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A04619 A commentary vpon the Epistles of Saint Paul to Philemon, and to the Hebrewes together with a compendious explication of the second and third Epistles of Saint Iohn. By VVilliam Iones of East Bergholt in Suffolke, Dr. in Divinity, and sometimes one of the fellowes of the foundation of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge. Jones, William, 1561-1636. 1635 (1635) STC 14739.5; ESTC S112377 707,566 758

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head of it is in heaven and their conversation is in heaven the Church which is termed the kingdome of heaven should be purified with these that is with earthly things like to themselves They were earthly and they ought to bee purified with earthly things the ashes of an Heifer the bloud of Calves Goates c. But the heavenly things themselves that be under the Gospell which is a Gate and entrance into the kingdome of heaven the Church in the time of the Gospell the true Tabernacle and faithfull Citizens of heaven it was necessary that these should be purified with better sacrifices above these namely with the sacrifice of Christ himselfe else we could never have had any right to the kingdome of heaven Christ's one sacrifice is here called by the name of many because it is compared with the many sacrifices in the Law and opposed to them Not because there be many Masse Sacrifices to represent this one sacrifice Here wee see how wee are advanced above them in the time of the Law they had the patternes wee the things patterned they painted flowers we the flowers themselves they the shadowes wee the body they the picture we the man they the lineaments of the house we the house it selfe How are we beholden to God happy are the eyes that see what we see O that wee could walke worthy of them Better No comparison betweene them no more than betweene the creatures and the Creator What are Bulls Goates Calves to the Son of God that hath offered himselfe for us VERSE 24. THe Holy of Holies was a type of heaven Not made with the hands of Aholiab and Bezaleel Which were antitypes as it were pictures in waxe to represent this a stampe of this Into heaven it selfe whereof that was a type Act. 1.11 Manifestly and openly Not for a little while to goe out againe as the High-Priest did when he had prayed and sacrificed for the people but now and continually Not for himselfe but for us By the demonstration of his own sacred body wherein hee hath suffered for us to make intercession for us So long as Christ appeares in heaven for us our sinnes cannot appeare in the sight of God Of themselves they cry up to heaven for vengeance but Christ our Advocate and High-Priest is in heaven to answer for us Indeed father they are grievous sinners but here am I which in my owne body have borne the burden of their sins In the Courts here on earth men have Advocates and Proctours that appeare for them Christ our Advocate appeares in heaven for us therefore wee neede not to feare Who shall lay any thing to the charge of GODS elect It is CHRIST that appeareth in heaven for us 2. As hee is gone into heaven so we shall one day bee in heaven with him In the time of the Law the High-Priest went into the Sanctum Sanctorum but hee could carry none of the people with him Our High-Priest will bring us all into the true Holy of Holies the kingdome of heaven Father I will that they also whom thou hast given mee be with me where I am The fore-runner is gone before us and we shall follow after hee himselfe hath told us that in his Fathers house there be many mansions and he is gone to prepare a place for us What a dignity is this that dust and ashes should sit in the heavenly place with CHRIST Let this comfort us against all the crosses and calamities of this life What though wee be sicke many weekes together What though wee bee pinched with poverty for a time in this world and with soares as Lazarus c. all these one day shall have an end and wee shall bee in heaven with Christ have Palmes in our hands Crownes on our heads where all teares shall bee wiped from our eyes for ever VERSE 25. HHimselfe Hebr. 1.3 Often as the High-Priest offered often Every yeere whereas Christ but once Other bloud of Goates Calves c. Let us remember that which St. Peter telleth us we are redeemed from our old conversation wee are washed from our sins by the bloud of Christ therefore let us not wallow like swine in the dunghill of sin againe VERSE 26. BEcause there were sins in all ages of the world to bee done away CHRIST 's death was prefigured from the beginning of the world by the death of Abel by the oblation of Isaac by the sacrifice of many beasts in the time of the Law yet hee suffered but once Now not in the precedent or future time but now in the fulnesse of time Gal. 4.4 End of the world 1 Cor. 10.11 1 Ioh. 2.18 Hora. Though 1600 yeeres and moe are passed since yet a thousand yeeres are but as a day with the Lord. Hath he beene manifested 1 Tim. 3.16 appeared in the nature of man truly like to us in all things sin only excepted To the abolishing so as hereafter it shall bee of no force to accuse and condemne us or to shut us out of heaven There is sin still remaining in us but the guilt and punishment thereof is put away how not by the sacrifice of a Lamb Goate Calfe c. but by the sacrifice of himselfe Why did not GOD send CHRIST at the beginning of the world 1. Hee would have sicke man for a time to bee humbled with the sight and feeling of his disease that the Physitian might bee more welcome when he came 2. He would have the prophesies concerning Christ to bee fulfilled before he came A sharpe and evident knife to cut the throat of the Masse withall If CHRIST be offered up in the sacrifice of the Masse then hee suffers at every Masse for there can bee no offering of Christ without suffering but he suffers not even in the judgement of the Papists neither Bellarmine nor any of them all can though full of shifts tell handsomely how to elude this argument for here their unbloudy sacrifice hath a deadly wound There can bee no oblation of Christ without the suffering of Christ. The world then is not eternall as some Philosophers dreamed it had a beginning and it shall have an end onely GOD is without beginning and ending for the Angels themselves had a beginning If the end of the world was in the time of CHRIST and of his Apostles then now it must needs bee at an end now it lyes a gasping and is ready to yeeld up her breath that day is at hand when the world shall passe away with a noyse Therefore why doe wee dote so much on the world wilt thou sit feasting and banquetting in a rotten house that is ready to fall on thy head Such an house is the world therefore rather hasten to bee out of it The wicked are called the men of this world wee that bee the faithfull are men of another world ye are not of the world sayes our SAVIOUR CHRIST yet for all that wee are meere worldlings following the pleasures and
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and if every Mystery should be a Sacrament there should not be seven but seventy Sacraments and more neither doth he speake of mariage but of the conjunction of Christ and his Church in that place We will fight against them with their owne weapons 1. As the covenant is common so ought all Sacraments the Seales of the Covenant to be common If mariage be a Sacrament why is it not common to all Christians Why doe they deny Ministers to marry 2. Every Sacrament must be celebrated by a Minister Goe teach all Nations baptising them c. A Minister as Bell. contendeth is not necessary in the celebration of mariage the parties contracting are sufficient Therefore to speake properly it is no Sacrament Though the Councell of Trent of late hath taken some further order in it We may not honour mariage so farre as to make a direct Sacrament of it yet it is honorable A number there be that have exceedingly dishonoured and disgraced it Marcion as Epiphan recordeth of him called matrimony inventionem Diaboli mulierem ipsum opus Diaboli Saturnius Basilides as Iren. lib. 1. cap. 22. writeth of them blushed not to affirme that Nubere generare were à Satana Hier. treading in Tertullian's steps wrests some sentences of Saint Paul to the disgrace of mariage Saint Paul sayes Melius est nubere quàm uri A goodly commendation As if a man should say it is better to have a lame leg than none at all Melius semper comparationem deterioris respicit That is not so it is better to take Physick than to live in paine is it therefore evill to take physick So it is better to marry than to burne is it therefore evill to marry Let them all say what they will mariage is honourable and to be honoured by us all 1 It was instituted by the most honourable person that ever was namely by GOD Almighty he saw it was not good for man to bee alone therefore Hee provided an helper for him Hee cast him into a deepe sleepe tooke a rib out of his side of it hee made a woman and brought her to the Man 2 It was ordained in the most honorable place that ever was on the face of the earth namely in Paradise the Garden of the Lord. 3 It was appointed in the most honourable time that ever was in the time of innocency Then a woman was needfull for a man much more now in the time of corruption 4 It was preserved in the most dangerous time that ever was in the great deluge that overflowed the whole World Noah and his wife his sons and their wives were saved in the Arke An argument that GOD made a precious and honourable account of mariage 5 It was honoured with the presence of our Saviour Christ and graced with the first miracle that he wrought 6 By the judgement and practice of all Nations it is ratified to be an honourable estate For they that bee maried in all places have the upper hand they have the higher roome in all meetings in the Church and at the Table which argues that honourable estimation which all have of it in their hearts 7 It hath honourable effects by it the number of Gods elect is accomplished the kingdome of Heaven replenished the Church is furnished with worthy Preachers that are as Gods arme to pluck up men into the Kingdome of Heaven The Common-wealth is provided of wise Governours of stout Souldiers of all kinde of estates and conditions mariage is the pillar that upholds the world the seminary of Church and Common-wealth Therefore it must needs be confessed to be a glorious and an honourable estate Let none open their mouthes against it 8 Because it is an excellent meanes to keepe our vessels in holinesse and honour as we are commanded 1 Thes. 4.4 And now seeing mariage is an honourable estate let us be bold as occasion serveth to flye to it If thou hast deflowred a virgin that is none of thine as Amnon did Thamar though it have beene in thy secret chamber the doores fast locked up be ashamed of it If thou art an impure strumpet as Iesabel was tyring thy head and painting thy face to allure lovers withall be ashamed of it for if thou persistest in that sin without repentance Christ will be ashamed of thee when he commeth in his glory with his holy Angels In regard thereof thou mayest be ashamed but be not ashamed of mariage This is no sin in it selfe nay it is an honourable thing thou needest not to be ashamed of it When Mordecai was carried through the City with the royall apparell on his back with a crowne set upon his head with this Proclamation so shall it be done with the Man whom the King will honour was there any cause why he should blush at it No because it was an honour appointed to him by the King If the Lord have given unto thee a godly wife being a man or a wise husband being a woman thou needest not be ashamed of this crowne which the King of Kings hath set upon thy head We may be bold as occasion serveth to flye to this honourable Sanctuary Yet let us not rush rashly and unadvisedly into this honourable estate When S. Peter being in the Mount saw the externall glory of his Lord and Master that his face shined like to the Sun by and by he is enamoured in a love of that place and saith Master it is good for us to bee here but the Text witnesseth that he wist not what he said even so a great number of rash and heady young men set their love upon a maide before they have learned to love GOD. When they are carried up as it were into the Mount where the glory of mariage is shewed unto them and by by they say in their hearts It is good for us to bee here But if they were rightly examined of the things appertaining to mariage they might take up that speech of S. Peter's and say We speake we cannot tell what Though it is a most worthy estate yet it is not without a godly premeditation to be undertaken we must take a diligent view of those spurs that put us forward to mariage It must not be the bare satisfying of our greedy lusts and raging affections though a respect may be had unto them but the glory that we may procure to God by it our mighty Creator and Mercifull Redeemer The good that we may purchase unto the Church and Common-wealth in that estate must be set before our eyes A wise choyce must bee made with great advice deliberation of that yoke-fellow which we propound to our selves We must not onely fixe our eye upon the externall beauty of the body as Shechem did upon Dinah because she was faire Beauty indeed is the good gift of God and many godly women have had it as Sarah Rebeccah Rachel Hester and such like neither is it to be contemned unlesse it
deviation from the Lawe of God shall wee therefore sinne The proper fruit of sinne is death yea death everlasting It is by accident through Gods mercie if any good come of it therefore let it be carefully abandoned by us all He does not say perhaps he therefore ranne away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 usus est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he uses a word of better report he departed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was separated from thee by the permissive hand of Gods providence After that men have repented of their sinnes we must not aggrava●e but in some measure extenuate them Not Noah's drunkennesse but Noah's unadvised drinking Not David's adultery with Vriah's wife but the matter of Vriah Not Peter's apostasie but Peter's deniall Not Onesimus running away but departing Before they be humbled we must be as Trumpeters to waken them out of their sinnes Lift up thy voice as a trumpet After that we must be as Nurses to cherish them before Corazives after lenitives before wee must come with the Law as a Schoolemaster to whip them after with the Gospell to comfort them before we must be Bonerges the sonnes of thunder after Barnabasses the sonnes of consolation But for how long did he depart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for an houre It is the last houre Our whole life is but an houre in respect of eternity The whole race of our life is but the running of an houre-glasse and a short houre-glasse too a spanne long There was a woman that had an issue of bloud twelve yeeres an other that was bowed by Satan eighteene yeeres a man diseased in his feete 38. yeares all in comparison of eternity was but an houre Endure with cheerfulnesse an houres paine here that thou mayest have eternall joy hereafter Having made a narration of Gods providence in his flight hee makes an application of it to Philemon 1. Shewing the end of it to be that he might receive him with advantage 2. Declaring the manner how hee should receive him Verse 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. à fugâ from his flight 2. à me from me 3. à Deo from GOD. In all these respects let him bee welcome unto thee But for how long not for a season as before but for ever Some interpret it for ever .i. to serve thee for ever so long as yee both shall live alluding to that place If the servant say thus I love my Master I will not goe out free then his Master shall bring him to the Iudges set him to the post bore his eare through with an awle and hee shall serve him for ever .i. to the yeere of Iubilee So that hee should serve Philemon for ever .i. during life that is not sutable to the place 1. The opposition requires it should be taken for eternity He departed for a while but thou shalt receive him for ever 2. In the Greeke it is an Adjective not an Adverbe that thou shouldest receive him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 eternall not onely for a time in this world but also to reigne eternally with CHRIST together with thy selfe and the rest of his Saints being now engraffed into CHRIST by faith as thou art This implyes the resurrection of the body for if Onesimus should not rise againe he could not bee eternall Idoneus est reficere qui fecit hee that made the body of nothing can remake it when it is consumed to nothing The faithfull are omnipotentes in CHRISTO omnipotent in CHRIST I can doe all things by IESUS CHRIST that strengtheneth mee that is Luther's collection and they bee aeterni in CHRISTO eternall in CHRIST In CHRIST wee shall all be made alive againe meet him in the ayre be translated with him into the Kingdome of glory and abide with him for ever The wicked are eternall too they in endlesse torments the godly in endlesse joyes which neither eye hath seene nor eare heard nor can enter into the heart of man VERSE 16. BVt how is he to receive him not now because an alteration is made in him now as a Servant He doth not speak it in contempt of servants Dominus servus diversa nomina sed homines homines paria sunt nomina Master and servant are diverse names but men and men are equall names Thou art a man a weake man a sinfull man as well as thy servant therefore despise not thy servant One may goe to heaven as well out of the degree of a servant as of a master Let none of you suffer as a thiefe there the name of thiefe is a contemptible name so is not the name of a servant here when as he sayes not as a servant non ut servum tantùm not as a servant only Ioseph esteemed Mary not as a Wife but as a woman greatly honoured by God to bee the mother of him that was both GOD and man yet he esteemed her as his Wife So here What then but above a servant Why a brother and a brother is more than a servant We are all brethren maximè cùm fides accedit media qua omnem superbiam amputat especially when faith conjoynes us together which is as a knife to cut off all pride In CHRIST there is neither bond nor free but we are all one in CHRIST IESUS The Father and the Sonne are brethren the Minister and the people are brethren if they believe in Christ. So also the Master and the servant are brethren we have one Father which is God one mother the Catholike Church one elder brother which is IESUS CHRIST one inheritance the kingdom of heaven we are all brethren and godly servants are to be used by their masters as brethren Before Paul called Onesimus his Sonne Verse 10. Now his brother in the one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the one is manifested his naturall affection in the other his benevolence and equality What brother a beloved brother beloved of all good Christians but especially of Saint Paul who was his Father as well as his brother upon that he inferres he should bee more beloved of PHILEMON because he is tyed to him with two bonds to St. Paul but with one The one in the flesh the other in the LORD Grace alone knit him to Saint Paul grace and nature too to Philemon By the flesh is meant Carnall affinitie by the LORD spirituall Onesimus was Saint Pauls only in the Spirit he is PHILEMONS in the spirit and in the flesh too they be neere to us in the flesh that be neere in carnall and outward considerations as man and wife brethren kins-folke countrey men Townsmen of one house or one familie Laban said to Iacob thou art my bone and my flesh the fire warmes them most that be neerest to it GOD is more beneficiall to the good Angels then to men because they be neerer to him then men in nature spirits as he is in quality
that he might the better pittie us that be men that he might be a mercifull high Priest to us all and shall we be unmercifull one to another As the elect of God put on bowels of mercy Col. 3.12 We have a mercifull high Priest Let us be mercifull one to another It is a token of a wicked man of a reprobate to be unmercifull as that rich glutton was that saw Lazarus dayly at his gates and would have no compassion on him True Christians are mercifull as Christ is Iudas came howling to the high Priests and Pharises Oh I have sinned in betraying innocent bloud what is that to us say they See thou to that So such a neighbour is sicke in the Towne such a one is mourning for the death of his Children his Wife c. Such a poore man hath neither meat nor firing nothing to relieve himselfe and his Children withall what is that to us A lamentable thing There is a thorne in the foot that paines it and makes it to swell shall the head and hands say what is that to us We are members one of another and we have an head that is pittifull to us Let us be pittifull one to another that Christ may have pittie and compassion on us both in this world and in that which is to come This may be a singular comfort to us all They say he is happy that hath a friend in the Court especially if he be gracious with the King wee have a friend in the Court of heaven that is deepe in Gods bookes such a friend as hath a feeling of all our infirmities He and we are as Hippocrates twins weeping and laughing together Saul why persecutest thou me If we be sicke or grieved he is c. This was one speciall end why CHRIST assumed our nature that hee might the better have compassion on us in our calamities As the bowels of the true mother yerned when her Child should have beene cut in pieces so if wee bee in any affliction the bowels of CHRIST yerne towards us therefore let us sound forth the praises of CHRIST with a cheerefull heart that tooke our nature on him let us glorifie this our elder brother LORD and Saviour in this life that we may be glorified with himselfe in eternall glory in the life to come CHAP. 3. HItherto he hath entreated of the person of Christ shewing him to be God and man now he proceedeth to his offices As for his regall dignity it might bee perceived by that which he had already spoken of him that he was above the Angels themselves therefore he sayes little of his kingdome in his other two offices he is ample 1. They are propounded joyntly Verse 1. Then opened Severally and particularly 1. Hee begins with his prophesie which is contained in this Chapter and part of the next to Verse 14. Then with his Priesthood in the Chapter following About his prophesie there be two things 1. An admonition with all reverence to listen to this our Prophet 2. Reasons to induce us to it Within this Chapter there are foure The 1. is taken from his fidelity illustrated by a comparison betweene him and Moses à 2. ad 7. 2. From the testimony of the Holy Ghost who stirreth us up to listen to him where we have the allegation of the testimony à 7. to 11. an application of it Verse 12 13. The 3d. reason is taken from the fruit and commodity we shall have by it a society and fellowship with Christ verse 14. 4. From the punishment inflicted on them that contemne this Prophet to the end In the admonition there be two branches 1. A description of the persons that are to attend 2. Of the person to whom they must attend Vnde whereupon Seeing the Prophet and Doctor of the Church is the high and eternall God above the Angels and all creatures seeing in time he became man that by Gods grace he might taste death for all men therefore let us make an high account and estimation of him The parties admonished to listen to this Prophet and Teacher of the Church are described by their estate and condition and by the gracious benefits bestowed on them 1 For their condition they be brethren dulciter eos alloquitur not carnall but spirituall brethren He doth not call them brethren only because they descended of the Fathers and came of the seed of Abraham as he did but because they were brethren in the Lord Iesus Christ. By this sweet and loving title he doth insinuate himselfe into the Hebrewes and allures them to have a reverent opinion of Christ. Yea he cals them holy brethren such as are made holy by Iesus Christ the Holy one of God 1 Cor. 6.11 By nature we are unholy as well as others but Christ sanctifieth us and makes us holy We that bee Christians must not be unholy brethren brethren in evill as Simeon and Levi were but we must be holy brethren As GOD our Father is holy the Church our Mother is holy Christ our elder brother is holy the Angels our fellow-brethren are holy Heaven is an holy place so must we in some measure be holy Seeing you are holy and have all your holinesse from Christ listen to him 2 For their dignity Partakers together with the rest of the Saints of the Heavenly and glorious kingdome whereunto God in mercy hath called us by the preaching of the Gospell 1 Thes. 2.12 Now as GOD hath beene so gracious to you as to make you partakers of his owne kingdome purchased by the bloud of his Sonne so listen you with all reverence to him and cleave to him alone Of the heavenly calling that is Of the preaching of the Gospell whereby we are called to the kingdome of heaven whom God hath predestinated hee hath called The preaching of the Gospell is the bell whereby we are called to eternall glory As by the sound of a Trumpet the people were called together in the time of the Law so the Word is the silver Trumpet sounding in our eares whereby we are called to the Kingdome of Heaven Blessed are they that be partakers of this calling Such are we in England at this present day if we had eyes to see it and hearts to consider it But GOD cals and we refuse to come wisdome hath made ready her Feast she shath sent her maids into the streets to call us to her banquet but we passe not for it The King made a Supper for his Son sent and invited many to it but they made excuses and came not so GOD calleth us continually but some sit at home in their houses some ride abroad c. when God cals them to his kingdome As we are partakers of the heavenly vocation so let us make a precious account of it that we may be called out of the kingdome of darknesse into the kingdome of light and remaine with Christ for ever Then he comes to the admonition it selfe Consider not lightly as they
