicked men that contemne it and tremble not at the hearing of it Note againe that though the Lord damneth many to hell Note yet he is not willing so to doe his desire is rather that all should repent and be saued as he declareth by sending the meanes amongst them Note lastly Note how vaine all these things are which we see the time shall come when they shall be made but fuell for the fire and therefore let vs not set our hearts vpon them but be lifted vp in our desires to those things aboue and be iust and righteous in all our dealings for so much as nothing but righteousnesse shall inhabit there CHAP. 3. VERS 15. And count the long suffering of our Lord saluation as our beloued brother Paul hath written vnto you as also in all his Epistles speaking in them of these things wherein or amongst which some things are hard to be vnderstood c. There is nothing betwixt this Text and that before going M●y●r but an exhortation Study to be found vnspotted and vnblameable before him in peace Vers 14. Tho. Aquinas Lyran. the first of which some referre to outward pollutions of the body the second to the inward defilements of the minde but I subscribe rather to those that hold them to be synonima two words vsed to expresse one and the same thing a freedome from all inquination of sinne and vnrighteousnesse seeing the righteous only shall inhabit the new Heauen and Earth Th. Aquinas In peace that is hauing peace with God he being reconciled vnto you vpon your true conuersion so as that when this terrible time shall come ye may with comfort looke vp vnto him Rom. 5.1 or else it may be vnderstood of a peaceable and quiet life without taking part with those that contentiously oppose the truth of Gods Word as the scoffers before spoken of for the true Christian preferreth peace and vnity and without any opposition doth quietly rest in the receiued doctrine of the Christian Religion not hauing any hand in making strife and brangles hereabout Or lastly a respect may here be had to the time of the Lords comming which should be full of tumult and trouble the wicked then running hither and thither and being at their wits end by reason of that terrible burning but such as leade an holy and blamelesse life shall stand as in a time of peace without such terrour hauing a minde within them resolued of Gods loue and fauour and so that all the appearing terrors shall turne to their comfort According
he contradicteth him saying That there are many of them that are predestinated vnto life that goe out of the Church and some that are in the Church and in grace are Reprobates What will not these men dare to say that are of such impudency to disgrace and gaine-say what an Apostle of Christ hath written if it maketh against their conceits But against this slander be it knowne that the going out of those that were not truly faithfull that it might appeare that they were such was mentioned to very good purpose both for the comfort of such as truly beleeue and vpon due consideration embrace the Gospell and for the credit of the truly faithfull For it is a great comfort to the true Christian to be assured that he shall keepe his standing and not be giuen ouer when he hath embraced the truth to such blindnesse as that he should afterwards be led away after error and of a Christian proue Antichristian and it maketh much for the credit of the truly faithfull that no such are thus mutable but only some intruders that lurke amongst them for a time that were neuer indeed of their number therefore might turne to any thing And lastly this may serue to warne euery man to take heed how he embraceth the Christian Religion lest not being an hearty and serious professor of it he be in iudgement giuen ouer to be an Antichrist to his greater condemnation What is meant by the anointing from the holy one and their knowing of all things This anointing is the inward illumination of the holy Ghost Gre. 5. Mor. c. 19. allocutio intimae inspirationis quae humanam mentem contingendo subleuat Iren. l. 4. c. 43. Chrysma doctrinae so Gregory saith saith that it is the allocution of internall inspiration which by touching doth eleuate mans minde Ireneus calleth it the anointing of doctrine Some haue wrested this place to proue the vse of Chrisme in baptisme whereas indeed it is not any external thing which he meaneth here but internall seeing by nothing externall we attaine to the knowledge of diuine mysteries but by an inward illumination Yet it cannot be denied but that the anointing of those that were baptized Cypri Epist 70 72. Tertul. l. de resur carnis is very ancient for Cyprian maketh mention of it ascribing too much vnto it and so doth Tertullian and Cyril Catech. 3. and Basil de sp s cap. 28 c. But Iustin Martyr maketh no mention of it whereby it appeareth that it was not in his time Athan. Orat. 2. contr Arrian And Athanasius saith plainly that Christ was not anointed with oyle and bestowed the spirit without any such Ceremony Euseb lib. 1. Hist cap. 4. Platina de Syluestro Eusebius saith that Christians are no more anointed with types and figures but by the naked vertues themselues And Platina saith that Syluester was the first that instituted this anointing Wherefore S. Iohn doubtlesse doth not insinuate any such Ceremony here but onely the inward anointing to vnderstand Touching the holy one some with Tho. Aquinas hold him to be Christ Beda Oecumen Faber Stapul Piscator as Beda some the holy Ghost as Oecumenius and some both as Carthusianus and Faber Stapulensis I subscribe with Piscator vnto the first for of the fulnesse of Christ we all receiue of the holy Ghost Iohn 1.16 and he often promised to send the holy Ghost Ioh. 14.26 that should instruct his in all things Their knowing of all things was of all fundamentall points of faith wherein these Antichrists did labour to seduce them as all agree and not such a knowledge as vnto which nothing more could be added 2 Pet 3.20 for wee are still to grow in knowledge and grace What is meant by saying that he is a lyar who denieth Iesus to be the Christ nay he saith Who is a lyar but he Vers 12. Is there none other lye but this or can he not truly be said to be Antichrist who doth not plainly deny Iesus to be Christ Beda Faber S●●●● To the first Beda answereth that this lye is so great that others are nothing in comparison of it but Faber better if such an one be not a lyar who is a lyar because to deny Iesus to be Christ is a most notorious lye To the second it is commonly answered that it is chiefly spoken against the Iewes who denied Iesus the sonne of Mary to be Christ and against Simon who said that there was another Iesus who descended from Heauen into Iordan as Oecumenius hath it Oecumen For this was a chiefe reason of S. Iohns writing both of this Epistle and of his Gospell to declare that Iesus is the Christ as he expresly speaketh Iohn 20.31 But it cannot hence be collected that none can be rightly said to be Antichrist but he that directly denieth Iesus to be the Christ and the Sonne of God for there is a denying of him euen by those that in word acknowledge him they confesse Christ Tit. 1.26 but in their deeds they denie him And I haue already shewed that by the consent of all the Fathers any heretike or wicked person is an Antichrist Valentinus is condemned by Oecumenius for a notorious Antichrist because hee said that besides God the Father of Christ there is another Father that cannot be named Cerinthus is held to haue beene Antichrist because he taught that Iesus began to be the Sonne of God in his baptisme not before and that afterwards the Spirit went away from him againe and then he suffered death and they who haue denied Christ to be God are also censured as denying the Son And by the like reason the Pope denying such a Christ as is set forth in the holy Scriptures is Antichrist for he denieth him to be our only Mediator and Aduocate he denieth the merit of his passion to be such as that hereby we are perfectly saued from our sinnes and the punishments thereof seeing he teacheth a necessity of our satisfying for temporall punishments he denieth his ordinance of his blessed Supper in both kindes and he denieth his body to be a true humane body for such a body is in one place at one time onely c. If the Antichrist should directly deny the Father and the Sonne he were easie enough to be knowne neither could he possibly deceiue so many Christian people as it is said that he shall Reu. 13. Hee must therefore be onely couertly denying Christ but openly making a profession of him By what consequence can it be proued that he that denieth the Sonne hath not the Father Verse 2● and so on the contrary side It is commonly answered that the Father and Son are Relatiues and therefore if the Son be denied the Father is also denied seeing he cannot be a Father vnlesse he hath Iesus to his Sonne because he is the onely begotten Sonne of the Father Againe the Father is denied because hee hath
of iudgement and our delight standeth firme in Gods Commandements To the naturall man the Law is an heauy burthen but to the spirituall such as all the faithfull are it being spirituall is a delight through the Spirit that is in them Note Note that the loue of God is not but in him that keepeth his Commandements the wicked man that tradeth daily in sinne whatsoeuer he boasteth of his louing of God yet he hath not one dramme of true loue in him Note againe Note that there is not that vnpleasant life which the world imagineth to the godly that make conscience of keeping Gods Lawes not daring to aberre here-from in any thing for Gods Commandements are not grieuous vnto them as all Iaacobs paines were not vnto him for the loue which he bare to Rachel as the Brides putting on of all her ornaments though it be some trouble yet it is not painfull but delightfull and so for any man to lay off his old vndecent clothes and to put on a faire new suit of apparell CHAP. 5. VER 6. This is he that came by water and bloud euen Iesus Christ c. and the Spirit witnesseth that the Spirit is the truth Vers 7. For there are three that beare witnesse in Heauen the Father the Word and the Spirit and these three are one Vers 8. And there are three that beare witnesse in earth the Spirit the Water and the Bloud and these three agree in one Hauing spoken of our regeneration and adoption to be the Oecumen in 1 Ioh. sonnes of God here he proceedeth to 5. set forth the Author of it Christ Iesus and by what meanes it is effected namely by water and bloud and therefore to shew this he declareth by what meanes he as he was man came to be adopted through whom we partake of the same dignity namely by water and bloud And indeed there was a threefold testimony Matth. 