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A09376 A cloud of faithfull witnesses, leading to the heauenly Canaan, or, A commentarie vpon the 11 chapter to the Hebrewes preached in Cambridge by that godly, and iudicious divine, M. William Perkins ; long expected and desired, and therefore published at the request of his executours, by Will. Crashawe and Tho. Pierson, preachers of Gods Word, who heard him preach it, and wrote it from his mouth. Perkins, William, 1558-1602. 1607 (1607) STC 19677.5; ESTC S2273 415,205 614

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but they vtterly contemne all other estates of life in regard of their owne And this is the common sinne of the whole world for at earthly preferments men wil stand amazed but seldome shall you finde a man that is rauished with ioy in this that he is the childe of God as Moses did But his practice must be a president for vs to followe we must learne to haue more ioy in being the sonnes of God then to be heires of any worldly Kingdomes and to take more delight in the grace of adoption through Iesus Christ then in the sonship of any earthly Prince It is a great prerogatiue to be heire to a King or Emperour but yet to be the childe of God goes farre beyond it euen aboue comparison For the sonne of the greatest Potentate may be the childe of wrath but the childe of God by grace hath Christ Iesus to be his eldest brother with whom he is fellow heire in heauen hee hath the holy Ghost also for his comforter and the Kingdome of heauen for his euerlasting inheritance And therefore wee must learne of Moses from the bottome of our hearts to prefer this one thing To be the child of God before all earthly things either pleasures riches or any other prerogatiues whatsoeuer Now more particularly in this fact of Moses note two circumstances 1. The manner how 2. The time when he refused to be called the sonne of Pharaohs daughter For the first his refusall was not in word but in deede for if we reade the whole History of Moses wee shall not finde that either he spake to Pharaoh or to his daughter or to any other to this effect that hee would not be her heire nor called her sonne but we finde that hee did it in deede for when he came to age he left the Court oftentimes and went to visite his brethren to comfort them to defend them and to take part with them And hence we must learne not so much to giue our selues to knowe and to talke of matters of religion as to doe and practice the same both before God and men This did Moses It is the common fault of our age that we can be content to heare the doctrine of religion taught vnto vs yea many will learne it and often speake thereof but fewe there be that make conscience to doe the things they heare and speake of But let vs learne of Moses to put those things in practice which wee learne and professe and in silence doe them for the fewer words the better vnlesse our deedes be answerable If any of vs were to walke vpon the top of some high mountaine we would leaue off talking and looke vnto our steps for feare of falling Behold when we enter the profession of Christianity wee are set vpon an high mountaine for the way of life is on high and Christianity is the high calling of God We therefore must be wise as Salomō saith Pro. 15.24 look wel to our cōuersation hauing a straite watch ouer all our waies through the whole course of our life euen to the end of our daies not stand so much on speaking talking as on doing for the doer of the worke shal be blessed in his deed Iam. 1.25 This is the thing we must looke vnto as the only ornament of our profession declaring that we haue the power of godlinesse but if deeds be wanting our religion is vaine we are like the Fig-tree which Christ cursed hauing leaues but no fruite The 2. circumstance to be considered is the time when he refused this honour namely when he came to be a man of yeares and discretion A man in cōmon reason would iudge thus of Moses fact Moses hath rare fortune offered him he might haue bin sonne heire to a Princesse surely this is a rash fact of his void of cōsideration to refuse it vndoubtedly he far ouershot himselfe herein either through rashnesse or ignorance But to preuent such carnall surmises the spirit of God sets down this circumstance of time saying that he did not refuse it in his youth but when hee was come to age that is to perfect yeares of discretion and by reason thereof must needes haue consideration and iudgement to know what he did then did he refuse this honour to bee Pharaohs daughters sonne and heire In the seuenth of the Acts wee shall see that he was fortie yeares olde when he did this And therefore this is true which is here said that when he was come to age and staiednesse then he refused this honour for fortie yeares is a time not onely of ripenesse for strength but of staiednesse in iudgement and discretion Out of this circumstance we learne two points 1 That it is a common fault of yong years to be subiect to inconsideration and rashnes for Moses did not refuse the honour of Pharaohs daughter when hee was young lest it should seeme to bee a point of rashnesse but when hee was come to age as the text saith insinuating that if hee had done it when hee was young it might haue beene esteemed but a rash part and done in some hastie passion of youth Euery age of man hath his faults this is the fault of youth to bee heady and rash in their affaires for want of consideration and experience And therefore all young persons must haue care of these sinnes of youth and watch the more against them because they are so incident to their yeares Now the way to auoyde them is to follow Christs example Luk. 2.52 to labour to growe as in yeares so in wisdome and grace and to obey the counsell of Paul to Timothy 2. Timoth. 