he shewes the equity of it they were a blind ignorant and perverse people that would not heare mee therefore I was worthily grieved with them They are a vagrant and wandring people straying out of the way He doth not say they have erred but erre continually erring ever Not in their outward lives and conversations only but in their heart which carryeth the whole man after it there hee points out the fountaine of this sin the corruption of their hearts If the heart be blind the whole man must needs be blind Wayes that is my lawes and commandements These bee the wayes wherein wee ought to walke or my workes quia per ea ad nos venit to impart his benefits to us and to open himselfe to us They had meanes enough to come to the knowledge of my wayes my servant Moses and others were ever teaching of them but they willingly continued ignorant and would not know my wayes For this cause I have cast them off this is that corruption which is in us all by nature an ignorance of the will of God that carries us from Gods wayes to the Devils wayes Ephes. 4.17 18. Yet there is in men a double ignorance the one is simplex insita the other is composita affectata All by nature erre and are drowned in ignorance Paul saw at Athens an inscription on an Altar ignoto deo but many of them if God send the candle of knowledge amongst them skip for joy and imbrace it with both armes Others though they live in those places where the light shineth before their eyes where there is continuall preaching yet they remaine ignorant still some through carelesnesse and negligence not regarding it others even upon will and stomacke they close up their eyes and will not see the light Such were many of these Israelites they would not know the wayes of God A fearefull thing to live in the Church where God is preached and not to know him VERSE 11. WHereupon God proceeds to a definitive sentence against them which he ratifieth with an oath Seeing they be such an obstinate people hee doth not say but sweare not in sport and merriment but being much moved hot and angrie against them for their sinnes If they shall enter Constructio est defectiva ad modum irati qui truncat verba sua it is a passionate speech when a man is so moved as that hee cannot bring forth his words an usuall Aposiopesis Something must be supplyed If they shall enter into my rest let mee be counted no GOD let mee never be believed hereafter The suppressing of these imprecations doth argue that they should bee seldome used by us So did Abram Gen. 14.22 Christ Mar. 8.12 Saul 1 Sam. 14.44 whereas we in our anger cannot containe our selves but furious speeches come by and by out of our mouthes If I be not even with him I pray God I may sinke where I stand never enter into the kingdome of heaven c. We should not be so rash in producing of them God as ye see sweares so may wee doe if we could keepe our selves within those limits that he did 1. God sweares seldome the Scripture doth not bring him in swearing often at every word as we doe 2. When God sweares it is by himselfe by no creature wee sweare by bloud wounds fire bread cheese c. 3. It is a matter of weight that makes God sweare he doth not sweare upon every trifling occasion as wee doe it was a matter of importance that made him sweare now even the establishing of his justice that men should beware how they provoke him by their sinnes 4. God sweares not rashly in heat and choller as wee doe if our bloud be stirred then wee sweare vengeably Though it be here said hee sware in his wrath yet it was a just and advised anger not a cholericke furie as ours is There bee two things that make God sweare the one is the confirmation of his mercie and gracious promises to his Children Hebr. 6.17 The other is the strengthning of his justice and threatnings against the wicked as in this place and let us beware when God sweares If the King doe not only say such a man shall dye but sweares to it then there is little hope of life for him God hath not only said but sworne that all contemners of his word that harden their hearts against it shall perish eternally Therefore there is no dallying let us looke to it An horrible sinne that wrings an oath from God It is called his rest because he in his eternall counsell prepared it for them and promised it to them long agoe and it was he that brought them into that rest This rest is double 1. The Land of Canaan which is called a rest in regard of their continuall toyles and turmoyles in the wildernesse where they were alwayes molested with flitting up and down but when they came into this land they should rest Heere they rested under their Vines and Figtrees hence it hath the name of rest 2. By it also is meant the Kingdome of Heaven where wee shall rest with Abraham Isaac and Iacob for ever Now were all they that dyed in the wildernesse excluded from that rest too no. Moses never came into the Land of Canaan yet he came into the Kingdome of Heaven I dare not say that all that were overwhelmed with the flood went to hell nor that all were deprived of the celestiall Canaan that missed of the earthly but the wicked persisting in their sinnes without repentance undoubtedly lost both The cause why they were deprived of this rest was their stubborne contempt of God in his Servant Moses speaking to them from time to time He perswaded them by a true and lively faith to depend upon God assuring them that as he had promised them the Land of Canaan so what difficulty soever came he would one day put them into a peacefull possession of the Land but they would not beleeve it when any thing crossed them then they would goe to Aegypt againe Therefore let us take off that sinne that we be not partakers with them of the punishment As Christ said behold a greater than Salomon is heere So say I of the ministery of the Gospell a greater than Moses is heere If the ancient Israelites lost the land of Canaan and some of them the Celestiall Canaan too for despising Moses and for murmuring against him and grieving him how shall we escape that contemne Christ the Apostle and High Priest of our profession which is so farre greater than Moses as the Sonne and heire of the house is above the servant in the house Christ spake by Saint Paul and the rest of the Apostles in their time and he speaketh by us which are His Ambassadours at this day therefore harden not your hearts against his preaching least he shut you out of his rest but reverently embrace his preaching let Christ enter into your hearts by His Word
offer any sacrifice for sin but remaining in heaven still he patiently abideth Then let us waite The foot-stoole of his feete Donec imports a continuation of time Sinne the Devill and his instruments death it selfe If Christ tarrieth for us shall not we tarry for him Luk. 12.36 2 Pet. 3.12 The soules of the Saints that lay under the Altar cryed how long Lord but this answer was returned to them that they should rest for a little season untill their fellow servants and brethren were fulfilled Apoc. 6.10 11. The patient abiding of the poore shall not perish for ever Let us by patience and long suffering passe through the sea of afflictions in this world that we may be with Christ in the haven of eternall happinesse in the world to come Let us tarry for him till the breath bee out of our bodies and let our flesh rest in hope till the day of judgement 2. This phrase doth signifie the greatest and basest part of subjection that can be Ioshua made the men of War to set their feete on the neckes of the Kings that fought against them Ios. 10.24 Adonibezeck made them whom he subdued to gather crumbes under his table Iud. 1.7 The Psalmist sayes of the enemies of Christ they shall licke the dust under his feete and Rom. 16.20 The God of peace shall tread Satan under our feete I will lay thee at my foote we are wont to say Now as they shall be Christ's footstoole so our footstoole too Wee shall be conquerours yea more than Conquerours by him that loved us but this full and compleate victory shall not be till the day of judgment when death the last enemy of all shall be subdued In the meane season while we be here we must look to have our enemies on our top to spit on our face to smite us as they did Christ to make long furrowes on our backes to offer us the greatest indignity that can be but let us be of good comfort the time shall come when they shall be our foot-stoole to their everlasting shame and we shall be as Kings with crownes on our heads and palmes in our hands for ever and ever VERSE 14. THere is great reason he should sit still at the right hand of God in heaven because with one offering he hath perfected that is hath gi-given them all things that were requisite reconciliation remission of sins sanctification redemption Not for a time but for ever Not all the world in generall but those that are sanctified they that remaine dogs and swine still have no benefit by this sacrifice but those that are sanctified Eph. 1.4 1 Cor. 6.11 All have not benefit by the sacrifice of our Saviour Christ only they that are sanctified Acts. 20.32 This is the will of God even your sanctification If we be not sanctified we shall never set a foote into the kingdome of heaven Dogges Enchanters Whoremongers are without Follow peace and holinesse without which no man shall see GOD. Except a man bee borne of water and of the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdome of God Ioh. 3.5 Such were some of you but yee are sanctified c. 1 Cor. 6.11 This is little considered of us We falsely imagine that we may wallow like swine in the mire of our sinnes and yet goe to heaven when wee dye That cannot bee None are perfected by the offering of CHRIST but they that are sanctified If thou remainest a covetous miser still and beest not sanctified from thy covetousnesse if thou continuest a drunkard still and art not sanctified from thy drunkennesse if thou dwellest in thy fornication adultery stil and beest not sanctified from these sins If thou beest a proud man still and art not sanctified from thy pride to have a lowly opinion of thy selfe thou shalt never have any comfort by the oblation of CHRIST Wee must be Saints in some measure while wee are here on the earth or else wee shall never be Saints in heaven hereafter Paul writeth to them that are sanctified 1 Cor. 1.1 Therefore let us entreat the Lord to sanctifie us in soule spirit and body throughout that we may enter into the holy Hierusalem in the life to come VERSE 15. FOr the HOLY GHOST testifieth this also to us 2 Pet. 1.21 For after hee had said before these are the words of the Apostle making a collection out of the Prophet He doth not say for Ieremie beares us witnesse but the Holy Ghost The whole Scripture was given by inspiration from God it was inspired by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1.21 The HOLY GHOST speakes in the bookes of Moses in the Psalmes and in the Prophets in the writings of the Evangelists in the Epistles of the Apostles and in all the rest In other writings men speake but in the Scripture GOD Almighty speaketh therefore how reverently are they to bee read and heard of us wee that bee the Preachers speake yet it is not wee but the Spirit of GOD that speaketh in us the HOLY GHOST speaketh by the mouth of all his servants therefore let us take heed how we resist the Holy Ghost VERSE 16. AFter he had promised a New Covenant instead of the Old After those dayes namely of the old Testament those being expired Then saith the Lord concerning the New Covenant that was promised Two things Renovation and Remission of sins Verse 17. God doth not promise to put his lawes in our eyes that wee might look on them in our mouthes that we might talke of them or on the fringes of our garments as the Pharises had the Law of God but if wee feare Him Hee will put his lawes into our hearts that the heart being possessed with the Law of God it may set the tongue and all the members of the body on worke VERSE 17. NEither the guilt nor punishment of them This testimony was cited Chapter 8. to prove that there was a New Covenant to abolish the Old Here it is alleadged to prove that remission of sins is effected by the sacrifice of Christ in the New Testament which was only figured out by the sacrifices of the Old Testament So that one and the same Scripture may be applyed to diverse purposes The foundation whereupon the remission of sins promised by God was built was the sacrifice of Christ in the New Testament otherwise this testimony should not be alleadged to purpose That which we minde to punish we will remember I remember Amalek said the Lord. A master being displeased with his servant sayes I will remember you anon but God will not remember our sins he will rase them out of the booke of his remembrance An happy turne for us for if he should remember but one sin against us it were sufficient to cast us into hell As God remembers not our sins So let not us remember the injuries done to us Ioseph would not revenge himselfe on his brethren for the injurie they intended against him and practised but
to speake wee doe not believe when wee shall see CHRIST our blessed SAVIOUR in the kingdome of heaven then faith is turned into fruition but there is singular use of it in this world and let us entreat the Lord to make bright the eye of our faith daily more and more that with Noah wee may see the things that are not yet seene What entertainment did Noah give to this warning did hee contemne it or set light by it in his heart no verily he reverenced it Wee must reverence the judgements of GOD. When Daniel pondered in himselfe the fearefull fall of Nebucadnezar that such a faire and beautifull tree which reached to heaven should bee cut downe he held his peace by the space of one houre and his thoughts troubled him When the Angels were to blow their trumpets there was silence in heaven they were stricken with a kinde of astonishment and could not speake When the booke of the Law was read before Iosiah his heart melted at it he reverenced the judgement denounced in it When this proclamation was made in Nineveh yet fortie dayes and Nineveh shall be destroyed they all reverenced it from the King to the beggar c. they put on sackcloth fasted and prayed to GOD. Noah hearing of a floud to come feares it after a godly manner and provides against the comming of it But some there be that are no more moved with them then the stones in the Church-wall Ier. 36.24 yet were not they afraid c. When Paul preached of the resurrection and of the day of judgement some in Athens mocked at it and Lots sonnes laughed at the destruction of Sodom that was at hand Let the Preacher thunder out GODS judgements against abhominable swearing lying flattering and dissembling and other sinnes that reigne among the people some laugh at it in their sleeves tell them of the day of judgement when as all nations shall appeare before the sonne of man they set not a straw by it they are worse then Felix he trembled when Saint Paul discoursed of righteousnesse and the judgement to come they are worse than the Devills for they believe that there is a GOD and tremble at it There is great difference betweene trembling and reverencing The wicked that have no portion in CHRIST tremble they cry to the mountaines and rockes fall on us c. but the holiest men of all must feare and reverence the judgements of God and we must prepare our selves for the avoyding of them as Noah did Doth the Lion roare and shall not the beasts of the forrest quake Doth GOD Almighty roare doth he threaten and shall we be mooved with no reverence as Noah reverenced the comming of the floud so let us reverence all the plagues that are denounced by God What doth Noe in this his feare hee is not as a man amazed and besides himselfe but as GOD had commanded him he prepares the Arke he doth not reason with flesh and bloud surely this may be but a scare-crow there is no such inundation to come God will not bee so unmercifull as to destroy all that hee hath made as for the Arke it must be very large to be a receptacle of all kind of creatures an hard and difficult thing to make such a Vessell when it is made how shall I and my family be preserved in it a thousand to one but wee shall be drowned hee admits no such consultation But knowing from GODS owne mouth there was a flood to come he prepares an Arke for the saving of him and his Faith must leape over all difficulties all stumbling blockes that lye in the way if God have sayd a thing let us beleeve it though all the world seeme to be against it GOD hath said there is a Iudgement to come let us all prepare for it as Noah did for the flood The old world prepared and Noah prepared they prepared by building of houses planting of Vinyards So we prepare for the world but not to meete GOD by repentance Noah prepared an Arke for the saving of himselfe and let us prepare the Arke of a good conscience for the saving of our selves at that day When it is said he prepared the Arke it is not to be imagined that he wrought it with his owne hands he was a Preacher and it is not like he could play the Carpenter or shipwright They may be like the Bell in the Steeple that calls others to the Sermon but hath no benefit of it itself they may build up others yet be unbuilt themselves Therefore it shall be good for us to preach to our selves as well as to the people lest while we preach to others we our selves be reprobates He provided all things for it Wood Pitch Nailes made it after the forme God had prescribed with many severall Roomes in it This Arke in the judgement of all interpreters was a type of the Church 1. The Arke was made after Gods appointment not after Noahs So the Church must be framed by GOD 's Will and not by mans 2. All were drowned that were not in the Arke so all regularly are damned that are not in the Catholike Church 3. The Arke was neere drowning yet never drowned it was miraculously preserved by God So the Church may be brought to a low ebbe yet it shall continue still 4. There was in the Arke good and bad cleane and uncleane so wee must never dreame to have all holy and sanctified persons that be in the Church 5. In the Arke there were diverse mansions and roomes some for men some for beasts so in the Church Ioh. 14.2 In my Fathers house there are many dwelling places 6. The Arke had but a few in it eight persons yet there was the Church Vniversalitie is no necessary note of a Church Christ's flocke is but a little flocke Here we see what a priviledge it is to be of the household of a godly man that may bee as a Sanctuary to thee from temporall plagues and judgements All that were in the ship were saved for Saint Pauls sake God gave him the soules of them all Noahs family was preserved for his sake because cursed Cham was of this house-hold he was saved Potiphars house was blessed for Iosephs sake Gen. 39.5 Strive to bee of the house-hold of a man that feareth God that shall be a shelter to thee from earthly punishments thou shalt fare the better in the world for that There is much contending much suit made to bee in the house of a rich man c. If they bee godly and religious men too as many are it is well but thou haddest better bee in the house of a godly poore man who is deepe in Gods books then in the house of a wealthy and wicked Nabal Labour to be one of Noahs house-hold Noe and his family were saved in the Arke yet with much a doe they endured much they were in continuall danger they passed through many difficulties the smell of