3. that hee is the Sonne of God First in the time of his baptisme by water Secondly a little before his bloudy passion when that voice came again from Heauen like thunder Iohn 13. I haue glorified my name and will glorifie it Thirdly after his death when he arose againe which could not be but by a diuine Spirit in him In that these three the Water the Bloud and the Spirit are said to agree in one the meaning is that they agree in testifying the same thing that Christ is the Sonne of God and that wee by him are made so likewise yet some Fathers thinke that the Father testifying of him in his baptisme is meant by the Spirit Concerning the Bloud and Water Mayer wherein the chiese difficulty of this place lieth I finde no difference almost in others from this of Oecumenius Th. Aquinas Thomas Aquinas vnderstandeth the Water of our Baptisme and the Bloud set forth hereby for the washing away of our sinnes and so doth the Glosse Glos ●rd Beza Beza addeth also the Bloud represented in the Lords Supper But for so much as the Water and Bloud by which Christ came is spoken of I rather assent to Oecumenius But for that which is added It is the Spirit that witnesseth that the Spirit is truth I doe not thinke that the Spirit here setteth forth his resurrection but the Spirit descending at the feast of Pentecost as hee had promised When as the speech may seeme to be strange as we reade it according to the Greeke the vulgar Latine rendreth it The Spirit testifieth that Christ is truth but for so much as here a word is plainly altered that ought not to bee we must rather cleaue to the originall and so the words will carry a good sense if we vnderstand them as Faber doth Faber Stapul because the Spirit is truth these last words seruing to illustrate the former as if he should haue said It is the Spirit that giueth restimony vnto Christ and his testimony ought to bee receiued because the Spirit is truth For that which followeth of the three that beare record in Heauen and the three in earth these things being thus premised it hath no difficulty in it Beza by the Spirit will haue the vinifying vertue of the Spirit vnderstood shewing it selfe in the faithfull who are by Baptisme ingraffed into Christ but I rest vpon that which hath beene already deliuered The Water and Bloud which are said to be vpon earth and the Spirit Aug contr Maxin inum c. 22. Th. Aquinas Gorran Gagneus are expounded by some of the Water and Bloud that flowed out of his side vpon the Crosse and of the water of his teares when he wept ouer Ierusalem and of the bloud which hee sweat in the Garden Bloud came from him at other times also testifying the truth of his humanity as at his circumcision and when hee was scourged Mat. 27. By the Spirit they vnderstand the Spirit that he gaue vp when in his Passion he said Father into thy hands I commend my Spirit And so they make these three the witnesses of his humane nature the preceding three of his diuine which doth not seeme improbable to me but let the Reader consider Touching the words following Vers 9. wherein the diuine testimony from heauen is further vrged comparatiuely by the consent of all Expositors the testimony of men there is the testimony of the Prophets who spake of the Messiah to come if this be receiued then much more the Testimony immediatly from Heauen ought to be receiued it being beleeued that this is the Messiah who hath already come Or it may be an allusion more particularly as some will haue it to that Law of witnesses at the mouth of two or three witnesses euery word shall stand For if humane testimony must be beleeued much more the diuine He that beleeueth Vers 10. Oecumen hath the testimonie in himselfe that is by being made the sonne of God such as hee beleeueth Christ to be for it is by the Spirit of Christ that he beleeueth this Note Note that if vpon testimonie we beleeue things then there is great reason that without all doubting we should beleeue in Christ touching whom there hath beene so ample testimonie the Father from heauen pronouncing him to be his dearely beloued Sonne the Spirit by comming downe and resting vpon him and his owne declaring of himselfe by signes and miracles for hereby it plainely appeareth that he was the Sonne of God Then the water and bloud that flowed from him which could not come from a phantasticall but a true naturall bodie and his giuing vp of the ghost for hereby he is manifested to haue beene man If any be incredulous and doe not beleeue Note it is because they haue no part in Christ for had they interest in him they should then haue him by his spirit dwelling in them and so they could not but turne witnesses of the same themselues The vnbeleeuing and doubtfull herein are guiltie
the meaning is I would put you in minde of the great deliuerance that was once wrought by the Lord for his people which yee know So that knowing this once is as much as knowing this to haue beene once done But the second time he destroyed those that beleeued not that is as all agree afterwards he destroyed euen those for whom he had done such wonderfull things partly by serpents partly by plagues and partly by the sword and the earths opening of the mouth Touching the Angels sinning Vers 6. and being punished therefore see 2 Pet. 2.4 only I will adde thus much more in way of expounding these words The Angels that kept not their beginning this in the vulgar Latine is their principalitie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word vsed signifieth both Graec. Scholia Oecumen c. the Greeke Scholia fauoureth that of principalitie saying that they kept not the dignitie of their nature Others that after their beginning Erasmus Bezs they continued not such as they were created for they were good but became euill the Reader may follow either of these readings for their beginning was both holy and full of power and glorie This they kept not when they sinned but left their habitation Faber Stapi● Some expound this of the punishment of their sinne when they were cast out of Heauen downe to Hell But seeing the punishment followeth in the next words and hereby their sinne is set forth I rather subscribe to those that expound it of the holy and heauenly course of life in which they were set by their creation which was as it were Oecumen a proper dwelling for them or according to the sound of the words that in ambition they went out of the places assigned vnto them aspiring to the Throne of the most High Th. Aquinas and so this passage is an allusion to that of the Prophet Esay 14.13 For the chaines of darknesse in which they are said to be kept enough hath beene spoken already in the place before referred vnto 2 Pet. 2.4 Note that heretickes are vnder a spirituall iudgement Note which is a certaine fore-runner of the Eternall at the last day they please themselues indeed in their damnable errours and sensuall liuing but blinde soules they see not how little cause there is of taking pleasure yea what great cause of horrour and feare vnto them as being now in the verie suburbs of hell Note againe that it is not without a secret prouidence Note that heretikes and sensuall liuers spring vp in Christian Congregations to the great scandall of the Church for such as haue beene guided by the Spirit of God haue written long agoe of them Though some fall thus fouly yet the estate of all is not fickle and vncertaine for these haue beene long agoe appointed vnto this it is not the case of any of the elect true-hearted Christians to fall thus Note lastly Note that there is one externall blacke brand of Arch-heretickes seruing to discouer them to such as are not able to iudge otherwise of them by their doctrine and that is vnder a pretence of religion and zeale to bee wanton and filthie in their liues And such are most of the holy Orders in the Church of Rome and Popes themselues as their Histories doe abundantly declare Haply some of the common sort may be stricter in their liues but their Ring-leaders are notoriously licentious VER 8. Likewise also these dreamers doe defile the flesh they set light by authoritie and blaspheme glories Vers 9. Yet Michael the Arch-Angell when striuing with the Deuill he disputed about the bodie of Moses durst not bring the iudgement of blasphemie c. In calling them Dreamers Oecumen in Iud. hee doth wonderfully hide the obscoenitie of the thing by the honestie of the speech their filthinesse was so great as that it was too much for any waking to doe so The filthinesse of the Barborites so called from their sordid basenesse is laid open by Epiphanius in his booke written purposely thereof called Pannarium Neither did they onely such filthy things according to the flesh but waxed mad moreouer against the Diuine Nature abrogating the Domination and vniuersall Empire thereof as Ireneus writeth Or else by the Domination or authoritie which they are said to set light by or to vilifie the ceremonies of Christs mysterie are meant in the roome of which they brought in their owne villanies The glories which they are said to blaspheme are the old and new Testaments for vnto them both Paul attributeth glorie 2 Cor. 3. 2 Col. 3. 3 Ioh. Or else Ecclesiasticall Dignities against which they inueighed as Saint Iohn saith of Diotrephes that he vsed railing speeches against them The Arch-Angell Michael conflict with the Deuill about the bodie of Moses was this The sepulture of the bodie of Moses is said to haue beene committed to Michael herein the Deuill hindred him alleaging that Moses was guiltie of murther for that he killed an Aegyptian and therefore ought not to haue any such honourable buriall but his bodie belonged vnto him Vpon this his striuing with him the Arch-Angell refrained himselfe from opprobrious speeches and so from the greater being in contention with the Deuil he argueth to the greater conuiction of them in their railing Moreouer there is another end also in alleaging this example that hereby wee might gather how the Deuill lieth vpon the catch after our departure out of this life to hinder vs from Heauen if hee can obiect any wickednesse against vs and how the good Angels of God stand to defend vs if wee bee guiltlesse Vers 10. Such things as they know not they raile against c. that is the mysticall points of religion but in those things wherein they haue knowledge that is in vile lusts they doe like bruit beasts defile themselues Then hee compareth them to Cain Vers 11. because by their errours they killed mens soules and by eating the seed of generation they destroyed bodies that might haue beene And to Balaam because they did these things for gaine And lastly to Core because though vnworthy they did with him arrogate to themselues the authoritie of teaching They set light by authoritie that is Tho. Aquin. either of Princes or Prelates whom they commonly disobey through a desire to aduance themselues And they blaspheme the Maiestie of God yet the Glosse by glories vnderstandeth either God or the Angels or Saints who are blasphemed by erroneous doctrine Out of what Scriptures the storie of Michael is taken it is vncertaine yet it is credible when God by the ministerie of his Angell hid the bodie of Moses Deut. 34.6 lest the people of Israel finding it should abuse it to idolatrie the Deuill stroue with him to bring it to light In other passages here Thomas Aquinas differeth not from Oecumenius Mayer neither is there much difference more amongst other Expositors Briefly therefore these expositions