2.22 to flie the lusts of youth following after iustice faith charitie and peace with all that call vpon the name of the Lord with a pure heart Secondly this circumstance of time noting Moses deliberate staiednesse in this fact doeth plainely aduertise vs what is or should bee the vertue of olde age and the ornament of yeares namely staiednesse discretion wherby I meane not only that naturall temper of affection which olde age bringeth with it but such religious discretion whereby men of yeares doe all things in faith so as their workes may be acceptable and pleasing vnto God For when a man is grown in yeares hath had experience obseruation in the Church of God he must not onely haue a generall knowledge and wisdome but a particular wisdome whereby he may doe in faith whatsoeuer hee takes in hand and therein please God But alas this may be spoken of olde men in these daies that in regard of this wisdome they are very babes a thing greatly disgracefull to their condition For Paul biddes the Corinthians 1. Cor. 14.20 that they should not be children in vnderstanding but of ripe age yea and he forbiddes the Ephesians Eph. 4.14 to be children stil wauering and carried about with euery winde of doctrine Whereby we may see that aged persons do
world yea and the first of all that had this true faith as the onely meanes of his saluation For as for Adam he afore his fall had not this faith neither should it haue saued him but when the first meanes failed him then came this faith as the second and more effectuall meanes of his saluation But Abell was neuer in possibility to be saued by any thing but by this faith And therefore Abels faith hath the first place of commendation and that in this verse Abels faith is here commended for three things 1. In that hee offred by it a greater sacrifice then Cain 2. By it he obtained testimonie with God 3. By it dead Abell yet speaketh The 1. effect of Abels faith is thus set down by the H. Ghost By faith Abel offred vnto God a greater sacrifice then Cain The ordinary Exposition of those words is this that Cain and Abell comming to offer there was no difference in the matter of their sacrifice but onely in the manner of offring in that Abell offred by faith and so did not Cain This Exposition though it be good yet it fits not the scope of this place nor the fourth of Gen. The right sense therefore seemes to be this Abell hauing faith this faith moued him to testifie his thankfull heart to God This hee did by offring vnto God the best and costliest sacrifice that he could namely the first fruites and fattest of his sheepe Whereas vnbeleeuing Cain hauing no loue to testifie vnto God brought onely of the fruite of his ground not of the best as Abel did but whatsoeuer cam first to hand This being the true meaning of the whole let vs come to the particular points laid down in this effect and they are three 1. That Cain and Abell offred that is serued God 2. That they offred Sacrifices 3. That Abell offred a better then Cain The first point containes their seruice in generall the second their seruice in particular the third the difference of their seruice wherein especially will appeare the excellencie of Abels faith First Abell and Cain the two first brethren in the world offered sacrifice to the true God How learned they this for they had no Scripture it was penned many yeeres after namely by Moses first of all I answer When their Parents Adam and Eue had fallen God gaue them of his infinite goodnesse a couenant of grace that the seede of the woman should breake the serpents head Genes 3.15 Wee doubt not but our first Parents receiued this couenant and beleeued the promise and this their faith taught them how to worship the true God aright You wil say thus Adam Eue learned of God but how came this to Cain Abell I answer When they had beene thus instructed of God Adam as a faithfull seruant of God taught the same religion and deliuered the same doctrine to his children and by it they were taught what to whom and in what manner to offer sacrifice And thus they did it neither by Scripture nor reuelation nor their own inuention but by the instruction of their Parents Hence let all Parents learne a lesson of Adam the first parent that was in the world namely to procure the good of their children he nourtered his children excellently 1. He prouided for them til they came to age 2. Then he left them not but appointed them their callings For one was a husbandman and the other a Shepheard 3. Not thus onely but he taught them to worship the true God both in their callings in the practice of religion and therefore he taught them to offer sacrifice in way of thankfulnesse vnto God all this did Adam So must thou do with the children which God hath giuen thee 1. Prouide for them carefully till they be of age take ●eed they miscarie not any way for want of things needfull 2. So bring them vp as that they may be apt to liue in some godly calling whereby to serue God and to doe good in his Church and that calling thou must appoint him according to the fitnesse of his gifts Adam appointed them not both one calling but diuerse callings according to the diuersity of their gifts and thou must see it be a lawfull and honest calling for so are both these Then 3. the greatest matter of all these teach them religion and the true manner of fearing worshipping God that as by the two first thy child may liue well in this world so by this he may be made an heire of the kingdome of heauen Adam was the first father father of vs all let all then follow him in this practice if we follow him in one follow him in both Diuerse wil be as careful for their bodies for their callings as Adam was but how few are as carefull to teach them religion for the prefermēt of their soules to life eternall But parents must haue care of both these else they shal answer for their child at the day of iudgemēt though he perish in his own sin yet his bloud wil God require at the Fathers hands For God made him a father in his room and he discharged not the duty of a father vnto their child Secondly in that Cain offered as well as Abell Hence we learne diuerse instructions 1. It is a common opinion that if a man walke duly and truly in his calling doing no man