it CHRIST the Saviour of the world was promised to them that he should come of Abrahams seed but as yet he was not come the kingdome of heaven whereof the land of Canaan was a type was promised to them but as yet they received it not yet they believed certainely that they should have them and dyed in that faith Faith is an evidence of things that are not seene The victory over sinne death and the Divell is promised to us we shall bee more than conquerors yet sinne gives us many a fall the Divell assaults and tempts us death seaseth on us and takes us away yet let us believe Gods promise As yet we have not received the resurrection yet believe it nor the kingdome of heaven yet believe it and dye in that beliefe though thou kill me I will believe in thee The affirmative 2. Though they received them not yet they saw them not neere hand but farre off not with the eye of the body but of the soule which is faith Abraham in the birth of Isaac saw CHRIST In thy seed that is in CHRIST shall all nations be blessed Isaac was borne of a woman which by the course of nature was never like to have Children so was CHRIST of a Virgin that never knew man In the oblation of Isaac he saw the oblation of Christ on the Crosse. When Isaac bore the wood wherewith he should be burnt hee saw Christ bearing his owne Crosse when he saw Isaac bound on the Altar he saw Christ fastened to the Crosse. So the Israelites afterwards saw CHRIST afarre off in the Paschall Lamb and the rest of the sacrifices but blessed are our eyes wee as yet see the kingdome of heaven but afarre off but one day we shall see God face to face 3. They were perswaded they should have them and dyed in that perswasion they saluted them as Marrinors espying the shoare afarre off skip for joy hoping shortly to bee at it so these seeing the celestiall Canaan afarre off rejoyced at it and embraced it with the armes of faith So we must rejoyce at the sight of death as Simeon and Paul 4. They confessed themselves strangers here Whereby it is apparent they looked for a Country in heaven and dyed in faith expecting that Country 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is opposed to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Citizens that have a r●ght and interest in the City may goe up and downe boldly strangers are fearefull standing at the curtesie of others 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that come as wanderers from another people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without house and home They confessed it 1. By deeds by their dwelling in tents 2. In words before all men It is not to be extended to the Patriarcks before the floud for some of them as Enoch dyed not It is to be restreyned to them after the floud Hee doth not say all these were rare and excellent men beautified with singular graces of GODS spirit deepe in his bookes therefore they were exempted from death there is none that hath that priviledge Death is a Cup whereof all must drinke there is no man living but shall see death Wise Solomon godly David that was a man after Gods owne heart is dead strong Samson faire Absalom wealthy Nabal is dead Lazarus dyed and the rich man also dyed and was buryed Beggars dye and Kings dye Have I not said yee are Gods yet yee shall dye as men It is well observed by Saint Augustine that it fell out by the providence of GOD that the verb morior should not be declined after the same manner that other verbs of that kinde be orior ortus est morior mortuus est to declare that death signified by it cannot be declined Mors non cogitur abesse sed cogitur non obesse Death cannot hurt the godly it is rather a benefit to them yet they dye This we can all say nothing so certaine as Death yet we make no use of it for all that we bathe our selves in the pleasures of sin we are set on the merry pinne we follow the world so earnestly so greedily as if we should live for ever We are like the fishes that are skipping and leaping in the water and yet by and by are taken in the Net We know that the Net of Death is continually spread for us all yet we are as jocund as if no net were laid for us It is said Eccles. 7.4 That the living shall lay it to heart Wee talke of Death wee carry Death about with us we see it daily in other men Almost every weeke a buryall in many Townes yet wee live as if we should never dye Damocles the Parasite was set in Dionysius chayre he had all the honour and pleasure that could be devised but when hee considered the sword hanging by a slender horsehayre over his head hee tooke delight in nothing Death as Gods sword hangs over our head continually it is senibus prae foribus adolescentibus in insidiis The staffe of death stands before the doore of old folkes and it may steale on young men ere they bee aware yet we regard it not It causeth us not to have our conversation in heaven but we are as great earth wormes as if we should never dye All these dyed but how did they dye in the faith All dye but all dye not in the faith 1 Thes. 4.16 some dye in CHRIST and some live to the world and dye in the world Achitophel dyed but it was not in faith hee dyed a malecontent in a proud conceit of his wit and wisedome that his counsell should not bee followed which was wont to bee reputed as an oracle from heaven Iudas dyed but it was in desperation in infidelity not in faith he could not be perswaded that his sins were washed away in the bloud of CHRIST and therefore tooke a rope and hanged himselfe Cain dyed but not in faith for he cryed my sin is greater than can be forgiven Happy are they that dye in faith The Scripture doth not simply say blessed are the dead but that dye in the Lord. Iob dyed in the faith I am sure my Redeemer liveth Old Father Simeon dyed in the faith with CHRIST in his armes LORD now lettest thou thy servant Saint Paul dyed in the faith the time of my departure is at hand From henceforth A sweet thing to dye in the faith All that dye quietly to the eye of the world dye not in the faith The Psalmist sayes of the wicked there are no bands in their death Good men may have sore temptations when they lye on their death beds through the distemperature of the braine and the vehement paine of the body they may deliver some fearefull and impatient speeches savouring of infidelity as Iob did in his pangs and yet for all that dye in the faith Live in the faith bee plentifull in the fruits of faith and thou shalt bee sure to dye in the faith It is the
let us annexe workes to our faith The Lord makes us perfect in workes that our election may be sure He doth not pray to GOD to make them perfect in some good workes but in all As he sayd homo sum humani nihil à me alienum puto So let us say Christianus sum nullum Christianum opus à me alienum puto Herod did many things but because hee did not all he was not saved Heere some trees bring forth Peares some Plumbes some Apples some Almonds There is no tree that bringeth forth all fruit But every Christian must be as a tree planted by the rivers of waters that bringeth forth all fruit We must be ready for every good worke wee must have prayers and almes deedes zeale meekenesse humility patience we must abound in every good worke 3 He doth not say the Lord cause you to begin in every good worke but God perfect you c. We must labour to aspire to perfection daily more and more as Iac. 1.4 So let zeale patience c. Let every grace have his perfect worke Vsus promptos facit use makes perfectnesse scribendo disces scribere use thy selfe to writing and in the end thou shalt write well use legs and have legs so use thy selfe to good workes and be perfect in good workes Milo by using to carry a Calfe when it was young did beare it when it was old So let us exercise ourselves in good workes from our youth as the young man sayes at the length it will bee easie to attaine such a perfection as is acceptable to God Let us use our selves to pray as Daniel did morning and evening Let us use our selves to reading of the Scripture as the Bereans to Preaching as Christ to fasting as Anna to give to the poore and needy as Dorcas and Cornelius At length we shall attaine to some perfection in them c. This is amplified 1. By the rule whereby our workes must bee framed that is the will of God Christ sayd not my will but thine be done So must every Christian say our will is to live at ease to wallow in pleasures to take the Tabret and Harpe to eate the Calves out of the middest of the stall to rejoyce with the instruments of Musicke Our will is never to taste of any misery to have no losses crosses sicknesse if possible not to have our finger ake But let us entreat the Lord that wee may doe His will to say with them Acts 21.14 The will of the Lord be done 1 Thes. 4. The will of God is your sanctification The Lord so perfect us to every good worke that we may possesse our vessels in holinesse and honour that we may serve Him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our life 2 It is amplified by the manner of our working That which is well pleasing in his sight not for any worthinesse of ours but through Iesus Christ in whom God is well pleased with us for without him we can please God in nothing Cain and Abel both offered Sacrifices yet God was pleased with Abel not with Cain The Pharisee and Publican both praied in the Temple yet the one was heard and the other was not Why because one was in Christ not the other Let us desire the Lord to accept of our poore and imperfect workes for the worthinesse of Christ in whose name they are presented to him He concludes with a doxologie a song of praise and thankesgiving to Christ the great Shepheard which is God above all blessed for ever to him be glory for ever and ever He it is in whom wee were chosen before the foundation of the world in whom is our life breath and being He it is that in unspeakable love came downe from the pallace of heaven into the dunghill of the earth for our sakes that vouchsafed to take flesh of a woman for us to be borne in a Stable layd in a cratch to endure the speaking against of sinners to be called Beelzebub a bibber of wine a friend of Publicanes and sinners to be blindfolded buffetted spit upon cruelly whipped to be pittifully nailed hand and foote to the Crosse to susteine the wrath of his Father to dye to be buried to rise againe to ascend into heaven there making intercession for us therefore to him be praise for ever and ever He it is that though he bee absent in body yet hath not left us Orphanes poore fatherlesse children he hath given us his spirit to be a father to us to guide us into all truth an heavenly Comforter to comfort us in all distresses to seale us up to the kingdome of heaven He hath left us His Word the foode of our soules the sword of the Spirit to defend us from all enemies of our salvation Hee hath given us the Sacrament of His blessed Supper as a perpetuall memory of him wherein we may daily see him the bread and wine are as pledges of his body and bloud that we may eate him spiritually be one with him and he with us He it is that hath given us his Angels to pitch their tents about us to take our soules at our dying day and to carry them into the kingdome of heaven Therfore let us say with cheerefull hearts to him be praise worthy is the Lord Iesus the great Shepheard of the sheepe to receive all honour and glory prayse power and might now and for ever Amen VERSE 22. 1 AN admonition Suffer the word of exhortation 2. The reason which is taken from the brevity In admonitions I have beene briefe hee spent but three Chapters in them therefore take them the more patiently Such is the pride and perversenesse of our nature we cannot abide to be told of our faults like gauled horses wee are ready to winch and kicke at it Therefore this caveat is very needfull Suffer your selves meekely and quietly to bee reprooved for your sinnes Suffer the Preacher to tell you of your covetousnesse your pride malice c. of your drunkennesse fornication and adultery of your negligence in comming to Church of the little care that is had for the good of the Towne every man is for himselfe none for the Towne Suffer your selves to be admonished of these things it is good for you Ye suffer fooles gladly sayes Saint Paul yee suffer stage players to tell you of your faults and ye laugh at it and will ye not suffer Preachers ye suffer the Physition to give you sowre potions yee send for him and reward him for it and will yee not suffer the Physition of your soules to bee sharpe with you for your salvation Ye suffer Chirurgions to cut you and will yee not suffer us to lanch the soares of your sins that the corrupt matter may issue out Suffer the words of exhortation and magnifie God for them Blessed be thou and blessed be thy counsell sayd David to Abigail So when the Preacher tels us of that which is amisse and exhorts us to
reconciled to thy brother then come and offer thy gift first seeke the kingdome of God GOD should bee first served yet he will have his owne service to stay till thou beest reconciled to thy brother If I speake with the tongues of men and Angels if I come to Church heare never so many Sermons receive never so many Communions talke never so gloriously of Religion and dwell in hatred be not reconciled I am as a sounding brasse and as a tinckling Cymbal 3. Wee can have no assurance of our reconciliation to God without it Matth. 18. ult As the King dealt with his servant So God will cast you into the prison of hell for ever This should make us all to quake 4. We have no certaintie of our lives This night may our soules be taken from us Iovinian the Emperour supped plentifully went to bedde merrily yet was taken up dead in the morning And if death take us before we take one another by the hand as a token of hearty reconciliation what shall become of us Wee should not suffer the Sunne to goe downe on our wrath Iohannes Eleemosynarius Arch-Bishop of Alexandria being angrie in the day with Nicetus a Senator towards night sends this message to him Sol est in occasu vir maximè honorande My honourable brother the Sunne is a setting let there be a setting of our anger too if we do it not within the compasse of a day and a night yet let us doe it within the compasse of our lives let not our anger be like the fire of the Temple that went not out day nor night Let us not say with Ionah I doe well to be angry to the death let our anger bee aculeus apis not aculeus serpentis the sting of a Bee that is soone gone not the sting of a Serpent that tarries long and it may be proves lethall Let us receive one another in all brotherly love and kindnesse as Saint Paul entreateth PHILEMON to receive Onesimus But who is Onesimus that PHILEMON should receive him Pauls owne bowels he doth not say my owne eyes though they be precious to us and we use to terme our deere friends Ocelli mei not my own hands which minister to my necessities my own feete which carry mee from place to place but my owne bowels our internall and vitall parts the longues the liver especially the heart the seat of love and affection Whom I doe most tenderly affect teneritudinem rarissimi amoris declarat he poynts out hereby the tendernesse of a most rare love As Saint Paul sayes of the Philippians I desire you all in the bowells of IESUS CHRIST 1. In an heartie love in CHRIST IESUS One Christian should be exceeding deere to another 1. It is a token of election As the elect of God put on the bowels of mercie Without these bowels no assurance of salvation 2. The affinitie betweene Christians require it We have one Father which is GOD one Mother the Church we are of one house the household of faith one Elder brother which is IESUS CHRIST one inheritance the kingdome of heaven 3. We are all bought with one and the same deare price the invaluable bloud of CHRIST therefore wee should bee deare one to another 3. Every one is tender over his bowels our brethren are our bowels he that toucheth them toucheth our owne bowells Oh that we did so esteeme and commiserate one another When the child was to be divided by Salomons sword the bowels of the true mother yerned within her So should our bowels doe if we see any hurt towards our brethren VERSE 13. IN the next place he unfolds the reason of his sending 1. Negativè not as if he had not beene usefull to him In that respect he would willingly have reteined him still that he might have ministred to him in the bonds of the Gospell There bee the bonds of impietie such were Zedekiah his bonds and there bee the bonds of piety Such were St. Pauls bonds not for any sinne of his but for the Gospell which were famous throughout all the judgement hall and in all other places That in thy stead he might doe it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for thee in this hee supplies thy roome and discharges thy office The Gospell is the common cause that concernes us all if any suffer for it we are all bound from the highest to the lowest to assist them with our purses our prayers and personall presence too if conveniently it may be yea though we be never so great personages It is like that obadiah himselfe hid the Prophets in Caves from the rage of Iesabel though peradventure he might send the bread and water by his servants Our SAVIOUR himselfe washed his Disciples feet Saint Cyprian writes to the Priests and Deacons to provide all things necessary for them that were in prison wishing that he himselfe were present with them Promptus lubens readily and willingly hee would performe Cuncta dilectionis obsequia all obsequious duties of love unto them Helena the mother of Constantine being at Hierusalem served in meate her selfe to the Virgins that were there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Placilla the Wife of Theodosius the Emperour in propria persona pauperibus ministravit ministred to the poore in her owne person and PHILEMON himselfe should have ministred unto Saint Paul The Angels minister to us yea when we be in prison as to Saint Peter and shall we scorne be we never so wealthie worshipfull honourable to minister to them that be in bonds for the Gospell Let us count it an honour to us In ministring to them we minister to CHRIST and he will reward it at the latter day Mistake me not I pleade not for them that are buffeted for their faults nor doe I reckon them to be in bonds for the Gospel who worthily suffer for their folly VERSE 14. WE have had the negative cause of his sending not because Saint Paul had no use of him but because he would not keepe him without his good will without thy minde thy sentence thy judgement 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 would I doe nothing In hoc negotio in this businesse otherwise in every thing he would not tye himselfe to Philemons minde Servants must not be detained without their Masters liking Eustathius Byshop of Armenia was deposed from his byshop-ricke quia servos praetextu pietatis heris abstulerat because under a colour of piety he had taken servants from their Masters Therfore the Papists themselves will not permit servants to take upon them a religious course of life to vow chastity without the consent of their masters yet children may invitis parentibus whether their parents will or no so as they be of age a man 14. a woman 12. and that their Parents need not their helpe A strange thing that servants may not but Children may But servants may not Bellar. Reason is without reason because
Gods Councell as the Preachers be at this day the Iewes were honoured that God would speake to them by them but to us hee hath spoken by his onely Sonne therefore our honour is the greater we are set in an high chaire of dignity above them happy are the eyes that see that which we see Many Prophets and Kings have desired to see these things which we see and have not seene them God give us grace to use our happinesse to his glory and the salvation of us all In this the Old and New Testament are equall God is the Author of them both God spake by the Prophets then and he speaketh now by his Ministers The word of the Lord the burthen of the Lord thus saith the Lord. These were the preambles of all the Prophets God spake by the mouth of David as he spake by the mouth of all his Prophets So God speaketh by the mouth of the Preachers at this present day It is not you that speak but the spirit of your Father which speaketh in you Wee are the Ambassadours for Christ as though God did beseech you by us When we teach God teacheth when we exhort God exhorteth when we reprove sinne God reproveth sin It makes no matter what the man be that speaketh so as he be the lawfull Minister of Christ God speaketh by the man when the man speaketh Gods word When the Ambassadour of the King of Denmark of France or any other Countrey speaketh in the Court the King speaketh whose person he doth represent when my Lord Chiefe Iustice gives the charge at the Assizes the King gives the charge for he sustaines the Kings Person and is a Commissioner for the King so when the Preacher speakes in the Pulpit when he in Gods name gives a charge against pride malice c. God himselfe speakes and gives the charge Oh that this were imprinted in the hearts of all that come to Church the Preacher is a man as thou art but God speakes by him and if thou despise him thou despisest God that speakes in him VERSE 2. WE have seene the estate of them in the time of the Law Now let us take a view of our condition under the Gospell Theirs were the first dayes ours be the last In those that were the first dayes some new Doctrine was daily to be expected but in these last dayes GOD hath opened to us his whole counsell there is no mint of any new Doctrine to be looked for now nothing but the second comming of our SAVIOUR CHRIST is to be expected which hath revealed the whole will of his Father to us If an Angel from Heaven preach any other Doctrine than that which wee have received in these last dayes let him bee accursed 2 In the last dayes there is greatest aboundance of knowledge In the last dayes I will powre out my Spirit on all flesh GOD then was sparing of his Spirit he sent it downe by drops but now he powres it out upon the Church they had the Moone-light we have the Sun-light Therefore if we be ignorant our condemnation shall be the greater as GOD knowes a number of ignorant persons are in this glorious light of the Gospell yea in those Towns where the Candle of Gods Word hath shined brightly these many yeares together The preaching of the Word is a well of water but we will not come with our buckets to fetch water at this Well or if we doe we come with riven buckets the water runs out by and by 3 These last dayes wherein we live are the most dangerous sinne overfloweth with a full streame In the last dayes perillous times shall come Never did sin shew her selfe with such a brazen face as it doth now Men now stick not to set themselves against the Word of GOD it selfe to call the authority of the Scripture in question whether all things be true in it or not To band themselves against the Preachers if not openly yet secretly and to pull downe if possible the Church it selfe these be the last times wherein we live GOD keepe us in them by his holy Spirit 4 Seeing they be the last dayes let us not be so much in love with them Will any be bestowing great cost on his house the last day when he is to goe out of it These are the last dayes of the world wherein we are ready to be turned out of the house of this world therefore let us not be inflamed too much with the love of it In the first dayes when they entred first into the farme of the world they might be merry and jocund we live in the last dayes when we cannot have long to tarry in it therefore let us not be glewed and wedded to it let us use this world as if we used it not for the fashion of this world fadeth away in these last dayes let us so live that whensoever Christ comes to judgement we may meet him joyfully in the Ayre and be translated with him into his kingdome of glory Spoken unto us 1. To the Apostles first that saw and heard him then to all Christians His must be understood Mat. 21.37 But last of all he sent unto them his Son in his Sonne Col. 2.9 For in him dwelleth all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily The which Sonne speaketh to us by his Ministers to the worlds end they had servants to speake to them but God hath spoken to us by his Son yet even his Son is little regarded Many of the Pharisies knew him to be the Son of God this is the Heire yet they said come let us kill him I am perswaded if CHRIST were now alive and preached many yeeres together in this Towne yet there be some so maliciously set against the Word and the preachers of it that they could finde in their hearts to kill him Hee that heareth you heareth me and he that goeth about to kill them goes about to kill CHRIST too What a vile age doe we live in What manner of Son not adopted but naturall 1 Heire The Son is the Fathers Heire he hath a right and interest to all his Fathers goods and lands when his Father is dead he hath the same power lordship and authority over all that his Father had So Christ Psa. 2.8 Iohn 16.15 Ioh. 17.10 Yet God his Father never dieth He is Heire as God and Man the King and Mediator of the Church All power is given unto mee in Heaven and Earth God appointed Him He did not intrude Himselfe He was not appointed Heire because being in time made He deserved it by His holy life as Photinus said not only Heire in time but with the Father before all times Of all Of all persons as well as of all things CHRIST hath a right to all he that taketh away any thing bequeathed to the Heire by the Will and Testament of his Father robs the Heire and is guilty of theft if we goe about to take