thunders and voices lamps glassie sea and beasts thinke that hereby the seuerity and mercy of God are represented of each of which there are three signes Some by lightnings Tyconius Rupertus Rechard de Sancto Victore vnderstand miracles done by these Elders to conuert the world by thunders Sermons of Gods iudgements by voices other more milde and moderate teachings But if we looke backe to Ezech. 1.13 14. where the like vision is set forth this lightning will appeare to be the flashing out of the fire from amongst the foure beasts which are described immediatly after for they are said to run and to returne like a flash of lightning and the thunder the noise of their wings and so are the voices for vers 24. the mouing of their wings is said to make a great noise like many waters voyce of the Almighty and the voyce of speech c. So that the glory and greatnesse of God is hereby more set forth and how terrible he is that all may doe reuerence before him for thus his going forth is commonly described Exod. 19. with thunder and lightning Psal 50. A fire before him and a great tempest round about him I cannot see how these things can be referred to miracles and preachings the intention of this place being not to shew Iohn what was done vpon earth for that he saw without being taken vp but in what maiesty and terriblenesse God is in heauen reigning ouer this world that all might stand in awe of him As for the seuen lamps burning before the throne they are explained in the text to bee the seuen spirits of God of which see before Chap. 1.5 Quest 4. Vers 6. And before the throne there was a sea of glasse like vnto Crystall What is to be vnderstood by this sea Answ Some by the glassie sea vnderstand the word of God which is mentioned next vnto the holy Ghost because it is the outward meanes of sanctification Ioachim Forbs Brightman Grasser as the spirit is the inward for the word is often compared vnto water and is said to be glassie because still and vntroubled and cleare as crystall because it sheweth clearely those things which pertaine to saluation and now more especially vnder the Gospell whereas before the Sea in the Temple made by Salomon was brazen that is thicke and not so transparent Some vnderstand this world Bullinger Pareus Rupertus Tyconius Beda Pannonius Glossa ord c. which is as a glassie sea for fragility and is transparent as glasse in the eyes of the Lord. Some vnderstand the Sacrament of Baptisme wherewith wee are washed that wee may enter into heauen as the Priests washed themselues in the brazen sea that they might proceed to their office in the Temple and it is said to be glassie and cleare as crystall because they which are rightly baptized are enlightened in spirituall things they being now made cleare and euident vnto them Heb. 6. Wherefore the Apostle speaking of the baptized calleth them such as haue been once enlightned the Greek Fathers call Baptisme 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Clem. Alex. lib. 1. paedag c. 6. Greg. Nazian Chrys c. For mine own part I am not satisfied in any of these expositions for why should the word of God or baptisme be represented in heauen where there is no further vse of either And for this fraile world it is so full of tempests stormes and darke clouds as that a cleare still crystalline sea can no way agree vnto it Moreouer this same sea being againe mentioned Chap. 15. the Saints in heauen triumphing for their victory are said to stand vpon it being mingled with fire If therfore amongst so many so learned I might put in my poore coniecture I thinke that it is here alluded to the brazen sea in the Temple of Solomon 1 King 7.23 Exod. 30.18 for as that was one part of the furniture of Gods house wherein water for the Priests to wash withall was so in the highest Temple of God which is heauen there is a sea of pure water as cleare as crystall glasse to set forth how pure and cleane all things are which be there no vncleane thing can approach before the throne of God as is set forth more at large Chap. 21. where also a riuer as cleare as crystall is said to proceed from the throne of God Chap. 22.1 And that glasse is not spoken of for the fragility but for the clearenesse and transparency is plaine Chap. 21.18 where the city of God is said to be of pure gold transparent as glasse Or else consider whether by this sea of glasse bee not meant that heauen which we call Coelum Crystallinum which though it be betweene the throne of God and this world yet it hideth not but rather as a perspectiue glasse maketh all things here more manifest for this may well be called a sea seeing at the creation waters were placed there as well as below so that as ours is the earthly sea so that is the Lords heauenly Quest 5. And in the midst of the throne and round about Vers 6. foure animals full of eyes before and behinde c. What are these animals translated beasts and how are they both in the midst of the throne and round about it Answ They which by the sea vnderstand the word of God expound these animals of the ministers of the word in the foure parts of the world who are full of eyes Brightman Chitreus to shew their vigilancy and haue six wings to shew their readinesse and are like vnto a lion calfe man and eagle because with the lion they are couragious with the bullocke patient of labour and with man intelligent and with the eagle soaring aloft in heauenly meditations and contemning this world Now one is said to be like a Lion another like a calfe c. not because some haue one of these vertues onely but hauing all these as is necessary they excell more in one kinde than in another and so are figured out accordingly or else more particularly the holy Ghost would hereby expresse the diuers vertues of the holy ministery in diuers ages In the first age they were bold as Lions in preaching the Gospell in the second age they were slaughtered like oxen in the third as a wise man they discerned the beast and the number of his name in the fourth they mount higher and see more into heauenly mysteries and become more heauenly These meditations are very plausible but seeing the foure and twenty Elders doe rather set forth the principall ministers of God in all ages I cannot see how these beasts being distinct things from them and rather leaders in spirituall hymnes to the praise of God should be the rest of the whole company of ministers who are all doubtlesse as the rest of the faithfull in their place inuested with white robes and wearing crownes vpon their heads and not in any different forme Iren.
times being brought in speaking to tell of a Lion and of the root of Dauid according to the Prophesies that then went of him but when he appeareth to Iohn it is most fit that hee should appeare as a Lambe bearing a signe of being killed because he was so lately crucified and by the name of a Lambe he was spoken of by the Prophet of the new Testament Iohn the Baptist There are many reasons rendred why he was spoken of as a Lion and as a Lambe He was called a Lion first Ioh. 1.29 for his strength in ouercomming all his enemies secondly for his principality whereby he is King of all as the Lion is of the beasts thirdly for his courage whereby hee feareth nothing but maketh all afraid of him fourthly for his vnderstanding euen in his child-hood as the Lion alone of all beasts that haue clawes seeth as soone as he is whelped And whereas it may seeme strange that a Lion is spoken of for the opening of a Booke for which such a creature is vnfit one resolueth it well that sinne and the Deuill hindring from the sight of the mysteries of God Brightman a Lion of power to breake the force of these is fitly mentioned because this hindrance being taken away the seales that kept them fast in closed are as it were loosed The root of Dauid he is called according to Esay 53.2 whereas he is said to be a branch out of the root Esay 11.1 because although he be but a branch according to the flesh for so much as he came of Dauid yet hee is a root according to his Diuinity Rupertus Pannonius whereupon Dauid and all the godly are borne by faith partaking of his grace as of sap comming from him and consequently of saluation by him He is called a Lambe because he was offered vp in sacrifice for our sinnes at what time as a Lambe is dumbe and complaineth not so he opened not his mouth Orig. Hom. 24. in Num. He is in the midst of the Throne because taken vp to the same glory with God in his humane nature he standeth to set forth his resurrection Hee hath seuen hornes to shew his kingly power for hornes set forth strength and Kings seuen being a number of perfection that he hath the power of all Kingdomes Seuen eyes set forth the fulnesse of spirituall light comming from him as all Expositors agree If it shall seeme strange that Christ should appeare as a Lambe with seuen hornes to declare his kingly power seeing the Lambe is a weake creature and hath little strength in the hornes I answer that it was necessary he being set forth as a Sacrifice for our sinnes whereby they were taken away being otherwise an obstacle to the perception of diuine mysteries hornes in great number should be ascribed vnto him to declare his might yet remaining when hee had suffered lest his enemies should contemne him as a weakling And although two hornes which Lambs vsually haue were vnfit to set forth this yet seuen hornes doe fitly set forth an extraordinary Lambe mighty beyond the nature of that beast And the seuen eyes answer to the seuen Seales so that he hath eyes enow to see what is vnder euery seale Note that sinne hindreth from vnderstanding the mysteries of God they must be first expiated or else the Booke of God will still remaine sealed it is in vaine to diue into the knowledge of these things for an vnregenerate person that hath no part yet in the sacrifice of this Lambe whereby only his sinnes may be done away Quest 2. The Elders are said to haue Harpes and golden Vials full of odours which are the prayers of the Saints What Saints prayers are meant here the Saints in Heauen haue no need to offer prayers for themselues bee not these then our prayers and if they be is not here a ground to entreat them to further vs in our prayers seeing they must needs know what we pray otherwise they cannot offer the odours of our prayers And why doe they addresse themselues thus to celebrate the praises of the Lambe vpon the taking of this book to open it Ans The popish sort will haue their presenting of our prayers before God here vnderstood or at the least the prayings of the Saints in Heauen for vs which if it be so then they are Mediators of intercession and to be sought vnto by vs. Our Writers on the other side will haue nothing else but the praises of the Lambe which follow in this Chapter vnderstood because a