any thing away from CHRIST we rob Him our soules and bodies are Christs therefore let us not keepe them away from Him but consecrate them wholly to him 2 We are Heires by Him the poorest man that beleeves in Christ is an Heire though he have scant a place to hide his head in nor a good meales meat all the week long Christ Himselfe was Heire of all when He breathed on the Earth yet He was hungry thirsty had no money in His purse when the receivers of tribute came He had not an house to dwell in then He had a right to all though He had fruition of little So is it with us Men are wont to make much of them that be Heires to great Personages the godly are Heires not of Men but of God not of transitory Lordships or fading Kingdomes in this world but of a Kingdome that cannot be shaken in the world to come make much of them If we see the Heire of a Noble man we reverence him especially if he be the Kings Heire Good Christians are the Heires of the King of Kings therefore have them in high price and estimation but the world knowes not these Heires therefore she makes no reckoning of them If the Kings Sonne should come to a towne in a beggars weede no man would regard him no more doe they the heires of God because many of them doe not flourish in pompe and honour and wealth as others doe yet let not that discourage them GOD knowes them the Angels know them and account them their brethren and CHRIST will know us at the day of judgement when he shall say to many that were gay-fellowes here I know you not let that be a sufficient comfort to us 2. Arg. He that made the world is God CHRIST made the world Ergo. CHRIST was not made hee was a maker The ages the times themselves which have beene from the beginning The world continues from age to age therefore the ages are put for the world Hebr. 11.3 The world was made by CHRIST not as by an instrument or an inferiour but as an equall a workeman of equall power with the Father 1. The world is of Gods making therefore it is to be highly esteemed of us The Tabernacle was of Bezaleels making that was furnished with all skill and wisedome therefore the more regarded by the Israelites the Temple was of Salomons making the wisest man that ever was therefore in that respect more honoured by the Iewes A picture of Apelles making would be in great request The world is the glorious worke-man-ship of God Almighty therefore to be admired of us all If a stranger be in a boat on the Thames he cannot but wonder at the brave buildings that be scituate on it shall we passe through this famous frame and superexcellent building of this world set up by God himselfe and not wonder at the wisedome power and goodnesse of God that made it Wee see what a goodly coate the earth hath Salomon in all his royalty was not so clothed as it we see the Sunne in the firmament the Moone the Starres GOD Almighty his Candles birds of the ayre beasts of the field fishes of the Sea the admirable worke of our owne bodies yet they doe not make us almost to thinke of GOD. The Gentiles had no booke but this to looke upon yet it left them without excuse Let us all behold GOD even in the creation of the world 2. Though the world be a worthy worke and that of GODS making yet let us not admire it too much as there was a time when it was set up so there is a time when it shall be pulled downe The Disciples stood gazing on the Temple wondring at the workemanship of it but CHRIST told them that one stone should not be left upon another So the time shall come as Saint Peter speaketh when the whole world shall passe away with a noise the elements melt like fire therefore let us not be too much in love with this world Let us lay up treasure especially in the heavenly Ierusalem that abideth for ever This world is but an Inne wherein we take up a nights lodging If thou commest to an Inne be it never so faire wilt thou alwayes continue there Nay thou wilt leave the Inne and make hast to thy house though it bee nothing so beautifull as the Inne Remember that this world is but an Inne be it never so goodly a piece of worke hasten to that house that is made without hands eternall in the heavens Plato sayd that the world had a beginning but should have no ending that is confuted by Aristotle his Scholler If it had a beginning it must have an end too that cannot be avoyded Therefore he to make it eternall would have it to be without both wherein he bewrayed his ignorance of God and his word 3. All things in the world were made by CHRIST without him nothing was made he is the first begotten of every creature whether principalities or powers c. The Angels were made by him and we men are made by him he is the maker of all things in the world we are all his creatures therefore we are bound to glorifie him especially we men for whom all things are made Men are wont to say of a Noble man or Gentle man by whom they have ascended to great wealth such a one was my maker I am bound to love him I owe him all duty CHRIST is thy maker hee fashioned thee in thy mothers belly hee put into thee the breath of life in him thou livest moovest and hast thy being therefore thou art bound to doe him all the service thou canst Daniel reproved that great King that he forgate the God in whose hand his breath consisted we have all breath by God yet we forget him The Devill is our marrer and undoer CHRIST is our maker yet a number serve the Devill more than him CHRIST made thy mouth therefore praise him with it raile not on him and his Ministers with that mouth which he made he made thy eyes therefore looke up to heaven with them looke not on faire Women with them to lust after them CHRIST made thy feet therefore goe not to the Ale-house with them till thou be past witte and honesty too but goe to the house of God with them for the salvation of thy soule c. VERSE 3. THe former might seeme by participation and similitude to be adscribed to Christians we are the Sonnes of GOD and heyres of GOD you are the light of the world sayes CHRIST Therefore here hee ascendeth higher shewing that CHRIST is of the same nature and essence with GOD as the brightnesse of the Sunne is of the same essence with the Sunne and as the brightnesse proceedeth from the Sun so Christ is of the same essence with the Father and proceedeth from the Father as the brightnesse from the Sunne he is lux de luce and as
bee understood of Salomon then of Christ he is the fairest among men Verse 2. Grace was in his lips he rideth on the word of truth Princes have thrones so hath CHRIST Salomons throne was but for a short time this for ever and ever What manner of kingdome administred in equity Isai. 11.3 swayed with righteousnesse there is no respect of persons with him he is just in his government he will punish the wicked comfort and defend the godly CHRISTS Scepter is a scepter of righteousnesse there is no partialitie no unjust dealing with him If his owne servants sinne he inflicts punishment on them as well as on the wicked judgement beginneth at his owne house first If a King will reforme his kingdome he must reforme his owne court first so doth CHRIST in the government of the world if they of his owne family offend he will begin with them first Moses murmured therefore hee lost the enjoying of the land of Canaan David a man after Gods owne heart committed adultery therefore his wives were deflowred before his eyes and he had like to have lost his kingdome for it Therefore let not us that be within the Walls of the Church flatter our selves in our sinnes wee may drinke c. CHRIST will be mercifull to us nay his Scepter is a Scepter of righteousnesse he must punish sinne wheresoever he findes it VERSE 9. THat the Scepter of CHRISTS kingdome is a Scepter of righteousnesse hee proves by two effects he loves righteousnesse and hates iniquitie ergo it is a Scepter of righteousnesse Hebr. It is because both are good and true The cause of good government is the grace of God and God rewardeth good government Thy God by generation Ours by creation Hath anointed thee Hereby hee is distinguished from GOD the Father as Genesis 19.24 GOD the Father anointed him in respect of his humanity With the oyle of gladnesse with the graces of the Holy Ghost which make the hearts of the faithfull glad and cheerefull to every good worke as they that were anointed in the time of the law were made the fitter to those businesses which GOD injoyned to them Further because they made CHRIST glad to powre downe those graces on his Church IESUS rejoyced in the spirit Luk. 10. We are Christs fellowes as men as members of his body and as his brethren we are anoynted touch not mine anoynted Psal. 105.15 and 2 Cor. 1.21 Wee in measure hee above measure Rom. 12.3 Io. 1.16 Io. 3.34 he is Sanctus Sanctorum Who be those that are Christs fellowes Surely the faithfull wee are his servants and fellowes too The head is above all the members of the body yet the head and members are fellowes the husband hath a superioritie over the Wife yet the man and the Wife are fellowes Christ is our Husband we by his grace and favour are his Wife therefore his fellowes the eldest Sonne and heyre to a Nobleman hath many prerogatives above the rest of his brethren yet in that they be brethren the Sonnes of one Father they are all fellowes So CHRIST our elder brother is above us yet because wee are his brethren wee may bee termed his fellowes By this oyle of gladnesse is meant nothing else save the graces of the spirit The oyntment shall teach you sayes Iohn the Holy Ghost is this oyle or oyntment Where we have many observations and instructions 1. All the oyle that we have comes from God we have no grace but it is of him the uprightnesse of Noah meekenesse of Moses zeale of Phineas sincerity of David the patience of Iob the hope of Abraham the wonderfull faith of the Centurion the knowledge of Ezra and Paul that spake with tongues more than all the courage of Peter all is of God it is he that anointed us with his holy oyle therefore let us be proud of no gift but use all in feare and trembling to the glory of the giver There is one that bestowes precious oyle on thee with that thou anointest thy face and hast a cheerefull looke thou art not to praise thy selfe but him that gave thee the oyle all our spirituall oyle comes out of Gods shop therefore let us magnifie him for all if hee anointed Christ much more us hee was anoynted with this oyle as he was man otherwise as he was God he had all fulnesse of himselfe 2. If Christ were anointed above his fellowes then his fellowes also are anointed though not in that measure hee was wee have a little Crewse full of oyle but he hath a great Pot full of it yet every Christian must have some oyle else he is a Christian in name not in deed Hence it is that we are called Christians of Christ because wee are anointed as he was but none may be called Iesuits of Iesus because there is no Saviour beside him wee may communicate with him in the name of Christ but not in the name of Iesus and if we be Christs members we must have some oyle as well as our head Saint Paul profited in the study of the law above his fellowes therefore his fellowes profited something CHRIST was annointed above us therefore wee must bee anointed too If thou hast no knowledge in the will of God no faith no zeale hope meekenesse patience thou art no Christian therefore let us intreat the LORD to anoynt us with this oyle dayly more and more 1. Oyle was a token of consecration in the time of the law Aaron and his Sonnes Saul David and all the Kings by oyle were consecrated to the Lord and set apart to an holy use Iacob powred oyle on the pillar whereof he was purposed to make an altar to the Lord. So we by this heavenly oyle of the spirit are dedicated to God as a royall Priest-hood an holy nation a peculiar people zealous of good workes 2. Oyle gives a sweet taste to the meat whereupon God commanded that on the meat offering should be powred oyle and incense oyle for the tast and incense for the smell So this spirituall oyle of Gods graces makes us a sweet and pleasant meat to the Lord the wicked he will spew out of his mouth but in us that are seasoned with the oyle of the spirit he takes singular delight 3. Oyle supples the wounds that be in a mans bodie The Samaritane powred oyle into the wounds of the man that lay halfe dead by the high way side so the oyle of the spirit supples us against the wounds of sinne a certaine perswasion being setled in our hearts of the love of God towards us in Christ. 4. Oyle makes a man nimble therefore wrastlers in all ages were wont to anoint themselves with oyle that they might bestirre their joynts the better So the graces of the spirit make us more lively in Gods service to wrastle with great alacritie with Satan and all the enemies of our salvation 5. Oyle keepes the body Soluble and is a meanes to purge it from many grosse humours
we are not the Angels Ministers This is thy gracious goodnesse towards us thy name be blessed for it for ever and ever Whether he have appointed to every one of us a particular Angell or not let us not be too curious in the discussing of it this is comfortable for us that wee have many Angels to Minister to us Their Angels saies CHRIST of those that believe in him not their Angell not one Angell but many carryed Lazarus his soule into Abrahams bosome 3. What an unspeakable comfort is this for us What a Tower of defence against Satan and his Angels The Devill compasseth the earth to and fro hee walkes up and downe like a roaring Lion seeking whom he may devoure and there be many 1000s of devils there were a legion in one man These by Gods permission raise up tempests stirre up extraordinary windes blow downe houses Nay if God did not bridle them they would quickly teare us all in pieces but let this be our castle to flye unto as there be bad Angels to hurt us so there be good Angels to defend us There were Charrets and horse-men of fire round about Elisha and the Angels of God though we cannot see them with our eyes pitch their Tents round about us these be stronger than the Devill and his angels because they never sinned and have God on their side In the time of Popery the people were much deluded with the walking of spirits they durst not go through a Church-yard in the night for feare of them Sundry are afraid of Fairies and of ill spirits that haunt their houses no doubt but the evill angels are busie in all places yet let us feare none of them all we are guarded with the celestiall guard of holy Angels that are able to protect us from them all especially Christ Iesus is on our side which is above all Angels he sits at Gods right-hand hath all power in heaven and earth he will preserve us from all dangers in this life and bring us to his everlasting Kingdome in the life to come 4 Seeing that God hath ordained the Angels to be ministring-spirits for our sakes which undoubtedly looke carefully to their charge seldome or never are they absent from us some or other are present with us continually Let us do nothing that may grieve these Heavenly Spirits let the Women be covered because of the Angels So let not us sweare and blaspheme the Name of God c. because of the Angels Men would blush to commit filthinesse in the presence of an honourable Personage the Angels are alwayes present with us therefore even in respect of them let us absteine from sin CHAP. 2. IN the former Chapter the Author as in a Glasse shewed the Deity of CHRIST and both simply and absolutely ratified it Now he applies it to them to whom he writeth Where 1. An application 2. A transition to his humanity In the Application 1. the Vse 2. the Reasons whereby it is pressed 1. From the incommodity 2. From the punishment set forth by a comparison 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 forsomuch as CHRIST the Author of the Gospell is not onely above the Angels but is the high and eternall God being the naturall Son of the everlasting Father and engraven forme of his Person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we ought So then it is not left to our discretion we are tied with the bond of necessity to it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intend our mindes that the things may be imprinted in our hearts and practised in our lives 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 more aboundantly We should abound more in hearing attention and practice than they did in the time of the Law we should excell them by a more rare and singular attention for though the things are the same yet the party is not the same by whom they are delivered It is not enough to heare Sermons every weeke which is good and commendable but we must yeeld a diligent attention to the things that we heare we especially now in the time of the Gospell when God speaketh to us by his owne Son The people were bound to heare attentively in the time of the Law when the Prophets of God spake to them but much more are we when the Son of God the Prince of Prophets the Prophet of the Prophets speakes to us All Samaria gave heed to Simon Magus that bewitched them and lead them to the Divell and shall not we give heed to Iesus Christ that labours to carry us to Heaven Doe not onely heare but attend to that which ye heare Take heed how ye heare whether loosely or carefully profitably or unprofitably Lydia attended to the things that Paul spake Acts 16.14 We must not only heare the Preacher but attend to the things which he uttereth An Infant doth not only take the dug into his mouth but he sucketh at it and that with greedinesse So we must not onely lye at the big of the Word but we must suck sweet doctrines and heavenly instructions from it The ground that receives not the seed into it will never be fruitfull if it lye aloft and be not hidden in the bowels of the earth it can never yeeld fruit so when the seed of the Word is sowne if we doe not marke it and lay it up in our hearts hide it within us as David did the birds of the Ayre that is the divels that flie up and downe in the Church will pick it up and run away with it Therefore let us diligently give heed to the things which we heare hearing is good and they be commended that heare yet that is not sufficient a diligent attendance must be given to that which we heare When Christ reades a Divinity Lecture to us we that be his Schollers must attend to it It is said of the people that they hung on Christ watching the words that came from his mouth ready to receive them before they came so with all care and diligence we must hang on the Preacher marke his words and be ready to receive them into our eares and hearts even before they are delivered so eager should we be of the Word Especially now in the time of the Gospell what attention is there in the Starre-Chamber when the Lords of the Privie Counsell speake But if either the Prince or the King himselfe make an Oration then there is wonderfull attention In the time of the Law the Prophets spake which indeed were of Gods counsell by whom God revealed his will to the people but now the Prince of peace the everlasting Counsellor the Kings owne Sonne that lay in his owne bosome in whom all the treasures of wisdome are hid speaketh to us Therefore let us listen with all diligence to the things which he speaketh And how doth Christ now speak Not daily from Heaven as he did to Saul but by the mouth of his Ambassadours He that heareth you heareth me will ye have an experience of Christ that
come out then they murmure against God despaire of his providence and are ready to exclaime against God This was the Israelites fault and thus often times they tempted God in the wildernesse If they wanted water to quench their thirst withall then they must needs dye God was not able to provide them water If they wanted bread So they did likewise and in a pelting chafe were ready to stone Moses and Aaron Then they would back againe to Aegypt then they wished themselves dead as if the same God that had miraculously beyond the expectation of men provided for them heretofore was not able to doe so still So when some told them of the walled townes that were in the land of Canaan of the mighty Gyants that were in the Country in comparison of whom they were but Grasse-hoppers then they brake forth into this exclamation God is not able to bring us into this land wee and our Children shall perish in this wildernesse They had seene with what a strong hand God had brought them out of Aegypt how miraculously he divided the red Sea that the waters stood as a wall on both sides till they safely passed over yet for all that when they were in any difficulty then God was no body of no power or willingnesse to doe for them This was a vile tempting of God which highly displeased him But there is no reason why we should thus tempt God casting off the hope and confidence we have in him He is subject to no changes yesterday and to day the same for ever Men may change but God changes not a man may be strong to day and weake to morrow whole to day and sick to morrow rich now and poore afterwards alive now and dead a while after a man may love us this houre and hate us the next as Amnon did his sister therefore we may make a question of the helpe of man But God is one and the same continually not a shadow of turning in him his arme is never shortned the welspring of his mercy and goodnesse is never dryed up Therefore in all distresses let us trust in him though all worldly meanes fayle us in sicknesse and health in poverty and wealth in death and life let him be our pillar to leane upon The Prince that would not believe the plenty that GOD had promised was troden to death 2 Reg. 7.17 and the carkasses of these men that thus tempted God fell in the wildernesse therefore let us beware of incredultie As Faith is the best vertue so infidelitie is the greatest vice CHRIST could doe nothing among his owne kinsfolke because of their unbeliefe Shall any thing bee impossible with God Indeed that which he wills not that he cannot doe it is his will that CHRIST in respect of his humanity should be in heaven till the day of judgement therefore he cannot doe this make his body to be here on the earth The Papists set Gods omnipotency on the tainters and stretch it too farre as some bad clothiers deale with cloath But if God have once given us his faithfull promise to doe this or that let us believe it though all the world say nay to it God had promised to bring them into the land of Canaan though there were never so many blockes in the way they should have depended on this promise So God hath promised us the kingdome of heaven feare not little flocke it is your Fathers pleasure to give you the kingdome Luke 12.32 though now and then through weakenesse we fall into sinne though Satan and his instruments rage though we be sicke dye be buryed our bodyes consumed to dust and ashes yet let us certainely know wee shall have this kingdome This is amplified by an excellent meanes which they had to pull them out of this infidelity which was a continuall view and contemplation of the wonderfull workes of God although they saw my workes in the Hebr. they saw the Aegyptians drowned in the red Sea and themselves safely walking through it they saw the cloudy pillar conducting them day and night water gushing out of a stonie rocke Manna descending from heaven that the clothes on their backes and shooes on their feet did not waxe old many yeares together they might have felt with their hands the power and goodnesse of GOD protecting them yet they would not believe in him whereas the sight of Gods former workes should strengthen our faith in all future calamities That use did David make of the workes of GOD. The LORD delivered mee from the clawes of the Beare and pawes of the Lion therefore hee will deliver mee from this Philistim GOD was gracious to mee in such a sicknesse therefore hee will be in this GOD provided for mee when I was a child and could not shift for my selfe therefore hee will provide for me being a man growne GOD preserved mee in such a plague and pestilence therefore I will depend on him still when I was in such an extremity GOD helped me therefore he will helpe me still God delivered England in the yeare one thousand five hundred eightie eight therefore if England serve him hee will deliver it still When Queene Elizabeth the mirrour of the world was taken away we looked for a wofull day yet God gave us a joyfull day after it therefore alwayes let us trust to him let the sight of his wonderfull workes dayly before our eyes be as oyle to nourish the lampe of our faith that it never dye The last circumstance appertaining to this sinne is the time how long it continued they tempted and proved him 40. yeares though they saw his workes These words in the Hebr. are coupled with that which followeth 40. yeares was I grieved with that generation Yet there is no jarre betweene Paul and David for these two are convertible and depend the one on the other They be both true they tempted God 40. yeares and he was grieved with them 40. yeares If they tempted him 40. yeares then he must needs be grieved with them and if God was grieved with them 40. yeares then they tempted him so long so that the one cannot be separated from the other They dwelt in this sinne a long time and would not bee plucked out of it VERSE 10. THe punishment of the sinne Gods wrath was kindled against them In the end after hee had borne the burden of their sinnes many yeares together his wrath did breake out against them for it They were irksome and tedious to me I could beare them no longer after that I had striven with them fortie yeares when there was no remedy I cast them off God is grieved similitudinariè That rebellious that obstinate generation Hee was not grieved with their Children but with them The Children doe not smart for the fathers faults if they make not their fathers sins their own sinnes Their Children went into the land of Canaan though they did not Least it should seeme to be a griefe or anger without reason
people the way to heaven to pray for the people in the congregation to carry their prayers to God to celebrate the Sacraments these be the lysts of the Minister The Magistrate hath his bounds and the Minister his Vzziah though a King must not meddle with the Priests office and Azariah the High Priest must not intrude himselfe into the Kings office yet that High Priest of Rome will have both swords hee will bee a Priest and a King too he will be for matters of the world as well as for GODS matters Boniface the eight shewed himselfe one day in the attyre of a Priest another day in the attyre of a Prince affirming that hee was both Bellarmine of late hath somewhat minced the matter that the Pope hath no power in temporall matters directè yet indirectè quoad bonum spirituale he may play Rex In respect of the spirituall good of the Church he may depose Princes at his pleasure and dispose of their kingdomes as pleaseth him So as a man get into an house it makes no great matter whether directly or indirectly and the Papists so as they may thrust the Pope into the possession of temporalities they care not whether directly or indirectly If one kill a man whether directly or indirectly all is one So as the Pope may play the butcher with Kings and Princes at his pleasure what availeth it whether directly or indirectly this is indirect dealing by an indirect distinction to breake downe the wall of partition that God Himselfe hath set up betweene the Priest and the Magistrate Every one shall finde enough to doe in his office and to guide his owne boate though he intermedle not in the office of the other and put his rudder into another mans boate Let the Magistrate look well to his temporall things and let the Minister keepe himselfe to his spirituall things they be both Gods deputies the one in things that belong to God the other in things that per●●ine to men Let them discharge their offices to Gods glory and the good of them that be committed to their charge He insisteth in one particular pertaining to GOD that he may offer both gifts and sacrifices for sinnes that is for the expiation of sinnes The Iesuits will have a perpetuall Priest-hood to be heere described and ordained in this place There must be Priests to the end of the world to offer sacrifice for sinne whereas it is as cleare as the noone day that this description is borrowed out of the law to set forth the spirituall Priest-hood of Christ withall The Apostle here teacheth us not what must be in the time of the Gospell but what was in the time of the law applying it to Christ. An externall sacrifice propitiatory for sin as they will have it is injurious to the blessed and perfect sacrifice which Christ offred on the Crosse for the sins of the world All outward sacrifices for sinne must now cease the bloud of Christ shed on the crosse having purged us from all sinne Yet the Ministers of the Gospell have now some sacrifices to offer up they bee either common with all Christians or proper to their ministerie 1. They must offer up themselves soules and bodies as an holy sacrifice to God as all Christians are bound to doe 2. They must bee plentifull in the workes of mercie to their power as other Christians are for with such sacrifices GOD is well pleased But there be other spirituall sacrifices that are also proper to them 1. To present the prayers of the people to God Ezra praised the great God of heaven and all the people said Amen So the Minister as the mouth of the congregation as a Spirituall Priest must offer up the prayers of the people to God and they in an holy zeale subscribe to him saying Amen Amen 2. We by the preaching of the Word doe sacrifice the people to God The Priests in the time of the law took a knife and cut the throat of a Calfe a Sheepe a Goat and so sacrificed them to the Lord. We by the sword of the Spirit cut the throat of sin of covetousnes pride malice uncleannes and so offer up the people as a glorious sacrifice to the Lord an odour that smelleth sweete Happy are they that bee sacrificed by the Ministers of the holy Word these sacrifices wee must offer to the end of the world and pray for us that we may offer them to Gods glory the comfort and salvation of you all VERSE 2. HE must not only execute his office but in such a manner as God requireth not in rigour and severity but in love kindnesse and compassion Which is illustrated by the persons on whom he must have compassion and the cause why If any sinne on ignorance or weakenesse hee must have compassion on them Such as are seduced by others and carryed out of the way what and if they sinne on knowledge Must they not be pittied Yes God forbid else but if they sin on malice against the knowne truth we must not so much as pray for them nor bee touched with any compassion towards them Pray not for this people neither lift up a cry for them There is a sinne unto death I doe not say that yee shall pray for it Saint Paul had no pitty on Alexander the Copper-Smith but prayed against him Otherwise if any of the people through infirmitie fall into a sinne if upon weakenesse of braine he be overcome with drinke if by the flattering entisements of the flesh he happen to be carryed into Adultery if hee bee somewhat too much in love with the world if he be a little tinckled with pride if he happen to be seduced by any Heretickes that come with a shew of Religion with faire and sugred words and so beguile him ere hee bee aware wee that be the Preachers of the Word must have compassion on such A Minister must not have an heart of flint but of oyle ready to melt at the consideration of the infirmities of the people and there is good cause why Because he himselfe is compassed with infirmities as they are as with a gowne that covers him from top to toe VERSE 3. ANd that he proveth by an evident signe A Minister is compassed with the same infirmities that the people are The Lycaonians would have sacrificed to St. Paul and Barnabas but they refused it O doe not so we are men of the like passions with you Cornelius fell downe at Saint Peters feet but hee tooke him up saying I my selfe also am a man Elias was a rare and admirable Prophet yet a man subject to like passions as we are Though we be never so wise learned or holy yet let the best Preachers in the world remember that they be men cloathed with the ragged Coate of infirmities as others bee Hence it is that Ministers yea famous Ministers doe often fall As Noah did into drunkennesse David into Adultery and murder Peter
sinnes of all the faithfull on him he feared the wrath of his Father yet without any diffidence or distrust He was in a wonderfull perplexity and perturbation as ever any was the power of the deity for a time suppressed thinking himselfe as it were forsaken of his Father God plucked him out of this feare sending an Angell to comfort him and strengthning him himselfe This is no disparagement to CHRIST because hee was a true man It is not in vaine to pray for God will heare us If not ad voluntatem yet ad utilitatem He doth not hearken so much to the externall cry of the throate for Esau cryed but obteined not the blessing Baals Priests cryed from morning to noone but were not heard he hearkens to the internall cryes of his Spirit in his Children 1 Ioh. 5.14 So he heard Anna Hezekiah David the Nine vites when they cryed unto him He heard Daniel Dan 9.23 and Cornelius prayers were in remembrance with God VERSE 8. THe second fruit is his learning by it 1. The Scholler 2. The Lesson 3. The Schoole-master Though he were a Son equall with his Father Phil. 2.6 by those his sufferings hee learned what obedience meant experimento didicit Cajetan hee felt by experience what it was to obey Christ learned as he was man as Luk. 2. ult Afflictions are very profitable for us It is good for me sayes the Psalm that I have beene afflicted that I might learne thy statutes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 qua nocent docent In prosperity we are as Calves Oxen and fat Horses kicking against our master pursuing eagerly after the sinfull pleasures and profits of this world but aduersity makes us to retyre home to God and submit ourselves to him by unfained repentance in their affliction they will seeke me early When a Scholler in the Schoole is under the rod he will cease then to play rex he wil cry peccavi keep in his seat afterwards and apply himselfe to his booke So afflictions will make us to consider our wayes and apply our selves wholly to the obedience of Gods word and will VERSE 9. COnsecrate to God and approved of God Hebr. 2.10 Authour Good workes are the fruits of faith seales of our election and pledges of our salvation but Christ is the Authour Eternall Not as some that are saved from the Gallowes and after dye Vnto all To Lazarus and Abraham Iewes and Gentiles rich and poore c. Obey Not to those that talke of him nor heare him in the preaching of the Gospell as 2 Thes. 1.8 but to those that obey him Why doth hee not say to them that believe because obedience is the touchstone of faith As the tree is knowne by the fruits So faith by obedience As Christ obeyed Verse 8. So must we Our Saviour Christ is the Author of salvation not to all that talke of him c. It is a good thing to come to Church heare the Word receive the Sacraments c. Yet we must not set down our staffe here for if we will obtaine eternall salvation wee must obey him Every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall not enter into the kingdome of heaven but hee that doth the will of my Father Not the hearers of the law but the doers of it shall be justified Obedience is better than sacrifice As a Physition is the cause of health to those patients that will follow his directions and obey him So CHRIST is the Authour of salvation unto all those that obey him Let us examine our obedience Christ wils us to avoid sins that cause his Gospell to be ill spoken of by good workes to adorne it to stop the mouthes of the adversaries c. Doe we so doth not drunkennesse covetousnesse pride malice and uncleannes abound As they said and promised to Iosua So let us to Christ. Whatsoever thou commandest us we will doe and whither soever thou sendest us we will goe Doth Christ command us to abandon covetousnesse which is Idolatry and the roote of all evill then let us not be glewed to the world Doth he forbid us drunkennesse malice pride c. Let us have no fellowship with these unfruitfull workes of darkenesse but rather reproove them let us forsake father and mother c. and follow him for without obedience there is no salvation How must we obey him 1. Fully The young man in the Gospell most proudly vaunted that he had kept all the Commandements from his youth let us endeavour that wee may say so in truth and sincere heart and as Zachary and Elizabeth let us walke in all the Commandements and ordinances of the Lord blamelesse 2. Cheerefully GOD loves a cheerefull giver I was glad sayes the Psalm When they sayd let us goe up into the house of the Lord Psal. 122.1 3. Constantly A runner hath not the prize till hee come to the Gole A Taylour hath not his wages till the garment bee finished A Traveller hath not his money till he come to his journeys end Here we are as Children 1 Cor. 13. growing higher and higher in knowledge faith love obedience c. Let us hold out to the end running constantly in the way of obedience that we may have eternall salvation VERSE 10. COgnominatus That his sacrifice being finished he hath this glorious title given him of God Perfectly So we are called Priests now but then more justly offring the sacrifice of praise for ever Hitherto of the lawfulnesse of his Priest-hood Now he is to proceede to the excellency of his Priest-hood whereunto that he might the better stirre them up to attention he useth a new preface to prepare their hearts and mindes to it There be two lets that hinder him from an immediate proceeding to it The one in the matter to bee delivered the other in the persons to whom it is to bee delivered In the matter there bee too branches the multiplicity and the difficultie of it In the hearers there is dulnesse which is to bee removed proved by the effects They that have gone long to the Schoole and have profited but little are dull Schollers but yee have gone a long time to Schoole and profited but little which hee proveth first simply then comparatively They that must yet bee taught the principles of Religion have profited but little but you must yet bee taught the principles of Religion 2. They that stand in need of milke and are not capable of strong meat have made small growth in Christianity you neede milke Both the members are severally ratified in the next words by shewing to whom milke appertaineth and to whom strong meat appertaineth VERSE 11. OR in the Neuter Gender of the which thing of Christ being a Priest after the order of Melchizedec Much speech a long speech that can hardly bee shut up in a narrow roome it must have a large field to walke in Concerning the person of Melchizedec and of Christ too what manner of man Melchizedec was and why Christ
hath promised heaven to mee Tit. 1.2 and hath sworne that I shall have heaven therefore I hope for it 3. CHRIST hath purchased heaven for mee with a deere purchase even with the shedding of his owne bloud therefore I hope for heaven 4. God that hath promised it to mee in Christ is able to fulfill his promise he doth whatsoever he will in heaven and in earth therefore though I be unworthy of it being a wretched sinner though I have many strong enemies to wrastle withall by the way even all the devills in hell against mee though I meete with crosses passe through a Sea of tribulations yet I will hope for heaven and I know I shal one day have it this is the ancre that pierces the waters of troubles and entreth into that within the vaile This is the hope of a Christian which makes not ashamed as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 5.5 this makes us with Abraham Rom. 4.18 to believe under the hope of grace against the hope of nature and our owne worthinesse The hope of the hypocrite shall perish Iob 8.13 Pro. 10.28 but the hope of a godly man that believeth in Christ shall never perish There may be weakenesses in hope as in faith but it shall never be quite overthrowen A man may bee sicke yet not dye the Sunne may be eclipsed yet not extinguished we have this as an ancre of the soule and by vertue of it we arrive at the haven of happinesse in the life to come Therefore let us desire God to increase our hope and to strengthen it daily more and more But this ancre being in heaven already may put us in an assured hope of heaven and the Lord in mercy so fortifie this ancre that no stormes of afflictions may bee ever able to prevaile against it Lord increase our hope VERSE 20. HEre wee have a pledge of our entrance into heaven which is Christ Iesus Our ancre is in heaven but as for us poore soules how can we come thither Well enough Christ is there therefore we shall bee there The argument is drawne from the relatives Christ is gone into heaven before and we shall goe after him he is praecursor and wee postcursores Iohn Baptist was Christs forerunner and Christ is our forerunner the head is in heaven therefore the members shall be in heaven the husband is in heaven therefore the wife shall be with him the first fruits are in the barne of heaven Christ is the first fruits of them that sleepe therefore we that are the second fruits sanctified in him and by him shall one day be in heaven with him Let this strengthen our faith and hope too our forerunner is entred into heaven before us and we shall follow after him This may uphold us against all the suggestions and temptations of Satan Flesh and bloud is ready to object against us oh it is a long way to heaven an irksome and tedious way through many tribulations wee must enter into the kingdome of God You shall meete with many enemies by the way and your legges are weake to carry you in this way how is it possible for you to come thither To all these we must oppose this buckler Christ our Saviour is gone before us and we shall follow after Christ had a body as well as we compassed with naturall infirmities as well as we he dyed as well as we yet he is in heaven therefore though I be full of weaknesses though I dye yet I shall rise againe and meete Christ in the ayre and be translated with him into his kingdome of glory This is our hope of eternall life and the Lord strengthen this hope in us all to the end Now least any should bee ignorant of whom hee meanes hee points him out by his name and office CHRIST had good authority to enter into this sanctuary because he is the true high Priest As the High Priest in the time of the Law went into the earthly sanctuary So is he gone into the heavenly Thus hee is returned to Christs Priest-hood from whence hee digressed Hebr. 5.11 CHAP. 7. IN the last Verse of the former Chapter of purpose hee made choyse of such a similitude to set forth the nature of hope withall whereby hee might justly take occasion to returne to the Priest-hood of Christ againe from the which hee hath digressed Verse 11. Chap. 5. ad finem 6. In the explication of this his excellent Priest-hood according to the order of Melchizedeck 1. He intreateth of Melchizedeck the type and figure Verse 1. ad 11. 2. Of our Saviour Christ prefigured by him speaking 1. Of his calling to the office of Priest-hood Chap. 7. and 8. 2. Of the exequution of it Chap. 9.10 In the type 1. A narration of the dignity and excellency of Melchizedec Ver. 1.2 3. 2. An amplification of his greatnesse Verse 4. ad 11. In the narration of the dignity of Melchizedec 1. A description of him out of Moses 2. An interpretation and application of it by the Apostle Melchizedec is described by his offices he was both a King and a Priest which are first affirmed then confirmed Melchizedec Some take it to be a noune appellative because of the signification that he was so called of the people because he was a just King 1. Then the names of Abram Sarai Iacob Benjamin should be appellatives because they signifie something 2. Then Salem should be an appellative Some of the late Hebrewes whom others follow say it was a common name to the Kings of Salem as Pharaoh to the Kings of Aegypt and Caesar to the Emperours of Rome but it is an invention of their owne it was the proper name of the man Melchizedecks kingdome is illustrated by the place where hee ruled King of Salem Ierome in locis Hebraicis is of opinion that this Salem is that which is called Sichem Gen. 33.18 where he affirmeth the ruines of Melchizedecks palace were to be seene in his dayes and that it is that Salem which is mentioned Ioh. 3.23 that was neere Iordan and in the Greeke and Latine tongue it is called Sicina Yet the same Ierome epist. 126. ad Euagrium reckons up a great number of learned men which thinke it is Ierusalem which at the first was called Salem after Iebus and at the last Ierusalem which as some suppose is composed of Iebus and Salem B. being turned into R. for Iebusalem Ierusalem Ioseph lib. 1. antiq cap. 11. lib. 7. c. 3. de bello Ind●ico l. 7. c. 18. is also of opinion that it is the same that was after called Ierusalem Sundry Hebrewes were of the same minde as Ierome testifieth in traditionibus Hebraicis in Genesim and the Chalde paraphrase doth translate it Melchizedec Rex Ierusalem And indeed it is most probable that it was Ierusalem 1. The name of Ierusalem hath Shalom peace in it ●●ru Shalom they shall see peace 2. Shalom and Sion are all one Psal. 76.2 now Sion is Ierusalem therefore