thanksgiuing is a kinde of prayer It is most cleare that the prayers of Gods people vpon earth are not meant because they are odours in the golden Vials of these glorified Elders something proceeding from them and the ●est of the Saints in Heauen euen as the incense offered by the Priests vnder the Law was a sweet fume kindled by them that offered it But whether they were properly prayers petitioning for something or praises it is a question Forbs Brightman Some will haue this a representation of the Church vpon earth singing and offering vp the sweet odours of prayer but this cannot stand because things in earth are brought in praising the Lambe afterwards Neither can I see how the following praises should bee meant by the prayers of the Saints for that was the song which they sung to their Harpes from which the odours in their Vials are a distinct thing It must needs then be yeelded that Prayers are here properly to be vnderstood and the prayers of these foure and twenty together with all the rest of the Saints in Heauen for the Church vpon earth And so it cannot be denied but that they intercede for vs only their intercession is for vs all in generall not knowing the particular case of any seeing as the Prophet saith Abraham knoweth vs not Esa 63.16 Israel is ignorant of vs. And therefore to apply our selues to them in our praying that we may be holpen by their mediation as we are directed to doe vnto Christ is absurd and superstitious yea for so much as this honour belongeth to Christ only it is from him derogatory and so in a high degree impious It is comfort enough to vs in respect of the Saints in Heauen that they beare still an intire loue towards vs and by soliciting the Lord for vs seeke to further our happinesse and that their prayers in this kinde are gratefull as odours and so are all our owne godly prayers Also comming out of golden Vials that is hearts purified and made precious by Faith For their disposing of themselues to these praises after the taking of this sealed Booke to open the reason is plaine it is no small part of blessednesse to vnderstand the mysteries of God herein contained this blessednesse wee cannot attaine vnto but by the Lambe that hath died for vs wherefore when the Booke of these mysteries commeth to the opening there is great reason
it as a comfort in suffering seeing when a man hath suffered death for Christ he is receiued vnder his wing being conformable to him in being sacrificed they rest and are safe with him for euer Some expound the Altar of Christs humanity Bernard serm 4. Omnium sanct which the faithfull are receiued vnto now it being reserued till the last day to giue them the full fruition of his diuinity also Some by the Altar vnderstand the places of the martyrs buriall or sufferings Ribera Viegas because Altars were wont to be built vpon them and the crying of their soules they will haue to be none other but as the crying of Ables bloud where it was spilt and soules are spoken of by a phrase vsuall so many men being called so many soules But this is a meere Iesuiticall imagination seeing Altars vpon martyrs sepulchres were of a later edition and though so many men be often called so many soules yet when the soules of any that are slaine are named it cannot bee so taken Whereas most stand for Christ meant by the Altar I should willingly incline to thinke so to but that Christ yet standeth as a Lambe and therefore I cannot see how he can at the same time bee represented by an Altar also I conclude therefore as I began that by the appearance of an Altar is represented their sacrificing when they suffered the place wherein they now are being heauen the common receptacle of all faithfull soules but said to bee vnder the Altar to denote the manner of their death neither doth Iohn see them with his bodily eyes but being in the spirit And fidy doe the soules of the martyred appeare after such a number slaine by cruell enemies crying for vengeance not vocally for soules doe not vtter voyces but vertually the destroying and murthering of them hauing a loud cry in the eares of God so that a desire of reuenge in them is amisse surmised to bee from hence who being in the flesh had so much loue as that they prayed for their persecutors and were farre from the spirit of reuenge But they are brought in crying aloud for the terrour of persecutors seeing the cryes of such shall without doubt bee regarded though in respect of many more yet in these times of corruption to bee crowned also with martyrdome a delay to bemade Whereupon it is that their answer is also set forth in this manner And thus I haue briefly resolued the rest of the doubts without delaying the reader by the diuersity of expositions Pareus Brightman Chrysost Hom. in Psal 9. August Serm. 30. detemp some interpreting their cry for reuenge to be onely for deliuerance of the Church from persecutors hauing beene already so long oppressed and some for the taking away of this malice out of mens mindes that there may bee no more persecuting by confounding such Kings and Potentates that they may bee brought to turne vnto Christ The white robes giuen vnto them Bullinger Brightman howsoeuer some contend that they were signes of some comfort and breathing time which the Church should haue and had about this time according to their exposition yet both the plaine speech which is vsed in answering them is against it for they are told of their brethren that must be slaine also and white robes are neuer spoken of in this sense Pareus but to set forth heauenly glory which is not to be thought now first to haue been giuen vnto them but immediatly vpon their departure out of this life when their deaths began first to cry though it was not represented in vision till now so that euen when they cry they are in the midst of heauenly ioyes and without all passion of sorrow onely they are not perfectly glorified till the whole company being made vp at the day of iudgement being reunited to their bodies they shall reigne in heauen for euer wherefore they are bidden rest till their fellow seruants were slaine also And well doth this cry come in after the fourth seale representing the corruptions in the Church fighting against the truth because this persecution hath beene longer than any before it and therefore needfull it was to tell of martyrs which had beene already made crying out and of such as should yet bee made when it might seeme to bee full time to put an end to these miseries that expecting so long a continuance wee might arme our selues with patience Quest 3. The sixt seale being opened Vers 12. there was a great earthquake and the Sunne became blacke as haire cloth and the Moone as bloud c. What is meant by these things and whether the day of iudgement or no Answ Most Expositors hold that the day of iudgment is here described Fox Richard de Sancto victore Pannonius Primasius Beda Rupertus Arethas c. when the reuenge before cryed for is taken vpon all sorts of persecutors of the Church and the words here vsed are nothing else but a periphrasis vpon this day for thus the Lord setteth forth the day of iudgement Luk. 21.11 There shall be great earth-quakes in diuers places Vers 25. There shall be fignes in the Sunne Moone and Starres and vpon the earth distresse of nations with perplexity Vers 26. Mens hearts failing them for feare c. and more expresly Mark 13.24 The Sun shall be darkened the Moone shall not giue her light 25. The starres of heauen shall fall and the powers of heauen shall be shaken The Sun shall be darkened because it shall no more giue light to this world the Moone shall be turned into bloud to shew the great destruction that then shall be the stars shall fall there being no further vse of them when men shall cease to bee here euen as the leaues of the figtree fall off when there is no further need of them to couer the figs. The heauens are as a booke folded vp when they lofe all their light being as it were clapt together whereas now it standeth open That which followeth of the mountaines and ilands remouing out of their places is to shew the greatnes of this earth-quake euen to the destroying of the earth Then all wicked men how great soeuer they haue beene in this world shall quake and feare being vnable to beare the wrath to come vpon them set foorth in their calling to the mountaines to fall vpon them c. Blas Viegas Who also saith that many Doctors expound this thus Brightman Grasser Others will haue these things vnderstood allegorically the great earth-quake of the great persecution vnder Dioclesian being in all parts of the earth at once then say they the Sun of righteousnesse Christ was darkened in his members the Moone the Church appeared like bloud being all bloudy with slaughters the starres the ministers of God many of them fell for feare from Christianity to idolatry the he●uen the Church was folded vp as a booke hiding it selfe for feare at that time and the inhabitants of
apparitions agree to these iudgements being almost euery one alike the Sword Famine and Pestilence where as in the figures first there is haile and fire and bloud vpon earth then a burning mountaine in the sea c. euery one differing greatly from another I answer that the Lord did not respect so much the diuersity of euils to come as the number of them and the greatnesse able to make all men to turne their eyes to behold and bee amazed at them And more particularly these are made choise of to set them forth after the manner of the Prophets who are wont to allude vnto some remarkable History of things past in foretelling of things to come though they be not of the very same kinde for vpon the Egyptians these things were done almost according to the letter there was haile and fire mingled together their Riuers were so smitten as that they could not drinke of them without dying there was darknesse of three dayes and three nights and finally the red Sea like bloud falling vpon them as a huge mountaine became their destruction being like fishes tumbled vp and downe in the deepe To shew then that these professed enemies and persecutors of Christianity should be destroyed by Gods Iudgements as Pharaoh and the Egyptians were these figures are taken vp and because they had many waies to torment Christians the Lord sheweth that they also should be plagued many waies and be destroyed with strange iudgements before vnheard of For it is Gods manner to punish sinners in their kinde the Sodomites who burnt with strange lusts with a burning fire from Heauen the builders of Babel who sought them a name with confusion and the enemies of the Christian Religion who sought out strange tortures with a burning mountaine and worme-wooddy Starre c. iudgements strange and terble And the third part of the Sea and the third part of trees c. are said to bee affected with these iudgements as I thinke because it was but a third part of the whole world where these tragedies were acted if the parts vnknowne till of late and yet vnknowne be