with his owne bloud And that he should goe but once with his owne bloud he proveth ab impossibili If he should often have offered himselfe he should often have suffered but he cannot dye or suffer often therefore hee cannot often offer up himselfe 3. There the High-Priest by his sacrifice did signifie the expiation of sins that was to be accomplished our High-Priest hath appeared to put away sin which is amplified by the time when and the instrument whereby The 4th is the application of the use The use of the Leviticall Priest-Hood was to shadow out our redemption to be wrought by Christ the use of Christ's Priest-Hood is to procure to us eternall happinesse Which is set forth by an antithesis betweene the common estate and condition of men and the grace we have by Christ. The common estate of men consisteth in two things 1. In death then in judgement These happen to all and cannot be avoyded Both members are applyed to Christ. 1. Death 2. The judgement where Christ's second comming is described To mans once dying is opposed Christ's once dying amplified by the finall cause To the fearefull judgement to come is opposed the second comming or appearing of our Saviour Christ amplified 1. By the persons to whom hee shall appeare with comfort 2. By the manner how hee shall appeare without sin not only in himselfe but in his members in his body the Church neither head nor body shall then have any sin in them 3. By the end VERSE 21. THe consecration of the Tabernacle was with bloud Where 1. The sprinckler 2. The things sprinckled 3. Wherewith The sprinckler was Moses which was Gods deputie the things sprinckled were the Tabernacle and the vessells of ministration that is wherewith they did publikely serve and minister that wherewith they were sprinkled was bloud At the first dedication of the Tabernacle it was annointed with oyle but afterwards Levit. 8. it was sprinckled with bloud The Altar and all other ministring vessells Aaron and his sons themselves were sprinckled with bloud All Christians are Gods Tabernacle hee dwells in us as in a Tabernacle and Temple we are likewise Gods ministring vessells to serve him Therefore wee must be sprinckled with the bloud of Christ Iesus or else we cannot be consecrated as an holy people to the Lord. Likewise as well as he did the people and the booke VERSE 22. THe second rite no purgation could be made without bloud Almost 1. A qualification 2. An asseveration Saint Chrysostome and Theophylact referre it to the verb all things are by the Law almost purged with bloud Not wholly but in part almost because the bloud of the beasts did but purge the flesh not the heart and conscience As Agrippa said to Paul almost thou perswadest me to be a Christian. But by the grammaticall construction it is rather to be referred to the noune 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Almost all things for there were some things purged by water some by fire Num. 31.23 But howsoever some things might be purified without bloud yet there is no remission namely of sins without bloud Where then is the unbloudy sacrifice of the Masse If there be no shedding of bloud in it as they affirme the bloudy sacrifice was on the Crosse this of the Masse is unbloudy then it cannot be propitiatory for sins as they contend Bellar. lib. 1. de Missa c. 27. hath three answers or rather three cavills against this place 1. The Apostle here speakes de sacrificijs veteris legis But 1. Then hee would have used a verbe of the time past rather than of the time present hee would have said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. He cannot speake of the sacrifices of the Old Law but he must needs have reference to CHRIST 's sacrifice prefigured by them Secondly sayes Bellarmine this is not to bee understood as if without actuall shedding of bloud there could bee no remission but absque virtute without the power of shedding of bloud there can be no remission Now the power of Christ's sacrifice on the Crosse is applyed to us in the Masse and so by it we have remission of sins I but First the sacrifice of the Masse doth rather abolish the power of Christ's Sacrifice on the Crosse then apply it to us for if that were a full and perfect sacrifice for sinne then there needs no other the sacrifice of the Masse is a blasphemous sacrifice robbing Christ of his honour 2. Here it is said without bloud shedding no remission not without the power of bloud shedding Bellar. saw hee should bee driven to this therefore hee hath a third refuge In the Masse there is shedding bloud 1. Mystically by a mysticall signification 2. Really for as the body of Christ is broken subspecie panis so under the forme of Wine is his bloud shed But if CHRIST 's bloud bee really shed so often as a Masse is said or sung then CHRIST suffers often Certainely a man suffers when his bloud is shed but Verse 26. therefore in the Masse no shedding of bloud and for that cause no remission of sins for the same 2. Vnder the Vizzard sub specie they may cover any thing In the Masse there is no propitiatory sacrifice offered up that 's most certaine That doth plainely signifie to us that if CHRIST 's bloud had not been shed for us we could never have had remission of sins Then how are we beholden to the Lord Iesus There is a base fellow in the land that hath committed high treason he must needs dye unlesse the Kings Son shed his bloud for him We were vile wretches dust and ashes Traitors and rebels against God If the Son of God had not powred forth his bloud for us we should have beene tormented in hell for ever CHRIST hath bought us with his owne bloud O the wonderfull love of CHRIST remember sayes Saint Peter yee are redeemed from your old conversation not with silver and gold but with the precious bloud of Christ. O that the consideration of this deere price were deepely imprinted in our hearts Being washed from sinne in the bloud of CHRIST shall wee tumble in the mire of sinne Thou art washed from thy covetousnesse pride uncleannesse drunkennesse with the bloud of CHRIST and yet wilt thou wallow still in them We are bought with a price we are not our owne wee are CHRIST 's hee hath deerely payd for us therefore let us glorifie him in our spirits and bodies which be his VERSE 23. IT was therefore necessarie 1. because God commanded it to be so 2. Because it was meete they should by these ceremonies be consecrated to God 3. That they might the better signifie the things that were to come Patternes such as did lively set before their eyes as by certaine examples the things to come Of things in the heavens that is of the Church in the time of the Gospell that is called heaven because the
of honour and so consequently an embracing analysis 24 of dishonour the which is amplified by the circumstance of time when he did it The honour refused by him was the title and appellation of Pharaohs daughters Sonne the time when he refused it was when he was of mature age Being great not in credit and estimation though that bee true for Moses was in great repute with all but in yeeres that is the native signification of the Hebrew word Gadal and Saint Stephen being a good commenter expoundeth it when he was full fortie yeeres of age This the Holy Ghost mentioneth least this his refusall should be adscribed temeritati or imprudentiae Young men want knowledge and experience often times they doe they cannot tell what if they had had moe yeeres on their backes they would have beene wiser and many times they doe that rashly upon weaknes and impotency of affection which they repent them of afterwards many a young man in a proud conceit of himselfe refuses a living which he would gladly have afterwards and cannot Moses did not so make this refusall Hee was great in yeeres of a ripe and mature age wise circumspect considerate enough yet he refused c. He denyed disclaimed that title horruit aversatus est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Chrysost. expounds it Whether he did deny it in words is not expressed in Scripture peradventure he did The Aegyptians saluted him gladly by that name here comes our young Prince the Kings daughters Sonne he disclaimed and said I am not the Sonne of Pharaohs daughter I am such a womans Son which is an Hebrew I am an Israelite I am no Aegyptian I had rather be accounted the Son of a meane woman of the Israelites then the Son of the greatest Lady in Pharaohs Court If he did it not in words at the least in deeds he is declared by his deeds in the visiting the Israelites in taking their part in revenging their wrongs to be an Israelite not an Aegyptian Pharaohs daughter had done much for him shee saved him from drowning shee paid for the nursing of him shee brought him up at her owne proper cost and charges shee put him to Schoole trained him up in all the learning of the Aegyptians she adopted him to be her Son and now doth he thinke scorne to be called her Son No doubt but hee was thankefull to her for all the kindnesses she had shewed him and behaved himselfe reverently and dutifully to her honour thy father and mother She had beene as a mother to him and out of all question hee honoured her yet hee would not honour her above God he was appointed by God to be the deliverer of the Israelites out of Aegypt Israel was the Church of God to them the promises were made the Aegyptians were a prophane company strangers from the covenants therfore though he might have gained a kingdome by it he would not be in their Calendar he professed plainely he was an Israelite one of Gods chosen people he was none of Pharaohs daughters Sonne hee was the Sonne of GOD by faith in the promised Messiah Hester concealed her people when shee stood on a kingdome yet Moses for a kingdome will not conceale his the time was now come when he was to open himselfe to the world what hee was hee set not a straw by that magnificent title in comparison of the affinity and consanguinity hee had with Gods people Together with this title he refused all the appendices that belonged to it the crowne of Aegypt all the honours riches profits and pleasures that were appertaining to the Crowne A strange and admirable refusall being with Pharaohs daughter hee might live in all ease rest and quietnes none durst give him a foule word much lesse offer him any wrong in deed He flourished in the pomp and honour of the world all the Court reverenced him capped and bowed to him by reason hereof he was in some probability of the Crowne hereafter for Iosephus writeth she had no naturall Sons of her owne but intended to make him her heyre yet this regall title with all the golden appurtenances he refuses Quis nisi mentis inops oblatum respuit aurum much more quis respuit oblatum regnum men will doe any thing for a kingdome yet he desires to bee counted one of Gods people how meanly soever he lived in the world An admirable faith This he did not when hee was under age in his minority but when hee was of full age and capable of a kingdome if it had descended to him Iosephus recordeth that when he was a Child Pharaohs daughter glorying exceedingly in his beauty and towardlines presented him to the King her Father who to please his daughter withall set the Crowne on Moses head the which he suffering to slip off and fall on the ground stamped it under his feete which the South-sayers of Aegypt presaged to bee ominous to the kingdome That he did when he was a boy if it be true but now being a man of compleat age he contemneth as it were the crown of Aegypt he sets not a straw by it because God had called him to another kingdome It is not a thing unlawfull to appertaine to the Court of earthly Princes or to be reputed in the number of their Sons When David was urged by Sauls servants to take Michal the Kings daughter he said to them seemeth it to you a light thing to be a Kings Sonne in Law but he did not say doe yee not know that it is an ungodly thing to be a Kings Sonne in Law Ionathan was Sauls Sonne Salomon Davids Hezekiah the Sonne of Achaz Iosiah of Ammon CHRIST said no man can serve God and Mammon but he never said no man can serve God and Caesar or all yee that will be saved come out of Kings Courts and Pallaces Sundry of the deere Children of God have beene advanced to great honour and dignity in them Ioseph was Ruler of all the land of Aegypt David was Lord Keeper to Achish King of the Philistims Nehemiah was butler to Artaxerxes Daniel was the second man in the kingdome of Babylon Hester was Wife to Ahasuerus a ruler of one hundred twenty seven provinces and Moses himselfe who now refused to be called the Sonne of Pharaohs daughter was afterwards Sonne to Iethro Prince of Midian Riches are excellent things honour and promotion is a glorious thing God oftentimes bestowes them as tokens of love on his Children hee made Abraham rich and he gave David a name like the name of the great men on the earth but if either GOD or they must be forsaken away with all the riches all the kingdomes of the world The Devill offered Christ all the kingdomes of the earth but he would none of them When the Virgin Mary tooke more on her then became her Christ said to her woman what have I to doe with thee so if honour or promotion riches or pleasure draw us from God let
Righteous man a true dealing man So some as Zacheus had faith he wrought righteousnesse the one halfe of his goods he gave to the poore and restored foure fold where he had done wrong but now men make profession of faith but have no righteousnesse The first table hath eaten up the second Men will not sweare not commit adultery in some sort they will keepe the Lords day they will come to Church heare Sermons talke of religion but come to the duties of the second table they make no conscience of them they will lye cozen flatter dissemble oppresse the fatherlesse deale unkindly and unmercifully with widdowes grinde the faces of the poore wring from their neerest and deerest by hooke and crooke a manifest argument they have no faith Luk. 1.6 for a faithfull man is alwayes a righteous man and he that loves God will love his brethren else he is a lyar and all his religion is in vaine The very Turkes and heathen that never heard of Christ are more full of the workes of righteousnesse then we There is more upright and mercyfull dealing among them then among Christians therefore they shall rise up in judgement against us at the latter day wherfore let us ad vertue to our faith that as we are faithfull so we may be righteous in our dealings 3 They obtained the promises that is some particular promises made to them As the Israelites had the possesion of the Land of Canaan promised to them Caleb had a speciall portion in it Ios. 14.13 David obteyned the Kingdome promised to him Abraham a Son when he was an hundred yeers old but that generall promise concerning Christ and eternall happinesse in soule and body in heaven together they obteyned not yet they were faine to waite a long time for these promises and endured much in the meane season There is a Kingdome promised to us Luk. 12.32 By faith we shall obtaine this promise if we can be content by many tribulations as God hath appointed to enter into it 4. They stopped the mouthes of Lions Samson Iudg. 14.6 not with his cloake but by faith David 1 Sam. 17.36 Benaiah 2 Sam. 23.20 Dan. 6.23 we also by faith shal stop the mouth of that roaring Lion VERSE 34. THe violence of fire that is the force or power Dan. 3.27 If wee have faith no creature shall hurt us The mouthes of the Swords Swords have mouthes as the mouth devoureth so doth the edge of the Sword The Sword devoureth one as well as another sayd David The Israelites escaped the swords of the Aegyptians that were at their heeles ready to thrust them through if the red Sea had not made a passage for them David often declined the Speare of Saul wherewith he was purposed to fasten him to the wall Elias escaped the sword of Iesabel who had threatned to take away his life wee escaped the swords of the Spanyards in eighty eight If they had landed there had beene no mercy with them they would have put all to the sword For God put valour into them they were made strong for their weakenesse Isa. 38.9 Psal. 38.3 and 10. Was it not valiantly done of Abraham with the servants of his owne house to encounter with five Kings was it not valiantly done of little David a young stripling never acquainted with warre to fight with that huge Gyant Goliah that had beene a man of warre from his youth up did not our English men fight valiantly with their little ships against the huge ships of the Spanyards ours being but molehils to their mountaines This valour was of GOD who taught their fingers to fight and hands to warre Weaknesse is twofold in body and soule Hezekiah was brought to great weakenesse when lying on his death bed as he thought hee turned his face to the wall and wept taking his leave of the world yet God made him strong againe David was weake in soule and faint hearted when hee brake forth into this lamentable speech one day shall I perish by the hand of Saul but God made him strong againe Let us entreate him to strengthen the weakenesse of us all When we are sicke what doe we some which is monstrouse to speake send to the Divell for helpe to witches sorcerers c. but to speake the fairest then their is posting to the physitian pils potions all kinde of medicines must be received That is not amisse so as they come in the second place and wee trust not in the Physitians as Ala did The Physitian wee should seeke to in the time of weakenesse and sicknesse should be God Almighty with the eye of faith wee should looke up to him When all earthly Physitians have given us over hee can set us on our legs againe Faith is the best medicine for the recovery of health and strength Tents It is a metonymie put for armies As Gideon with his three hundred men vanquished the Midianites As Ionathan David Asa Iehosaphat c. did their enemies they were not able to stand before them When there be rumours of wars mustering preparing of Horses c. Let not our hearts be troubled faith is the best weapon if you have a strong and valiant faith one shall chase a thousand and tenne shall put ten thousands to flight Let us intreat the Lord to make our faith stronger to our dying day As the Psalmist speaketh of the Church Wonderfull things are spoken of thee thou Citie of GOD So wonderfull things are recorded of faith By that men remove mountaines cast out devils subdue kingdomes nothing is too hard for him that beleeveth All of us by faith shall subdue the kingdome of Satan which is stronger than all earthly kingdomes By faith we shall tread the devill under our feet therefore GOD strengthen the faith of us all Before we had their actions now follow their Passions 1. An enumeration of them 2. An amplification The enumeration is first generall then speciall generall some concerne name body Vers. 36. life 37. The speciall is their flight An amplification 1. By a commendation of the men 38. 2. By a commemoration of the events of their faith 1. Affirmative 39. Negative as the reason Vers. 40. VERSE 35. WOmen received their dead 1 Reg 17.18.23 2 Reg. 4.18.36 Their passions are of three sorts 1. the suffering of those things that goe before death and might provoke us to a defection from God 35.36 2 The kindes of death which they suffered 3. A miserable flying and hiding of themselves The miseries going before death are greater as racking lesser some appertaine to the name some to the body The first going before death is racking as many were under Antiochus in the time of the Maccabees Timpanum was an Instrument like our Rack whereunto the parties were straight tyed the nerves of their hands and feet stretched out their bodies also cruelly beaten even to death thus was Eleazar tormented 2 Mac. 6.30 The which is amplified by their Constancy not receiving deliverance
hearts ô that I had beene in the dayes of Abraham of David of the Prophets I but we are in more happy dayes if we had eyes to see them and hearts to make use of them Now God having provided better things for us we should bee the better Those Children should bee more dutifull for whom their father provides best Our heavenly father hath provided best for us therefore let us live more obediently to him But we are worse than they In the last dayes shall come perillous times sinne most abounds in these last dayes wherein God hath beene more bountifull to us then to them in times past The grace of God hath abounded and sin doth super abound What unkinde wretches are we as God in mercy hath provided better for us so let our lives bee better that wee may bee in some measure answerable to the goodnesse of the Lord. CHAP. XII IN the former Chapter we had a Catalogue of faithfull men and women now followes the use we are to make of it they must be as spurres to pricke us forward to the like The scope of this Chapter is that in hope of eternall happines reserved for us in the heavens we should patiently beare the afflictions of this life and persevere in the profession of Christianity to the end It hath two parts 1. That we our selves should couragiously runne the race set before us and fight manfully under Christ's banner to Ver. 14. 2. That we should bee as trumpets to waken and stir up others thereunto In the former 1. A propounding of the admonition Ver. 1 2. A pressing and an enforcing of it In the propounding of it 1. The foundation whereupon it is built 2. The propounding of the admonition 3. The strengthning of it The foundation is double 1. Ponit currendi incitamentum which is the examples of the faithfull in the former Chapter 2. removet impedimentum the casting away of all impediments that hinder them in the race VERSE 1. WHerefore to make use of the examples which wee have had and not to suffer them to passe from us without some profit Wee also as well as they Let us draw in the same yoke with them Not you exempting himselfe but us including himselfe in the number Having So great a cloude of witnesses set about us 1. A cloud is above us so these holy men are above us in faith patience and other vertues yet we must labour to come as neere them as we can 2. A cloud is thick and hath a great deale of raine in it so these are many a world of witnesses a cloud of witnesses 3. A cloud is darke so these were darkened with afflictions though they gave light by their vertues 4. A cloud compasseth a Towne City or Country so we are compassed about with these witnesses on every side wheresoever wee turne us we shall see some to imitate 5. And it may be he alludeth to the cloud which was a direction to the Israelites for their journeys Exod. 13.21 So these examples must be our direction With so great of men and women before the floud and after in Aegypt and in the promised land Witnesses 1. Ministers are witnesses Act. 1.8 2. Martyrs 3. All Christians these by their sufferings have witnessed that they looke for an eternall rest so must you doe Seeing so many have run this race before us broken the yce for us that have witnessed to us the power and efficacy of faith let us not think much to follow them though it be a rugged path yet it is a beaten path therefore let us goe in it All examples are written for our learning It is a true speech that Saint Ambrose hath amplius proficitur exemplo quàm admonitione he renders three reasons of it 1. Non potest putari difficile quod jam factum est it is a greater motive to heare that a thing is done then that it ought to be done 2. Probatum est therefore wee may safely doe it This is an approved medicine such and such have taken it and it hath done them good this will encourage any to receive it 3. Religiosum est that hath beene transmitted to us jure hareditario from so many of our godly ancestours therefore wee are to make a profitable use of the examples of holy men that have gone before us these are for us as Saint Paul speaketh This cloud of witnesses is for our imitation It would grieve a man to walke in a way alone I onely am left said Elias If we were alone in this race we might be loath to run it but we are not alone we have a cloud of witnesses a great number that have broken the ice before us and that run with us at this present day we are compassed about with one cloud of witnesses in the Old Testament with an other in the New The blessed Virgin Mary all the Apostles and many excellent men and women with a third cloud of witnesses in the Primitive Church Many worthy Martyrs that have gone through many tribulations into the kingdome of Heaven Therefore having so many fellow runners let us cheerefully run the race set before us If we were all alone it might be some discomfort wee are not alone wee have great company and good company too If a man have good company to London though the way be foule it will encourage him to goe We have good company to the celestiall Ierusalem a cloud of witnesses to goe with us Therefore though the way bee somewhat unpleasant to flesh and bloud yet let us take it though we fare hard by the way yet wee with all our company shall have good cheere at our journeyes end we shall eate of the hidden Mannah and of the tree of life that growes in the middest of the Paradise of God The impediments to be removed are two the one without the other within He doth not say let us lessen it get companie to helpe us to beare it but let us cast it quite away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Omnem molem every weight not some part but the whole burthen They that run will have nothing to trouble them so neere as they can they will cast off all even their very clothes oftentimes to their very shirts So in this our spirituall race we must be as light as may be therefore we must cast away every thing that presseth downe c. They may be reduced to these three Heads honour riches pleasure Daniel ran with honour Dan. 2.48 David with a kingdome but if honour hinder us if it bee a burthen that wee cannot travell with it to the heavenly Ierusalem away with it Moses refused the kingdome of Egypt CHRIST refused to be made a King because it was a clog to him and would hinder him in his Office Latimer cast away a Bishoprick The second thing that presseth downe is riches In themselves they are not weights but wings Abraham was a rich man yet ran yet many times howsoever we
shew thy dislike of that But we are so far from being at peace with all as that wee are not at peace with our neighbours with them that dwell in the same towne and professe the same Religion with us there is heart burning envy and malice strifes and contentions even among us nay some are so farre from being at peace with all men as that they are at peace with no man like Ishmael whose hand was against every man Wee are so farre from following of peace that wee will not accept of it when it is offered They seeke peace and we refuse it Such is our folly wee had rather be following the Lawyers to our cost and smart then to follow peace home to prevent Law Let us all bee followers of peace let us follow it let us seeke it by all meanes possible The hunter followes the deere though it run away so let us doe peace and lay hold on her whether shee will or no. Peace is a singular thing God is stiled the God of peace he is not called the God of faith c. 2. Mat. 5.9 he doth not say blessed are they that can talke gloriously of religion but blessed are the peace makers Why for they shall be called the Children of God They that be at peace are Gods Children they that live in strifes and contention are the Devils Children The envious man sowed tares hee it is that soweth the tares of discord and dissention 3. Wee are members one of another and shall we be at warre Ioseph would not have his brethren to fall out by the way We are brethren and have one elder brother which is Iesus Christ shall we fall out one with another and that upon every trifling occasion It is a wonder to see what jarres there are betweene the professours of the Gospell betweene neighbour and neighbour scant two in a towne that love heartily and sincerely There be two especiall things that hinder peace pride and covetousnesse Prov. 13.10 Pride is the Nurse of contention There is I proud and Thou proud I stout and Thou stout none will bend none will yeeld as Abraham did though he were better than us every kinde of way The second is Covetousnesse We are so much wedded to the world the valour of an halfe penny will make us to contend Why rather suffer yee not wrong If every man were content to put up a little wrong what peace would there be in the Towne how should it flourish to the credit of the Gospell and comfort of us all The second vertue is holinesse It might be objected if we follow peace with all men then we must bid holinesse adieu For some will not be at peace with us if we be holy I but if peace cannot be joyned with holinesse away with it doe not so follow peace as that ye should let holinesse goe Above all things lay hold on holinesse Apoc. 1.7 They shall see him when he comes to judgement but they shall not see him in his kingdome Or if they see him it shall be afar off as the rich man in hell saw Lazarus they shall not be partakers of his joy and glory Without learning without variety of tongues without riches honour beauty men may see the Lord but without holinesse none shall see him By nature we are all unholy comming of unholy parents borne and conceived in sin but we must be holy before we can goe to Heaven 1 Cor. 6.9 Be ye holy as I am holy The kingdome of heaven is called the holy Ierusalem No uncleane or unholy thing can enter into it The Angels for their unholinesse were cast out of Heaven and shall we thinke that GOD will take unholy men into heaven A great number scoffe at holinesse O yonder goes an holy man Indeed if he be a whited Tombe and a painted Sepulchre whose holinesse for the most part consisteth in the laying open the unholinesse of others he is worthy to be despised But except we be all holy we shall never see heaven Let us be holy first in heart then in our eyes tongues hands feet and all the members of our body being truly holy we shall see the Lord to our eternall comfort Perfectly holy we cannot be in this world there will alwayes be some drosse cleaving to the best golden Candlesticke but let us be sincerely holy and we shall triumph with Christ for ever VERSE 15. THese two are particularly unfolded 1. Peace then holinesse Verse 16. For the preservation of peace they must take heed there be no Apostats nor backsliders among them Apostasie from true religion will breake the bond of Christian peace 1 A Caveat for the performing of it 2. A meanes for the fulfilling of it Watching one over another playing the Bishops and Overseers one of another Not 1 Pet. 4.15 busie-bodies in other mens matters Not onely that your selves fall not away but as much as lyeth in you that there be not one Apostata in the whole Church It is a metaphor from Travellours that lagge behinde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Saint Chrysostome By the grace of God in this place is not meant the everlasting love and favour of GOD but the Doctrine of the Gospell which he of his grace and goodnesse offereth to us 2 Cor. 6.1 Let none revolt from the truth of the Gospell but Continue in the grace of GOD. As a remedy for the effecting of it let no root of bitternesse c. Deut. 29.18 Any bitter root of Heresie of false and erroneous Doctrine as appeareth in Deut. Besides that any bitter rootes of malice and envie pride and ambition covetousnesse c. All these will breed strifes and quarrells among you therefore let them not spring up beate them downe so soone as they arise He perswades them to keepe them from springing up by two pernicious effects the one hath relation to themselves the other to others Trouble you as a multitude running upon you And by this meanes many shall be defiled for whose perdition you must answer One scabbed Sheepe infects an whole flocke 2 Tim. 2.17 1 Cor. 5.6 Iudas having fallen away from Christ came howling to the Pharisees and said I have sinned in betraying innocent bloud What is that to us say they looke thou to that So though some round about us fall from the Gospell to Popery Atheisme Brownisme it never toucheth us we are ready to say What is that to us am I my brothers keeper I verily according to our place and ability Let every one of us in that place wherin God hath set us take heed that no man fall away from the grace of God Let us all as much as lyes in us keepe them from falling especially let Pastors looke to their sheepe and Householders to them of their owne houses If a fayre and beautifull Apple fall from thy Tree thou art somewhat grieved at it and shall it not grieve us to see Trees fall out of Gods Orchard Sinne as ye see is a
are never mentioned in Scripture but to their disgrace Let there bee no Traytor among you as Iudas no grosse and open Idolater as Ieroboam that made Israel to sinne no Strumpet as Iesabel whose adulteries were in great number no worldling is Demas no drunkard as Falcidius qui superavit totam Asiam bibendo If their names be registred to posterity it is with a perpetuall blot of infamy His prophanenesse doth appeare by a Sale that he made The Gardarens were prophane persons which had rather forgoe Christ then their Hogs The Pharisees were prophane persons that laughed at Christ when he preached against covetousnesse That Iudge was a prophane person that neither feared GOD nor reverenced man Those Philosophers that mocked at the resurrection and those Epicures were prophane persons that said Let us eat and drinke to morrow wee shall dye They that sit quaffing and swilling in Tavernes and Ale-houses in Sermon time they know there is a Sermon in the Church yet wittingly and willingly they continue in the Ale-house still What are these but prophane persons For a little drinke they loose the sincere milke of the Word whereby they might grow to everlasting life All covetous Misers that are glued to their wealth that had rather lose the Kingdome of Heaven than their riches are prophane persons the pottage of this world is sweeter to them than the joyes of Heaven Let mee live merrily while I am here let me have the world at will and let them take Heaven that can get it O miserable wretches Farre unlike Moses that preferred the rebuke of CHRIST before the treasures of Egypt They count Heaven but a Tale of a Tub whereas we ought to Count all as Dongue that wee may winne CHRIST Let there bee no such prophane persons among us where the sound of the Word ringeth daily in our eares let us have holy and heavenly mindes Yet are there not prophane persons among us that count all preaching prating that no credit is to be given to the Scripture full of contradictions shall we beleeve them They have gotten such a savour in drinking and whoring that the very Scriptures seeme bitter to them VERSE 17. THE second thing considerable in Esau is the punishment of his fact Where 1. A desire to have it againe 2. A denyall of it He would have had it againe but could not his repentance was too late Ratified by their owne testimony for ye know how that afterward being exercised in the Scriptures The blessing which depended on the birthright Then hee would have had it with all his heart but could not get it he begged it earnestly at his Fathers hand but could not get it Shall a man seeke repentance and not finde it At what time soever a sinner repenteth of his sinnes from the bottome of his heart c. Esau sought not repentance but was grieved for the punishment not for the sinne he grieved non quia vendiderat sedquia perdiderat primogenita as one speaketh Neverthelesse this is not referred to Esau his repentance but to Isaac His Father Isaac would by no meanes repent of that which hee had done Iacob hee had blessed and hee should bee blessed Esau could not move him to reverse the blessing doe what hee could 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he sought it earnestly with teares with howling and crying too There is no necessity in the Greek to supply the word blessing The pronoune may be referred to the word repentance immediately going before he found no place of repentance that is of his fathers repentance though hee sought it with teares All his crying would not make his father repent Iacob had the blessing and hee should enjoy it Esau had a kinde of blessing too concerning temporall things but not like that of Iacobs For ye know I speak to such as are acquainted w th the word of God The Sadduces did erre not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God but all good Christians must know the Scriptures they must have their senses exercised in them they must search them daily as the Bereans did that when the Preacher speakes of any History in the Bible he may speake as to men of knowledge But now a dayes a number even in the Countrey are better Lawyers than Divines more skill in the Statutes and Lawes to wrangle with their neighbours than in the Law of God This is the foolish nature of man There be many rich and excellent blessings which we make no reckoning of when we have them which afterwards we would willingly have and cannot get them When David had free liberty to come to Gods house hee was not so much inflamed with the love of it but in exile he longed after it then the Sparrowes and Swallowes that build their nests by GOD's Altar were in better case than he When the prodigall Son was at home in his fathers house where he had aboundance of all things he set light by it but when he was keeping Swine ready to starve for hunger than hee would bee as one of his fathers hired servants his fathers Table could not content him before now hee would bee glad to sit at the servants Table While Esau had the birth-right and the blessing too he regarded it not now he howles for it and cannot get it Let us make much of good things while we have them So it is with us we live now in peace and prosperity there is no leading into captivity nor complaining in our streets we may come to Church without any feare of the enemy sicknesse doth not keepe us at home as it doth many Yet these benefits are now scarse worth a good mercy What care we we will not set a foot over the threshold to go to Church now But I pray God that the time come not that we shall not onely wish but howle and cry for them and not get them Let us use with all thankfulnesse the gracious mercies of GOD while we have them least afterwards we seeke for them when it is too late While we have the light let us walke worthy of the light while ye have the word make much of the word while ye have health use your health to Gods glory and the salvation of your soules 3 Esau found no place to repentance All that he could doe or say could not make his father to repent If we have done a thing that is agreeable to the will of God we must never repent of it Psal. 15.4 Iacob had laid his righthand on the head of Ephraim Ioseph would have removed it but he could not Isaac had blessed Iacob he would not reverse the blessing Pilat had written The King of the Iewes the Scribes and Pharisees could not move him to alter it What I have written I have written If it be a bad thing let us repent quickly of it Let us not persist in an evill thing for that is stubbornnesse and wilfulnesse but in a good thing let us persevere to
before the earthquake in Phaenicia whipped the pillars in the market-place saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 stand ye must dance shortly They may be overflowne by inundations of waters as Rome was by the River Tyber insomuch as they were faine to row with boats in the streets many Churches and houses were overthrowne they may be sacked by the enemies we may meet with many crosses and calamities in them that may make us weary of our lives our houses even in our lives time may goe to our enemies S. Chrysostome professeth he could name some to whom it hath happened When death comes that thrusts us out of these Cities If they remaine till the day of judgement then the world with all the magnificent buildings shall be burnt with fire If a Man were sure the Citie would fall the next yeere who would build in it The world may fall this yeere for ought wee know therefore let us not fix our solace nor repose out confidence in these transitorie Cities let us looke up with the eye of faith to this permanent and abiding Citie whose maker and builder is God where we shall have joyes that eye hath not seene eare heard nor yet can enter into the heart of man But are we come to it already Not by many a mile Saint Iohn came to it by a vision Apoc. 21. S. Peter S. Iames S. Iohn came to a glimmering of it by the sight of Christs transfiguration in the Mount but how are we come to it Credendo venisti sed nondum pervenisti adhuc in via sumus venimus sed nondum pervenimus Aug. de verb. Apost Serm. 12. We have this City already 1. Per virtutem promissionis godlinesse hath the promises of this life and that which is to come He hath promised it that cannot lye nor deny himselfe In him there is no shaddow of turning 2 Per Dei donationem Luc. 12.32 It is your Fathers pleasure to give you the Kingdome 3 Per ejus haereditarium it is an inheritance 4 Per fidei apprehensionem Iohn 3. ult Faith is the evidence of things not seene Abraham saw the day of Christ by faith so doe we the heavenly Ierusalem 5 Per spei expectationem Ye are saved by hope and this Anchor is cast upwards into the heavenly Sanctuary 6 We shall have it one day Per plenariam fruitionem possessionem One Busices a Noble Man of Persia seeing one Ananias an old man goe trembling to death said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shut thine eyes a while be bold and thou shalt see the light of God Soz. l. 2. c. 11. Through many tribulations we must enter into the kingdome of God by sicknesse poverty malevolent tongues by death yet we shall have it The light affliction which is but for a moment procureth an eternall weight of glory So let us shut up the carnall eyes of our body let us have the eyes of faith open undoubtedly we shall one day enjoy the glorious light of this heavenly Ierusalem Now let us proceed to the persons to whom wee are come they are in number five The first are the guardians of the Church the second is the Church it selfe the third is the Founder and preserver of the Church the fourth is certaine speciall members of the Church the fifth is our Saviour Christ the Head and Mediator of the Church The guardians of the Church are the Angels the Souldiers that keepe the Citie Nomen spiritus nomen essentiae the name of Spirit is the name of essence If we respect their nature they be Spirits nomen Angeli nomen officii An Angell is a Messenger Ye are come to innumerable messengers sent from God ministring spirits for the salvation of elect men In whom these points are briefly to bee discussed 1 Their Number 2. Their Order 3. Their Wisdome 4. Their Power 5. Their Office 6. Whether every one of Gods elect have a particular Angell or not 1. For their number Wee need spend no time about that because it is here said that they be innumerable 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to Myriads of Angels One Myriad is ten thousand thousands to many 10000s of Angels Thousands ministred to him and tenne thousand thousands stood before him Dan. 7.10 Such a multitude of them that our Saviour compares all mankinde to one sheepe in comparison of them Luk. 15.4 They are innumerable to us not to GOD. There bee many things that wee cannot number but GOD can We cannot number our sinnes the haires of our heads the sand of the Sea shore the Starres in the firmament but God can So we cannot number the Angels but God can The set number is not defined in the Scripture only it is said to bee a great company of them for the comfort and strengthening of us all 2. Touching their order Where some curious braines put all out of order Nicephorus reports many strange things of Dionysius Areopagita 1. That Saint Paul baptized him with his owne hands yet it is more than Saint Paul himselfe remembers 2. That he constituted him Bishop of Athens but where or when he cannot tell 3. Which is the strangest of all that Saint Paul revealed to him and one Hierotheus the secrets he saw in the third heaven among the which was the hierarchie of the Angels which hee afterwards committed to writing Neverthelesse Tertullian armes us against such phantasticall conceits if any sayes hee shall pretend the knowledge of the secrets which Saint Paul saw in Paradise Paulus secreti proditor reus est either Saint Paul is guilty of high Treason in disclosing the secrets of the King of Kings or another was taken up into Paradise to whom it was lawfull to utter that which St. Paul might not neither of them both can bee because they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ineffable words Therefore no credit is to be given to them Yet for all that Peter Lombard the master of the sentences whom all the Schoole men follow building principally on the authority of Dionysius Areopagita takes on him to determine that there bee nine orders of Angels and those nine are divided into three ternaries for the signification of the Trinity The superiour is Seraphim Cherubim and Thrones the middle is Dominations Principalities and Powers the inferiour Vertues Arch-Angels and Angels A strange thing that Arch-Angels should be set so low An Arch-Bishop is above all the Bishops in his province and one would thinke an Arch-Angell should be above all Angels Saint Augustine is of a more modest spirit quomodo se habeat beatissima illa ac superna civitas how it is in that blessed and supreme city whether there be any difference of Angels they being all called by the generall name of Angels whether there bee Arch-Angels or not and how these foure words differ quid inter se distent 4 Illa vocabula whether they bee thrones dominations Principalities or powers Dicant qui possunt si