considered Quest 4. And I saw and heard an Angell flying thorow the midst of Heauen saying with a loud voice Woe Vers 13. c. What Angell was this and why is this cry interposed here Answ The vulgar Latine and Arias Montanus for Angell reade Eagle I saw an Eagle flying but in all other Copies it is an Angell Lyra. Petr. Damas Viegas Ribera Hereupon some stand to finde out why an Eagle should be vsed to cry thus and resolue that it was one of the foure animals like an Eagle and some Iohn himselfe who was hereby figured out and some the Preachers of the last times or some singular Preacher who should foretell the iudgements of those daies Beda Arethas and Ticonius follow the vulgar but there is the like passage againe afterwards Reuel 14.6 where it is spoken of an Angell putting it out of doubt that it is an Angell here also Forbs Brightman Pareus Some will haue this Angell to be Gregory the great who gaue warning of the Ant●christ not aboue three yeeres before lib. 4. Epist 34. The king of pride is at hand and which is horrible to speake an army of Priests is prepared Epist 38. He iterateth the same and addeth He is Antichrist that shall challenge to himselfe to be vniuersall Bishop Not much aboue three yeeres after Boniface the third tooke vpon him this title and his successors likewise to this day plainly declaring the Pope to be Antichrist euen by their owne rule which is That the Pope cannot erre And therefore Pope Gregory erred not in thus saying but it was truth which he so seriously and often affirmed Hee that will be vniuersall Bishop is Antichrist This howsoeuer it be true yet it hath no place here for the woes proclaimed are not against the Church but the inhabitants of the earth by which name wicked shedders of the innocent bloud of Christians are complained against vnder the fift Seale It is more genuine therefore by this Angell to vnderstand an Angell properly as in speaking of other Angels who flyeth thorow the midst of the Heauen that the sound of his denunciation might bee heard euery where hee giueth warning of greater plagues yet to come Hitherto terrible iudgements against professed enemies of Christianity riding vpon the red horse had beene represented now the case of heretikes and of corrupters of Religion in the Papacy commeth to bee described in the fift and sixt Trumpets and the finall destruction of all the wicked in the seuenth and because these indgements should yet be more grieuous than the former it is cried Woe woe woe as there were three times of execution yet to come that if it were possible mens hard hearts might be pierced and many being brought to repentance might escape these euills For it is Gods vsuall manner to giue warning before hee striketh which if it be not taken the heauier will the iudgements bee when they come CHAP. IX ANd the fift Angell blew his Trumpet Quest 1 and I saw a Starre fallen from Heauen to the earth and to him was giuen the key of the bottomlesse pit c. What is meant by this Starre and by the Locusts comming out of hell together with the circumstances of their description in their forme time manner of tormenting and King which is set ouer them Many Writers by this Starre vnderstand the Bishops of Rome in their succession Answ when they fell from being heauenly and seeking after the saluation of mens soules to be earthly and to seeke more after honours and riches here for then they had keyes indeed but of the bottomlesse pit Brightman And some more particularly referre this Trumpet to Boniface the third who obtained of the Emperour Phocas to bee vniuersall Bishop for then the fall appeared being indeed before as is intimated in the word fallen not falling but now the fall was made more sensible Darknesse arose when ignorance preuailed and in these times of ignorance an innumerable company of religious persons of diuers orders who like Locusts eat vp the fat and best things euery where They sting like Scorpions when they seeme least to intend any hurt but only such as are not marked for God hath his Church in the midst of Popery others which are misled by them are not proceeded against as by persecutors before described but vnwittingly receiue such Doctrine from them as turneth to a sting of conscience more grieuous than the bodily death viz. the doctrine of Purgatory and of vncertainty of saluation and of the merit of workes and of superstitious orders and tedious pilgrimages and bloudy whippings more grieuous than present death The time of fiue moneths limited vnto them some vnderstand indefinitely Bib●●an ●●r Arto ●●us Rullinger Chytraeus this being the whole time of the Locusts which lay their egges in Autumne and being kept all winter in a
and minaciously than hee hath beene wont to doe Their powers are in their mouthes and in their tailes The Locusts power was in their tailes onely for they spake not against Christianity in generall but were ready though in a corrupt manner to entertaine it but these as professed enemies defie Christianity and make war against it and by cruelty and deceiueablenesse seeke to draw as many to Mahumetisme as they can and thus they destroy both soules and bodies And because they are said to haue lions heads as the Locusts Lions teeth and it is the property of a lion to kill with his taile they kil also with the taile as they did being first called vpon for aid but turning to be destruction to such as called them as the serpent proueth to him that receiueth it Vers 20. The rest neither repented that they should not worship Deuils nor images of gold c. Vers 21. Neither repented they of their murthers c. In these words is set forth the obstinacy of the Papists and it is made yet more euident that the Turkes were sent for a plague of their superstitions and corruptions And the euent answereth the prediction for they are as great worshippers of images as great murtherers fornicators as euer they were Neither can this be applied to any but them seeing they onely of late dayes haue beene notorious for their idolatries and massacres and whoredomes also which haue beene obserued by all the world And whereas Deuils are mentioned the worshipping of whom it seemeth cannot be charged vpon them let their delusions by apparitions and voyces vttered at the Sepulchres of Saints and by images be considered and I doubt not but the indifferent arbiter will acknowledge that these things come from Deuils who are worshipped vpon an imagination that they are the Saints Againe an idoll is nothing saith the Apostle but what is sacrificed to idols is to Deuils Wherefore let not vs that haue repented and so are spared from the Turkes inuasion make a relapse againe but praise God for this mercy and pity their obstinacy and blindnesse which know not the time of their visitation CHAP. X. ANd I saw another strong Angell comming down from heauen compassed with a cloud Vers 1. and a rainbow vpon his head c. Who is this Angell What little booke open is it that he holdeth in his hand Why doth he stand so strangely one foot vpon the sea and another vpon the land What meaneth his loud cry and the seuen thunders vttering their voices thereupon which must not be written And why doth hee sweare so seriously that time shall be no more but during the sounding of the seuenth Angell And what is meant in that Iohn is bidden to eat that little booke c. for all these things doe so hang together that they must needs be expounded together Answ It is to be vnderstood that all these things come vnder the fixt trumpet and therefore are to bee referred to the same times though perhaps beginning somewhat after the iudgements before declared Hitherto hath beene nothing but matter of terrour by fierce enemies in infinite multitudes destroying a world of people for idolatry murthers fornications c. Now because the Lord had some people in these most corrupt times which read and cleaued vnto the Scriptures and impugned hereby those grosse corruptions though with danger of their liues and prospered in respect of their cause in so doing it seemed good vnto the Spirit of God by some figure to shew this also and the figure is an open booke in the hand of a strong Angell eaten vp by Iohn which was sweet in his mouth but bitter in his belly And againe in the next Chapter a reed giuen vnto him to measure the temple the outward Court being left vnmeasured as being trampled v●der foot by the Gentiles two and forty moneths in all which time the two witnesses of God prophesie in sackecloth c. C●y●rae●s Bulling●r Aret●●s Aug●st c. Br●ghtman For●s c. This being thus generally premised I come now to the particular Quaeres This strong Angell by the consent of most Expositors is the Lord Iesus who hath a rainebow about his head to shew the security brought vnto men by him is cloathed with a cloud that is the nature of man his face shineth as the Sunne because he is the light of the world his feet like pillars of fire to shew that his ministers propagating the Gospell kindle a fire of feruent loue where they come one foot being set vpon the earth and the other vpon the sea set forth his dominion ouer sea and land Ly●a Lyra vnderstandeth the Emperor Iustinus and his Nephew Iustinianus about the yeere 518. who held a little booke open when he wrote his Epistles against the Arrians in fauour of the Orthodox Lastly some vnderstand an Angell properly either Gabriel or some other perhaps the same that was before so desirous to haue the booke opened Chap. 5. but all the seales now being opened and men not being moued to repentance it is precisely noted in the Chapter before going he commeth againe roaring as a Lion so loud as that thunders Eccho-like are heard Arethas Andreas Abbas Ioach. Fox and protesteth that time shall be no more c. that men might hereby at the least be awakened made to repent And vnto this doe I subscribe because I see no necessity of vnderstanding Christ by an Angell here but rather as the word soundeth for it is expressed in none other termes but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 another Angell that is another such as the Angels blowing the trumpets When Christ is set forth by this name it is alwayes with some addition as the Angell of the Couenant c. Moreouer what need was there that Christ should now leaue his royall throne in heauen to come downe to the earth when hee had many ministers fit for this seruice and indeed this cannot well be applied vnto Christ seeing it is expresly said Act. 3. The heauens must containe him till the time of restoring all things Whereas the apparatus of a cloud rainebow c. may seeme not to agree to an Angell indeed let it bee considered that the Angels in heauen doe partake with Christ in his glory as the Saints doe and then it will not seeme absurd that an Angell should bee set forth thus descending all making for the honour of God and of Christ to whom they are ministers being glad with so great glory The little booke opened Pareus some will haue to be the same which before was said to be sealed Some the holy Scriptures the opening and right vnderstanding whereof Aretius after that they had beene long kept shut in the time of Popery is here figured out And this seemeth to mee to agree best for the other booke must needs be very great out of which so many horses issued and other things appeared this of the Scriptures