Christ the Sun in the heaven was darkned and drew in her face At the Feast of Pentecost after Christs asscention the Holy Ghost came from heaven the Apostles on the sudden spake all languages on the earth all Nations were shaken with the preaching of the Gospel which as a Trumpet from Heaven sounded in the eares of them all Thus the Gospell whereof Christ is the Minister is farre more glorious than the Law whereof Moses was the Minister Therefore let us take heed how we despise him that speaketh now to us from heaven VERSE 27. HAving alleaged the Text he makes a Commentary of it Shaken like ships tossed on the Sea As of things that are made as the Tabernacle and Temple were Which cannot be shaken the precious Iewels of the Gospell may remaine for ever The ceremoniall Law with all the Rites belonging to it is shaken the Gospell continues to the worlds end They that despised the Law were punished though it were to continue for a time how much more shall they that despise the Gospell which abideth for ever Here the Apostle speaketh of a spirituall shaking There is one materiall shaking yet behinde when as the pillars of Heaven shall bee shaken the world shall passe away with a noise the earth with the workes thereof shall bee burnt up that is a terrible shaking We feare now to see a few trees shake but then Heaven and Earth shall shake Let us shake now before CHRIST speaking to us in the ministery of the Gospel that we may stand without shaking before him at the latter day Here we see that the Scriptures are not carelesly and negligently to be read of us Grandia mysteria lye often hid in one word but of one word in the Old Testament Christ deriveth the resurrection God of the living not of the dead Out of the Cloud S. Paul fetcheth Baptisme out of the Rock Christ. The Apostle here out of one word in the prophesie of Hagge concludeth the abrogation of the Law and the corroboration of the Gospell Therefore let us be circumspect in reading of the Scriptures there is nothing idle in it no not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as S. Basil speaketh one word may be a foundation to set a goodly building on Therefore marke with diligence every word of the sacred Scriptures VERSE 28. HEre we have the affirmative use that we should honour him whereunto he exciteth us by two arguments the one à praemio the other à poena 29. Receiving a Kingdome by expectation in this life and possession in the life to come Not a Lordship but a Kingdome which our Saviour Christ speaking better things than Abel hath purchased for us with his bloud He doth not say seeing we merrit a kingdome we are not merritors but receivers of it Christ puts it into our hands and wee receive it What manner of Kingdome not an earthly that may be shaken but an heavenly The windes may blow downe these kingdomes the earth may shake and hurle them downe fire may consume them the sea devoure them God may use the men of one kingdome as knives to cut the throat of another kingdome But this is a kingdome that cannot be shaken This we receive from Christ our Saviour he rewards our poore service with a kingdome therefore let us serve him Which is amplified by the efficient cause and the formall The efficient is the grace of God without the which we cannot serve him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let us hold the grace given to us in the Gospell that it may bee as a whet-stone to sharpen us to his service Then for the manner of it it must be pleasingly so as he may be pleased with our service Some serve God and yet please him not They give to the poore and to the Preachers of the Word but it is grudgingly whereas God loves a cheerefull giver We must so serve him as that we may please Him Whereunto two things are required shamefastnesse in respect of our selves and reverence in regard of him When we looke to our selves considering what vile wretches we be polluted with sin in soule and body wormes-meat dust and ashes then wee must hang downe our heads in our bosomes for shame we are unworthy to serve such a Master as Christ is 2 In respect of him we must have reverence because he is the high and eternall God We must love Christ and reverence him too love him as a Saviour reverence him as a Lord and Master Though a servant have a poore man to his Master yet he must reverence him our Master is rich Heaven and Earth are his therfore reverence him Though we have a weak man to our Master yet we must reverence him Christ is most strong able to crush us in peeces with a rod of Iron Though he be a wicked man yet reverence him Christ is most holy no iniquity dwelleth in him therefore reverence Him VERSE 29. WHY he is our kinde loving and mercifull GOD but as Hee is a GOD of mercy so of vengeance too GOD is ignis communiens consumens purgans Hee is a preserving fire to them that serve Him aright Zach. 2.5 Hee is a consuming fire to them that rebell against him that cast His Commandements behinde their backes He was a consuming fire to the Israelites when he sent fiery Serpents among them to kill them to the Sodomites when He sent fire and brimstone to destroy them to the two Captaines that went for Elias when Hee sent fire from Heaven to spoyle them Hee consumes with Consumptions and diseases with the Pestilence inundations of waters with fires in many Townes There be two fires the one temporall the other eternall Hee will be a consuming fire to all impenitent sinners when they shall bee with the rich Glutton in the lake burning with fire and brimstone for ever Therefore let us feare this God Kisse the Sonne least if His wrath be kindled but a little yee perish from the way We flatter our selves too much in the mercies of God God is mercifull As a Father pittyeth his children c. His mercie reacheth to the heavens Though we be adulterers drunkards proud malicious yet God is mercifull I but as He is demulcens Pater so he is animadvertens judex with an axe ready to cut our heads Because God doth not alwayes shew Himselfe in the likenesse of fire a terrible God powring downe the coales of his wrath upon us because he beareth with us and doth not by and by punish us for our sins we thinke we may contemne him we may serve him as we list any service will content him I but remember likewise that our God is a consuming fire It is long peradventure before a fire breakes forth it may lye lurking a great while and not be seene but if it begin to flame to set upon a Towne without great prevention it will burne up the whole Towne So God is patient His wrath
is long a kindling but if wee provoke him too much Hee will breake forth as a fire and consume us all He is a fearefull God with whom wee have to deale therefore let us serve Him with feare and reverence in holinesse and righteousnesse all our dayes that wee may not onely avoyde this fire but enjoy the light of the heavenly Ierusalem for ever CHAP. XIII IN the 11th Chapter we had a Treatise of Faith in the 12th a Treatise of Hope now in this we have a Tractate of Love 1 The delivery of certaine precepts 2. The conclusion of the Epistle The precepts concerne the members of the Church and the Rulers verse 17. For the members 1. Hee perswades to that which is good 2. Hee disswades from that which is evill verse 4. For the performance of that which is good hee commends love to them 1. quoad affectum 2. quoad effectum verse 2.3 VERSE 1. NOt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the love of the brethren or brotherhood Of them that be brethren in CHRIST which have one Father which is God one mother the Church that suck one milke out of the two dugs of the Word of God that have one Faith one Saviour one Baptisme one H. Supper one inheritance the kingdom of heaven Let the love of these brethren continue We must love all men as they are the glorious workemanship of God created after Gods image but those especially that are His workemanship in CHRIST IESUS renewed after the image of the LORD IESUS Owe nothing to any man save love Love a Turke a Iew but especially love a Christian that embraceth CHRIST truely as thou doest There ought to bee brotherly love amongst them that as brethren professe one Faith one CHRIST and one Gospell 1 Love is the body of a Christian. 2 Love is the Seale of our election 1 Iohn 3.14 If thou hast no love thou hast no assurance of eternall life 3 Love is the sauce that seasons all vertues 1 Cor. 13. Though thou commest to Church and hearest Sermons receivest the Communion offerest up the sacrifice of prayer and praise talkest never so gloriously of Religion yet without love thou art but as sounding brasse c. therefore let brotherly love continue 4 It is a sweet thing therefore it is compared to the oyle powred on the head of Aaron it is a profitable thing resembled to the dew of Henmon therefore let it continue Yet for all that love is a rare bird among us she is much in our tongue little in our hands we talke of her but we walke not according to the rule of love Love envyeth not What envy is among the professors of the Gospell If our Neighbour be in better estate then we we grieve at it Love disdaineth not What contemning is there one of another Love seeketh not her owne Among us every man is for himselfe none regards the good of an other Love thinkes not evill it speakes not evill What cursed speaking backbiting railing and slandering is there among us Love is not onely cold but in a manner dead among us there is more love among Turkes and infidels then among Christians Drunkards love there is good fellowship among them Theeves love they have one purse Adulterers love The Divels love A legion of Divels were in one man onely wee that professe our selves brethren in Christ which ought chiefely to abound in love and be lights to others wee want love What a pittifull thing is this He doth not say let it be let it finde a footing among you but let it abide and continue he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in GOD not he that hath love He doth not say let love be as a guest among you which tarries for a night or two but let him be a continuer let him never discontinue from you The Scripture sayes let not the Sunne goe downe on thy wrath Wee must not keepe anger with us an whole night but wee must keepe love with us day and night continually Love hath many enemies that seeke to thrust her out of doores Therefore we had need to hold her and to labour for the continuance after 1 There is the Divell that cannot abide her Iud. 9.23 According to his name he is an enemy that sets himselfe against love If he see love in a Towne he will expell her if he can by one meanes or an other 2 He hath his factors and agents in all places that labour to breake the necke of love Now a dayes they bee especially two talebearers and wrangling Lawyers God tooke order in the law that none should goe about with tales yet they are too frequent in every Towne sowing the seed of dissention and nipping love in the head Therefore if yee will have love continue stop up your eares against Talebearers And as the North winde driveth away raine So with an angry countenance doe ye the Talebearer As for Lawyers they be necessary in the Common wealth as well as Physitions but as he is a bad Physition that will make work for himselfe So he is a bad Lawyer that will set men together by the eares for the enriching of himselfe Let us take heed of all that goe about to pull love from us and let her bee continued among us 3 There bee weaknesses in our selves wee are too supercilious too credulous ready on a small occasion to cast away love 4 There are many infirmities in them whom wee love yea even in the best of all Now when love sees an infirmity shee must cover it or amend it and not cast off a friend for an infirmitie The Holy Ghost not without great cause made choyse of this word continue for hee knew there were many ropes to pull us from love many that would seeke her discontinuance Wee desire the continuance of all other good things wee would be glad that wealth honour health ease prosperitie might continue and shall we not seeke the continuance of love that sweetens them all to us Doe not onely love for a time but continually But alas love is of little continuance Many have beene friends that proove enemies Herod and Pilat were friends but afterwards fell out Love is fine drinke but it growes soone sower Some there be with Amnon that hate more then ever they loved before In other things wee cannot away with the Praeterperfect tense as to say I had health I had house and land I had wealth yet wee content our selves to say I had love Indeed the time was when wee loved but now one neighbour cares not for an other That is a miserable alteration Let brotherly love continue Let her tarry with us so long as we our selves tarry Let her dwell with us in this world that shee may dwell with us and we with her in the world to come VERSE 2. THE Branches of Love are three The first concernes our neighbours 2.3 verse the second our selves 4.5.6 verse the third our rulers Having
justified sanctified delivered from sin and damnation and brought to heaven by the Priest-hood of the Levites then why did it not remaine still why was another Priest-hood substituted in the roome of it For the manner of the change the Priest-hood went not away alone but the fall of it was the fall of the law too and when I speake of the Priest-hood I speake of the law too for under it the people received the law Some translate the preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unto for unto it namely to put us in minde of perfection that was to comeby the Priest-hood of CHRIST The law was established to the people but that is further fetched and the preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth signifie under as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The law that is the ceremoniall law touching sacrifices washing observations of times and meats c. the law was given together with the Priest-hood it was an appendix to the Priest-hood therefore as perfection comes not by the one no more doth it by the other The people were lawified tied and bound with the fetters of the ceremoniall law If perfection had beene by them what needed there a further supply but there came another Priest-hood and an other law too therefore the former were imperfect 1. For the Priest-hood there arose another Priest of another order then the Leviticall Priests were they were of the order of Aaron this of Melchizedec Rise not by haphazard but by Gods owne constitution Deus natura nihil faciunt frustrà the wise and omnipotent GOD doth nothing that is needlesse and unnecessary If it had not beene needefull that another Priest should arise after the order of Melchizedec the Priest-hood of Aaron might have remained still If preaching had not beene necessary GOD would never have instituted preaching If the Sacraments had not beene necessary helpes for the strengthning of our faith God would never have ordained the Sacraments if wee could have beene justified and made righteous by our owne fulfilling of the law God would never have sent his Sonne into the world made of a woman and under the law for our sakes but God sent Christ into the world to fulfill the law for us therefore all our righteousnes is not worth a straw This is the Logick of the Holy Ghost and all wrangling Sophisters in the Church of Rome must yeeld unto it If Aarons Priest-hood could have perfected us Christ's Priest-hood should never have risen up in the roome thereof Wherein wee may behold the supereminent dignity of Christ his Priest-hood above the Aaronicall and Leviticall Priest-hood It cannot be denyed but that Aarons Priest-hood was most glorious As the Psalmist speaketh of the Church so may wee of it many glorious things are spoken of thee thou City of God many glorious things are recorded of the Leviticall Priest-hood There was a costly tabernacle a sumptuous Temple the wonder of the whole world there was an admirable Altar many oblations and sacrifices there were sundry Sabbaths and new Moones diverse festivall dayes the feast of unleavened bread of the blowing of Trumpets of Tabernacles of Dedication c. which were kept with wonderfull solemnity there were many washings and purgings for the clensing of the people Vid. Supra Therefore let us magnifie GOD for this our high Priest by whom wee have an enterance into the kingdome of heaven The high-Priest went into the Holy of Holies himselfe but hee carryed none of the people with him they stood without our high-Priest is not only gone into heaven himselfe but hee hath also brought us thither that high-Priest offered Bulls Calves Lambes for the sinnes of the people this high-Priest offered himselfe for us all Therefore let us honour and reverence this our high-Priest let us subject our selves to him in all things He that would not obey the high-Priest in the time of the Law was cut off And doe ye thinke we may lawfully contemne our high-Priest in the time of the Gospell Let us say to him as the people did to Iosua whatsoever thou commandest us that will wee doe Hee hath made us all Priests to GOD his Father that wee should offer up our selves our soules and bodies as an holy and acceptable sacrifice to him therefore let us shew our selves to bee Priests let us sacrifice the filthy Beast of uncleannesse the ugly and deformed beast of drunkennesse the insatiable Wolfe of covetousnesse the crooked Serpent of Craft and divellish policy the swelling Toade of pride and loftinesse the consuming beasts of envy hatred and malice let us offer up the sacrifice of praise to this our high-Priest all the dayes of our life in this present world that wee may sing praises to him with Saints and Angels for ever in the world to come As wee say Christ is our Priest so let us make use of it to our selves VERSE 12. VPon the change of the Priest-hood necessarily followeth the change of the law too The Iewes were stubborne defenders of the Ceremoniall law above all things they could not abide to heare of any change of it Some might reply and say though the Priest-hood bee gone yet the law may continue still Nay sayes the Apostle these stand and fall together they were instituted together chickens of one hatching therefore they live and dye together The Leviticall Priest-hood and the Ceremoniall law are relatives se mutuò ponunt auferunt He doth not openly say if the Priest hood be abolished then the law is abolished the Iewes being zealous of the law could not as yet indure that Therefore he mollifies his speech using a more soft and gentle terme if the Priest-hood be changed Yet in effect it is all one they changed as Festus and Felix did Felix went out of the countrey and Festus came in his roome So the Leviticall Priest-hood went away gave place to Christ's Priest-hood which is come in the roome thereof transposed put out of place altered Hee doth not say then by all probability there must bee a change of the law but of necessity it cannot be avoyded The morall law remaines still but the ceremoniall law vanisheth away with the Priest-hood As Christ is come into Aarons roome so likewise into Moses roome he is our Lawgiver as well as our Priest The Pope in his Decretalls applies this to himselfe but it is proper to our Saviour Christ. He may as well conclude from hence that hee is a Priest after the order of Melchizedec as that he hath power to make lawes as Moses had In this world there is nothing but changing The world is like the Moone that is ever changing like the Sea that is ebbing and flowing sometimes calme sometimes boisterous it never stands at one stay So the Priest-hood is changed instead of the Leviticall Priest-hood is established the Ministery of the Gospell Kingdomes and nations change The foure mighty Monarchies of the world are changed The famous Churches of Assia to the which Christ writeth that once embraced the
Gospell of Christ are now changed they now receive Mahomet for their God and Saviour England which was once rude and barbarous is now become civill and religious The time was when Church-men were the greatest men in this kingdome now the Lawyers carry all away but that naile of the Cart wheele which is now aloft may hereafter be in the dirt Daily experience teacheth us what changes there be in townes and citties A towne that had many wise and grave governours in it hath now scarce any that will looke to the government of the towne A towne which a whyle agoe was wealthy a great number of rich men in it in the turning of an hand becomes poore and beggarlie Men themselves change sometimes they love sometimes hate sometimes they are whole sometimes sicke one while in their thousands as Iob was shortly after scant worth a Groat Here is nothing but changing The Leviticall Priest-hood was changed and there shall be a change of the Ministery of the Gospell too the time shall come when as there shall be no Churches to goe to no Scriptures to read over no Ministers to preach to us and shew us the way to heaven for when wee be in the celestiall Ierusalem what need shal we have of the Ships and Charrets that carry us thither when we be in heaven we shall not need the ladder of the Ministery to climbe up into heaven Nay there shall be a change of the world it selfe the earth whereon wee tread shall bee changed this earth shall be burnt with all the workes thereof the Sunne the Moone the Starres the goodly firmament over our heads shall be changed they all waxe old as doth a garment and as a vesture shalt thou change them yet here is nothing but labouring for these changeable things these reeds feathers weather-cockes these fading flowers are the chiefest things wee seeke after there is moyling and toyling for these men are at daggers drawing for them all our striving and contending is about them as for the favour of God in CHRIST the blessed hope of our election and salvation in the kingdome of heaven few strive for them Peradventure wee wish to bee in heaven as Balaam did but we strive not for it as we ought to doe all that we hunt after is silver and gold houses and lands the trash of this transitory world but we seeke not for that which is unchangeable and lasteth for ever In other things wee cannot away with change we would not willingly take a piece of Cloth which wee know will change the colour We all know that this miserable world will change colour the glory thereof will fade away yet we are most greedy of it Who will buy an house that hee knowes will change and that speedily that stands to day and is ready to fall to morrow Such an house is this world yet there is nothing but beating our braines about it all things in this world are changeable therefore let us love them and use them as if we loved and used them not Let us especially long after that change when Christ shall change our vile bodies and make them like his glorious body where wee shall remaine with him without change for ever and ever VERSE 13. THe law being taken away with the Priest-hood hee comes againe to proove the change of the Priest-hood à pari The Tribe is changed therefore the Priest-hood The Leviticall Priests were all of the Tribe of Levi this is not of that Tribe but of another To whom these things are referred as to their scope and marke Spoken in the Psalme that is the promised Messias for the Iewes themselves confesse that the Psalmist speakes this of him Matth. 22. ver 46. Is partaker of another Tribe As the Levites did None of that Tribe did therefore he could not Did so much as draw neere to the Altar gave themselves to the Altar medled with the Altar Temple or Ceremonies All the Priests in the time of the law were of the Tribe of Levi Our Saviour Christ is a Priest as the Scripture testifieth of him thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchizedec yet he is not of the Tribe of Levi therefore that Priest-hood is abolished and Christ's Priest-hood is to continue another Priest is risen up that is not of the order of Aaron Christ pertaineth to another tribe whereof none served at the Altar The Altar being a principall part of the Leviticall service is put for the whole All the lawfull Ministers of the Old Testament were of the Tribe of Levi this is an axiome in this place Sundry of the Pharises which were interpreters of the Law were not of the Tribe of Levi. Saint Paul was a Pharisee yet of the tribe of Benjamin notwithstanding our Saviour wills the people to heare them therefore though Ministers are not such sometime as were to be wished yet so long as they preach sound doctrine they are to be heard that by the way What though he appertaine to another Tribe yet he may be a Priest after the order of Aaron nay for none of this tribe served at the Altar Every one in the Common-wealth of Israel might not bee a Priest though the Messiah came of the Tribe of Iudah yet none of that Tribe might serve at the Altar In an armie every one must keepe his station the common Souldier must not bee a Captaine unlesse he be called thereunto a Bow-man must not be a Bill-man unles he be appointed thereunto So is it in a well ordered estate every man must not presume to expound Scripture to Minister the Sacraments to bee a Preacher unlesse hee bee called as Aaron was Vzzah put his hand to the Arke when it was in danger of falling but hee was stricken with sudden death Vzziah being a King presumed to offer incense but he was a Leaper for it all the dayes of his life Then what malepart boldnesse is it for a private man to step up into the Pulpit and to take upon him without warrant to be as GOD's mouth to the people Yet some in a jolly humour have done it whom God hath punished one way or other None of the Tribe of Iudah served at the Altar Let every man abide in that calling wherein God hath set him Let us serve in those places which GOD in wisedome hath allotted to us But though they served not at the Altar yet they served in other functions none of what Tribe so ever of what condition soever must bee idle wee must all serve God in some place or other Some serve as Kings it is a service to be a King The Philosopher calls a King Servum publicum and the Lord himselfe calls David his servant when hee was a King Nebuchadnezar that mightie Monarch was Gods servant Some serve as Counsellours to the King for the good of the common-wealth some serve as Iudges some as Lawyers some as Merchants Clothiers Weavers Husbandmen c. We must all serve