out by the opening of the Temple in Heauen and the Arke of the testimony appearing and the Thunders Lightnings Voices Vers 19. Earthquake and Haile concluding all Answ Some referring that which went before to the times of reformation in sundry parts Brightman Forbs vnderstand by these voices the acclamations of praise in the reformed Churches for diuers Kingdomes comming vnder the obedience of the Gospell as England Denmarke Sweuia and diuers parts of Germany And that the foure and twenty Elders are the multitude of the faithfull following the foure beasts the Pastors who hauing stirred them vp doe more particularly commemorate the time of iudging the dead meaning the Iewes who hitherto lay dead in infidelity but now shall be turned The anger of the Nations is the Popes and Papists indignation striuing to take reuenge for this reuolt excommunicating Princes and absoluing subiects from the oath of allegiance and mouing the Spaniard to come with his great Armado against England ann 1588. And now Heauen is opened and the Arke appeareth by the more cleere vnderstanding of prophesies than in former times But vnto the wicked there is no comfort hereby but matter of terrour set forth in the Thunders Lightnings c. Against this exposition maketh first the fluctuating estate of some kingdomes where the truth hath beene entertained and the holding off of most hitherto whereas the Lord is said after the accomplishment of this to reigne for euer and not some kingdomes but the kingdomes of the world are said to become the Lords by which all kingdomes in generall must needs be vnderstood Againe it is plainly forced to apply the iudging of the dead to the calling of the Iewes for howsoeuer the Iewes bee as it were dead hitherto yet the phrase of iudging the dead will not beare any such sense of comming in grace to any people but rather with reuenge And that which is opposed vnto it of the reward of the godly maketh it more plaine that by iudging must be meant calling to an account and proceeding in iudgement against them Lastly it is contrary to the oath of the Angell who sweareth Chap. 10. that time shall bee no more but when the seuenth Angell soundeth so that to expound this vnder the sounding of the seuenth Angell of things happening in this world it still continuing I cannot see how it may be iustified Some vnderstand by this seuenth Angell the last order of Preachers Gagnaeus and some other Popish after the ouerthrow of Antichrist who shall sound out the comming of the Lord to iudgement when all the world shall for euer be subdued vnto him the wicked being iustly condemned and the godly graciously rewarded But this trumpet is indeed the last trumpet whereof it is said the Lord shall come with the sound of a trumpet For this is the time of iudging the dead and wherein all kingdomes are subiected to the Lord no man ruling any more and Satans kingdome being at an end Beda Rupertus Primasius Andreas Aretas Bullinger Fox Marlorat Tossanus Alphonsus Pareus c. The Gentiles were angry before but now is the time of Gods anger Fox And therefore most Expositors agree in this both ancient and moderne After the fall and slaughter made in the great city before described whereby Heresie and superstition is reiected in all parts none other notable change shall happen more till the Lords comming to iudgement at the last day when iustreuenge shall be taken vpon all enemies of the truth who were angry and had indignation to see it lift vp the head and destroyed such as stood for it and the godly shall bee rewarded according to all their sufferings whether they bee Prophets or Saints and other men fearing God whereby such matter of ioy is ministred to all the heauenly company that they breake out into acclamations of praises of the Lord by whom these things are done Then the Temple in heauen appeareth and the Arke of the Testimony The glory of that place which is yet vnseene and shut vp from all mortall eyes as the Sanctum Sanctorum with the Arke of old was so as that none but the high Priest onely entred once a yeere and did see Aarons rod budded and the pot of Manna preserued shall bee set open to all the children of God to enter and behold and see as they are seene to their vnspeakable and euerlasting comfort but to the wicked as before there were nothing but signes of terrour thundrings lightnings earthquakes c. so now they shall feele these terrours to their euerlasting woe of which they heard before but not beleeuing them hardened themselues still in their euill wayes Some by the Arke of the Testimony here vnderstand the Lord Iesus Bullinger Pareus whom we shall then actually enioy he appearing vnto vs in his glory as he is and by the Temple the Church triumphant the glory whereof shall then be laid open to all men Some by the Arke vnderstand Christs humanity but there being little difference I will not stand to contend Beda Primasius Rupertus but by the happinesse of that time let vs all be perswaded to feare God and patiently beare what the malice of this wicked world shall lay vpon vs and the basenesse of our present condition for then we shall haue a full compensation of most excellent glory such as hitherto hath not beene seene yea which no mortall eye can see or heart conceiue CHAP. XII IN this and the two Chapters following is another period of time contained wherein by new figures are set forth the troubles of the Church by Antichrist and what iudgements shall finally be executed vpon him and vpon all his adherents they shall bee tormented and the smoake of their torment shall ascend for euermore they shall be troden in the wine-presse of Gods wrath by the ministery of his Angels being sent out to gather them together as clusters of grapes are cut down and gathered together to the wine-presse when they are ripe But the figures and passages here are so mysticall as that we need pray much to the father of lights to enlighten vs to goe in a right path of the vnderstanding of these things or else wee must needs bee wildred and lost in this search Trusting therefore onely to this enlightening I thus enter this way Quest 1. And a great signe was seene in heauen Vers 1. a woman cloathed with the Sunne and the Moone vnder her feet and vpon her head a crowne of twelue starres c. What woman is this and what doth this strange kinde of apparell about her signifie What is her being with childe and pained to be deliuered What childe is it that she was about to bring forth that should rule all nations with a rod of iron whom a great red Dragon standeth ready to deuoure hauing seuen heads and ten hornes and with his taile drawing the third part of the starres and casting them to the earth which Dragon is said
which cause she is called his body some resolue this by applying this womans trauailing with childe and bringing forth to the conception and birth which is by faith For the old Church by faith longed for and was pained in expecting his comming so long a time and euery man may bee said to trauaile with Christ and to bring him forth when through many inward troubles and much sorrow for sinne he commeth to be regenerate and to leade a new life for then hee liueth not any more but Christ liueth in him Gal. 2.20 Bullinger Gorran as Saint Paul speaketh and this according to Bullinger and Gorran But because this is daily done and here is rather an allusion to Christs corporall birth from which time that which is here figured out beginneth to take place it doth not seeme to mee to agree so well and therefore I vnderstand it rather of his corporall birth by the Virgin Mary as Bullinger doth at the first For although shee were but one particular member of the Church yet that for the effecting of which she was vsed as an instrument herein may well be ascribed to the whole body whereof she was a member and therefore St. Paul speaking of the whole Iewish nation saith Rom. 9.5 of whom Christ came according to the flesh As for other circumstances of being pained and crying out to be deliuered I hold them to be meerely allegoricall and not to be strained to a particular signification but as when a woman is neere her time of being deliuered it appeareth by these signes so they are here mentioned to signifie the neere approaching of the time when the Church of the Iewes should corporally in Mary a vessell chosen to this purpose bring forth our blessed Sauiour And this is one reason also why the Church is set forth by a woman because the head and the chiefe vpon whom all the rest depend was promised by the name of the seed of the woman If there shall seeme to bee a disagreement in the time because the things set forth here were not already past but altogether such as should happen afterwards I answer with Pareus Pareus Bullinger that the intent of this vision is to set forth things to come but for more orderly proceeding if it be begun a little higher euen at the birth of Christ there is no going from the matter propounded viz. to set forth things to come sith it is done onely to illustrate them them the better as was also done before in the opening of the first seale when a white horse issued out that he might the more orderly and with better light proceed vnto the red and blacke and pale horses c. It is said that hee should rule all nations with a rod of iron to expresse his terriblenesse to his enemies and such as rebell against him which are commonly expressed by the name of Nations or Heathen because they knew him not One expoundeth this of Constantine the great but neither was he watched at his birth to be deuoured Brightman but after that hee came to the Empire at what time the childe here spoken of is past all danger if it be vnderstood of his spirituall birth when he became Christian it were preposterously set down for so his birth should follow his being taken vp into the throne neither did he rule ouer all nations Chap. 4. neither can the throne of God be fitly applied vnto him here vpon earth seeing this throne is before described so as that no man can bee said to bee taken vp to it till he be glorified in heauen One will haue Heraclius the Emperour Lyra. who destroyed and succeeded the vsurper Phocas vnderstood here but there is no colour for it Touching the great red Dragon he is set forth plainly v. 9. that he is the Deuill but is called a Dragon in alluding to his first appearance vnto Eue in a serpent when he tempted her he is red through fury and cruelty Ioh. 8.44 hee was a murtherer from the beginning Viegas He is said to be in heauen here according to some for the like reason that the woman is said to be there because he persecuteth her who is said to be in heauen or rather because he had his abiding sometime in heauen and though hee be excluded because he kept not his first standing yet a long time hee had the liberty of appearing there before God amongst the good Angels for hee appeared amongst them to accuse Iob and that it was his common practise is here afterwards plainly intimated Iob 2. vers 10. how hee commeth to bee quire excluded and when we shall see further by and by but still he is said to be Principalities and powers in heauenly places Eph. 6.12 Pareus because hee hath the liberty of the Aerean heauen to this day His seuen heads with crownes vpon them set forth by the common consent the many kings of the earth who are ready as his instruments to execute his will the number of seuen being vsuall in this booke to set forth many his ten hornes his great power by meanes of other states of people who also serue him who are more in number Certainly the largenesse and multitude of his dominions and his manifold power is hereby figured out and how great a Potentate hee is to expresse the more the danger wherein this childe was that the power whereby he was preserued might be the more magnified His taile drawing the third part of the starres and casting them to the ground doth yet more illustrate his stupendious power By these starres I vnderstand the Angels that fell together with Lucifer who as the chiefe drew them after him and therefore hee is said to draw them with his taile because they followed him in sinning and were throwne downe to the ground which was by being depriued of their place and dignity in heauen For there is one Deuill as the chiefe and ringleader set forth the rest of the infernall spirits followed him And this though done long before is brought in here as auailing to a perfect description of him that it might the better appeare how formidable he was Some by the starres vnderstand Parous Viegas as in Chap. 1. the Churches which are seduced vnto Popery and some the Doctors who by worldly preferments and respects are fawned vpon Bullinger Forbs and so drawne away from the truth vnto errour and so by heauen they vnderstand the Church of God by earth the world of the wicked who are set vpon earthly things into whose society they come being thus drawne away But for so much as heauen is a distinct thing here from the Church if the woman be the Church for shee appeareth in heauen I cannot see how by heauen should be vnderstood the Church here and consequently how by the stars should be meant the Doctors and therefore I rest in the first exposition as most naturall and the rather because
they are not only said to be stars but starres of heauen as he himselfe at the first was and therefore is called Lucifer Esa 14.12 Hee standeth ready to deuoure this childe so soone as hee should be borne for he stirred vp Herod to send his executioners to kill all the male children in Bethlehem of two yeeres old and vnder and from the time that he shewed himselfe after his baptisme he neuer left persecuting him and plotting his destruction till that at length he was crucified but euen then in stead of being deuoured nothing befell him but what hee did voluntarily vndergoe and he was soone raised vp againe and taken to the throne of the Father and therefore he is spoken of as missing his purpose herein for so much as Christ by his death gat the dominion Heb. 2.15 Col. 2.14 and euen vpon the Crosse triumphed ouer the Deuill Learne we from hence both of how excellent a condition the Church of God is heauen is her countrey and her glory is heauenly and most magnificent that we may preferre to be members of the Church before all worldly honours and also what a terrible enemy we haue of the Deuill so that we can no sooner become Christians but hee is at hand to deuoure vs neither doth he want power so to doe but he shall not be able to hinder our saluation that we may put vpon vs the armour of God neuer being secure but alwayes making account that we stand in the midst of greatest dangers and therefore continually seeking to the highest power by prayer and out of a confident expectation of being taken vp out of all danger to glory at the last becomming strong in the faith to beare all oppositions without shrinking howsoeuer we be assaulted Quest 2. The woman fled into the wildernesse Vers 6. where she hath a place prepared of God that they may nourish her one thousand two hundred and threescore dayes c. To what time is this fight to be referred what is this wildernesse and how long is this time of one thousand two hundred and threescore dayes Answ This relation commeth in here by way of anticipation as most consent for this very persecution and flight into the wildernesse is more largely described vers 13. and this time is the same onely by a prolepsis it is in short here propounded to satisfie such as would bee ready to inquire what became of the mother after that the sonne was taken vp shee was persecuted and fled c. but in order of time somewhat happened before this and therefore before a full declaration of this persecution that is set forth in the next words And there was a great battell in heauen Vers 7 8. Michael and his Angels fought c. of which we are to consider before we answer this the proper place for this comming in afterwards viz. vers 13. Quest 3. Where is the fight here said to be in heauen what is Michael and the deuils casting out of heauen c. Answ No man doth hold that this is to bee vnderstood according to the letter for it were absurd that there should be a fight in heauen being a place of all peace and comfort and not for any variance Heauen therefore is to be vnderstood as before when the woman is said to appeare in heauen and the great red Dragon against her which was all done here below but represented in heauen as the proper place of the Church which is but a stranger in this world and the place where the Deuill first had his abode and where he was wont to appeare to accuse the godly For so a great fight is said to bee in heauen when as indeed it was in this world because they which doe instigate and stirre vp vnto it are on the one side the holy Angels of God whose abode is in heauen Eph. 6.12 and on the other side the troupe of vncleane spirits who are in heauenly places that is the vpper part of the aire Many stand for the Church that by heauen here the Church is meant but seeing the woman is the Church who is persecuted after this fight and casting down of the Deuill from heauen to the earth I cannot see how heauen should bee put for the Church also But being vnderstood as hath beene before deliuered all things following will excellently agree Michael the Archangell with his Angels fight that is that principall good Angell who is superiour to all the rest as the Deuill is the principall of the euill Angels he with the other good Angels I say standing for the truth stirred vp Christian Emperours and Gouernors to fight for the truth and the Deuill on the other side with his infernall rabble stirred vp Heathen Emperors and Gouernors to fight against the truth Forbs Brightman Mason And thus almost doth Forbs and Brightman vnderstand it for they make Constantine the great and his assistants in his battels Michael and his Angels and Licinius with his assistants the Deuill and his Angels Many will haue Christ meant by Michael Bullenger Grasserus Pareus both here wheresoeuer else this name occurreth because he is said to be the Archangell that is the Prince of Angels and Michael one as God But why may not one Angell bee chiefe amongst the good Angels as well as one Deuill is chiefe amongst the euill Angels And if so it is no whit absurd to say that he is like God being so eminent an image of his maiesty and excellency And therefore some hold Michael to be an Angell indeed Fox as hath beene already said and by the ancients it hath beene generally held to be so onely some question hath beene of what Angels Michael is the chiefe and herein most following Dionysius who wrote of the orders of Angels haue held him to bee the chiefe of the lowest order onely I cannot approue so well of expounding Michael the Archangell of Constantine or of any man or the Deuill of Licinius because there is none other place of Scripture which giueth light vnto such an exposition and the following circumstances agree not seeing Licinius perished when he was ouercome of Constantine neither did hee persecute the Church any more and afterwards this Deuill said here to haue but a short time is also said to be bound vp a thousand yeeres and then to rage as hauing but a short time which can no way agree to that Tyrant Michael therefore fighteth by his pupils Constantine Theodosius Valentinian and other godly Emperours the Deuill by the heathen Emperours before Constantine and Licinius and Iulian and Eugenius who sought to beat downe the Christian religion This fight began soone after Christs ascension and continued till ann 394. in three hundred of which yeeres the Deuill fought so as that by his agents the Heathen Emperours the truth was put in great hazzard but then Michael began his battell so fiercely as that errour and idolatry was put to the worse but by
to shew both the vniuersality of the iudgement that shall be Note and the terriblenesse of the Iudge to the wicked so that nothing shall be able to abide his presence and the iust proceedings according to which all shall bee sentenced because they shall be by bookes and according to mens workes and lastly the wofull estate of all that haue done euill after this time they shall be cast into the lake of fire and the ioyfull estate of those that haue done well death and hell is abolished vnto them so that they shall stand in feare of these enemies no more What is written in the booke of life is kept so secret that wee cannot know it but they whose workes are euill may be sure that they are not therein written the booke of life and the register of mens workes doe parallel one another Wouldest thou then see into this great secret goe to thy workes and consider them if they be good thou art assuredly written in the booke of life otherwise thou mayst bee sure that thou art not and then the lake of fire gapeth for thee Psal 34.12 Be not deceiued therefore by thy faith but wouldest thou liue long and see good dayes refraine thy tongue from euill and thy lips that they speake no guile cease to doe euill seeke peace and ensue it Attend to that direction of our blessed Sauiour giuen to him that asked what he should doe to be saued 1 Tim. 6.7 keepe the Commandem●nts and if thou be rich forget not to distribute of thy goods to the poore and so lay vp to thy selfe a good foundation CHAP. XXI IN this and the Chapter following vnder the figure of the new Ierusalem the state of the Church triumphant in heauen is set forth as it shall be after the day of iudgement according to the opinion of all Expositors Brightman Forbs except two of ours who vnderstand it of a flourishing Church vpon earth after the Pope and Turke destroyed and the Iewes conuerted and some Popish Writers who expound it of the Church of Rome whom Alcasar a Iesuite mentioneth and confuteth But that it cannot possibly bee vnderstood of the Church vpon earth in any time or age is most plaine first because this vision followeth after the vision of the last great day of iudgement and therefore in order should represent somewhat after that 2. Because the condition of the Church is such here as that it can neuer be free from suffering and sorrow All that will liue godly must suffer persecution Rom 8.17 wee shall bee glorified with Christ if we suffer with him Ioh. 16. 1 Pet 5.8 and In the world ye shall haue trouble and if at any time there bee outward peace yet the Deuill like a roaring Lion goeth about continually seeking whom he may deuoure and there are bodily pangs and sicknesses and other occurrences that doe afflict whilest this life l●steth Heb. 12.10 for if wee should bee without chastisement wee should be bastards and no sonnes And lastly there is sinne euer here in the best which maketh them to sorrow Matth. 5.5 according to that Blessed are they which mourne for they shall be comforted But the new Ierusalem here described is without all sorrow and paine vers 4.3 Because the Church here described hath the glory of God which is all one with being glorified in heauen so as cannot said of any vpon earth vers 11.4 Because this Church is without a Temple needeth no light of the Sunne c. vers 22 23. whereas the Church vpon earth must alwayes haue a place to resort vnto and must be enlightened and vpheld in grace by meanes and shall euer need the light of the Sun and Moone 5. Because no vncleane thing is in this Church vers 27. whereas in this world the kingdome of heauen is euer like a corne field with tares in it like vnto ground with thornes and briars and stones in it and such as that it may be said alwaies Many are called but few are chosen Lastly to put vs out of doubt that no state of the Church here is meant but in heauen he saith that they shall see his face Chap. 22.4 for this shall neuer be till we come in heauen 1 Cor. 13. then shall we see as we are seene and herein standeth the perfection of blessednesse 1 Ioh. 3.3 for now we are the sonnes of God but it doth not yet appeare what we shall be for we shall see him as he is To say nothing of the new heauens and the new earth 2 Pet. 3.13 which Saint Peter speaketh of when he hath shewed how the world shall bee destroyed by fire but wee saith he looke for a new heauen and a new earth wherein dwelleth righteousnesse These reasons I thinke may satisfie any reasonable man against the probabilities that are that it should not be meant of the Church triumphant in heauen except the phantasticall Chiliast who may thinke to reconcile all these to his imagined ioyfull time of a thousand yeeres vpon earth after the first resurrection of the Martyrs onely for they apply all this to that imaginary condition But that hath beene sufficiently confuted already and whereas any thing may seeme to make against the common tenent of the glorified estate of the Church here set forth it shall be answered in the proper place And so I hasten to the exposition of the difficulties here as they offer themselues in order And I saw a new heauen and a new earth Vers 1. for the first were passed away neither was there any more sea By the new heauen and earth here most Expositors vnderstand not any new creation but so great an alteration in the heauens and the earth as if they were made new For these heauens and earth say they shall not cease to bee in regard of their substance but become more glorious as is taught Rom. 8.19 being no more subiect to corruption Neither shall they be renewed that we might again haue a dwelling here for we shall ascend 1 Thess 4. and euer remaine with the Lord aboue but to intimate the new glorified estate of the faithful if the creatures which were made to serue them shall come now to a new glorious condition then much more they for whose seruice they were made as Bullinger speaketh Bullinger But I haue already deliuered my coniecture vpon 2 Pet. 3.8 for the first heauen and earth were passed away This was shewed before Chap. 20.11 and because no mention was there made of the sea here it is added the sea was no more that we might not conceiue but that all the parts of the world fled from the Lords angry presence Bullinger Some thinke that nothing else is meant but that the sea was altered to a more glorious estate euen as the heauen and the earth but it is to be noted that he speaketh onely negatiuely of the sea but both affirmatiuely and negatiuely of the
testified from Heauen Mat. 3. saying This is my beloued Sonne but to confesse the Sonne is to confesse the Father also and the way to be accepted for his in the world to come Mat. 10. For hee that confesseth mee saith Christ before men him will I confesse before my Father which is in Heauen From this 23. verse to the end of this Chapter there is nothing difficult more That which they heard from the beginning is that which our Sauiour Christ taught that who so would attaine to life should beleeue in him Ioh. 17.3 and that it is life eternall to know God and whom he hath sent Iesus Christ vers 24 25. Now these things he saith that he wrote vnto them because of seducers not that they needed any instruction herein for so much as they had the Spirit of God to teach them Note that such as erre in the doctrine of faith are very Antichrists Note and accordingly to be had in abomination and to be auoided Heresie is in effect to deny God the Sonne and so to deny the Father and to ouerthrow all religion and piety that they which are tainted herewith shall haue no more benefit of the Christian religion than Pagans and Infidels And therefore let vs hate Popery as being most notorious heresie not being deceiued because in word they professe Christ as wee doe Note againe Note that there are some in the Church which are not of the Church and this is manifested by their apostasie and falling from the truth to errour So that if any depart from the reformed Religion to Popery wee ought not to be troubled at it for they were neuer sound at the heart otherwise they could not haue departed Note also Note that the truly faithfull are instructed by the Spirit of God which as a sweet oyntment doth so sweeten their mindes with the truth as that they can neuer be corrupted and come to an ill sauour through errour and wickednesse Sinne they may but be destitute of grace sufficient for their saluation they can neuer be CHAP. III. HAuing made some way in the last verse of the former Chapter as I haue already shewed to returne to the commendation of a righteous and holy course of life he doth more at large prosecure that argument here ioyning vnto it a commendation of brotherly loue Touching righteousnesse and holinesse he stirreth vp vnto it first from the consideration of our estate we are the children of God and yet haue greater hopes and therefore cannot but be pure as he is pure Vers 1 2 3. Secondly from the consideration of that reference which we haue vnto Christ we are in him but he hath no sinne nay his comming into the world was to take away sinne and therefore who so is in him sinneth not Vers 4 5 6. Thirdly from the consideration of the state of wicked and sinfull men they know not Christ they are of the deuill Vers 6 7 8. Fourthly from the consideration of our new birth by the seed of God which being in vs keepeth vs from sinne Vers 9 10. Touching brotherly loue coupling the want of this with a sinfull life he first sheweth Vers 10. Vers 11. Vers 12 13. Vers 14 15. that such as haue no loue are not of God and then setting downe the command which wee haue to loue hee dehorteth from enmity and hatred instancing in Cains hatred against Abel and the worlds hatred and shewing the euent both of loue and of hatred Then hee exhorteth to loue vrging to loue in deed after the example of Christ Vers 16 17 18. condemning other loue which extendeth not to the releeuing of the miserable to be no loue And that this exhortation to loue indeed Vers 19 20 21 22. might take the more effect he sheweth what confidence towards God such a man may haue to obtaine whatsoeuer he desireth as doing his will herein and that which is pleasing vnto him Now that he doth his will and commandement he proueth because his command is that we beleeue in Christ Vers 23. and loue one another which last is a plaine euidence of the first he therefore that beleeueth and loueth keepeth his commandements and so abideth in him and how this may be knowne he immediatly sheweth euen by the Spirit which he hath giuen vs Vers 24. and thus againe he maketh way to speake of diuers spirits in the Chapter following 1 IOHN Chapter 3. Verse 1. For this the world knoweth vs not because it knoweth not him Beloued now we are the sonnes of God but yet it is not made manifest what we shall be c. BEcause we are the Sonnes of God the world knoweth vs not Th. Aquinas in 1 Iohn 3. that is by the knowledge of approbation or as the Glosse hath it they know not our dignity to loue and respect vs but doe esteeme basely of vs and afflict vs Because it knoweth not him that is beleeueth not in him It doth not appeare c. that is the great glory wherewith we shall be glorified appeareth not it is as a light hidden in a Pitcher till it be broken or as a light within a mans hands appearing onely through his fingers We know that when he shall appeare that is by the certainty of faith for faith doth assure vs of things inuisible now we know our selues to be Gods children by the vertues and miracles which by his spirit we are inabled to doe When he shall appeare that is at the day of iudgement Wee shall be like vnto him that is in the conformity of nature of grace and of glory We shall see him as he is that is in the very substance of his Deity which is not granted to any man liuing here The doubts of this place are first Mayer what is meant by the worlds not knowing of vs and to what these words For this haue reference I answer that the world of wicked men and vnbeleeuers are said not to know vs that are accepted to be the children of God because they doe not see into the excellency of this estate to prize and to esteeme of it And for this they know vs not because they know not Christ it was hidden from them of what excellency hee was which was the cause that they vsed him as base and contemptible For had they knowne him they could not but haue knowne his so much resembling him as they that haue knowne the father if his sonne commeth in presence which is very like him they know him to be his sonne and as he that hath well knowne a man if hee seeth his picture he knoweth whose picture it is And this is spoken to make vs vndismaid at the contempt and ignominy that shall be offered to vs in the world as a Prince laugheth at the railings and ill vsage of him by his owne seruants whilst they know him not Chrys Hom. 78. in Iohan. They know not saith Chrysostome what