harme but giuing euery man his owne and so doe all his life long God will receiue him and saue his soule but the truth is this If men do thus it is good and commendable and they must be exhorted to continue but if they stand vpon this for saluation they cast away their soules For mark here Cain was a man that walkt in an honest calling and more then that he tooke paines laboured in it which all men doe not which haue honest callings And more then all these when Abell offred hee came and worshipped God also and hee did outwardly in such sort as no man could blame him but onely God that saw his heart And for all this yet is he a wicked Cain and that is all that the word of God giues him 1. Iohn 3.12 Then it is manifest that to walke in a mans calling iustly and vprightly doing no man harme wil not serue the turne Cain did it and yet was cursed wee must then goe further then Cain else wee shall goe with Cain to the place where he is Reason not with thy selfe I worke hard and follow my calling I hurt no man thus could Cain reason and yet but cursed Cain Thou must then beside these get that that Cain did not Learne in thy conscience to see and feele thy sinne to be grieued for it so as thou maist say My sicknesse my pouerty my crosses grieue me but nothing so much as my owne sinnes these trouble me aboue all this griefe swalloweth vp all the rest And there is another thing which I seeke aboue all not
not onely beleeues and obayeth but as God promised so he went to it and tooke possession and died in this faith that God would performe his promise and that his posteritie should inherite it all as afterward indeede they did euen from Moses to Christ. If it be asked how this could be the answere is that Abraham knew that God was King of Kings and had the world and Kingdomes of the world in his hand and disposition and therfore assured himselfe that hee could bring to passe what hee had promised and make good his word notwithstanding all such impediments to the contrarie And as hee beleeued it came to passe his posterity came to it entred as conquerers vpon this gift of God and by the power of God so amazed all these Kings and their people as some submitted as the Gibeonits and they that did not were all slaine and their Countries conquered as we may reade at large in the booke of Ioshua all the Stories whereof are briefly comprehended by Dauid in fewe words where he saith We haue heard with our eares our Fathers haue tolde vs how thou O Lord droue out the heathen with thy hand and planted them in how thou destroyed the people and made them grow Psal. 44.1.2 Out of which we learne two instructions First that the change of States and alteration of Kingdomes or common-wealths are in Gods hand and that he can turne them one way or other as it pleaseth him To this purpose saith Dauid in the fore-named Psalme verse the fourth They inherited not the land by their owne sword neither did their owne arme saue them but thy right hand and thy arme and the light of thy countenance because thou didst fauour them This must teach vs to pray earnestly in our daily prayers for the good estate of this Kingdome wherein we liue and of that worthy Prince and Queene vnder whose gouernment wee haue beene so long and so liberally blessed For the welfare and prosperity the certainty and security of it and her is not in our policie might munition ships not in the strength of our nauie nor in the power of our armour nor in the chiualrie of our people nor in the wisedome of our Councell though for all these we are a people honoured of our friends and feared of our enemies But in the mighty hand of our God who as Daniel saith beareth rule ouer the Kingdomes of the earth and giueth them to whomsoeuer he will Dan. 4.22 Seeing therefore the King of heauen in the giuer and establisher the remouer and changer of Kingdomes of the earth let vs assure our selues that the prayers of Elisha are the Horses and Chariots of Israell 2. Kinges 13.14 And surely if Elisha for his prayer was acknowledged by the King himself to be his Father then doubtlesse the godly Ministers and such other in our Church as pray daily for the peace of our Ierusalem are worthy to be accounted good children of our Church and worthy members of our State Secondly here we learne what is the ruine of Kingdomes and ouerthrow of estates namely sinne and vngodlinesse This is most apparant in the present example For why did God take this land from the Cananites and giue it to Abraham and his seede the Stories of the olde Testament answere nothing but sinne In Deuteronomie Moses chargeth the Israelites that they doe not after the abhominations of the heathen Cananites For saith he because of their abhominable sinnes God did cast them out before you Deut. 18.9.12 And why did not God instantly giue it to Abraham to inherite after the promise euen because the wickednesse of these Amorites was not then full Gen. 15.16 that is their sinnes were not then ripe For we must know that though God be the absolute and soueraigne Lord of all Kingdomes and may dispose them as hee will yet he rather exerciseth his Iustice then his power and neuer ouerturneth any State but vpon cause of their apparant sinfulnesse Nor can the Amorites or Cananites pleade herein any hard measure For the same God dealt afterward in the same Iustice with his owne people giuing the Kingdome of Iudah to the Chaldeans and Israel to the Assyrians and the cause is laid downe most memorably in the Storie When the Israelites sinned against the Lord their God and walked after the fashions of the heathen whom the Lord had cast out before them and did secretly things that were wicked and made Images and serued Idols and though God warned them by his Prophets yet would they not obay but hardned their neckes and so finally left all the commandements of God then the Lord was exceeding wroth with Israel and cast them also out of his sight 2. Kings 17. from the seauenth verse to the 19. Thus sinne is able to ouerturne Kingdomes be they Cananites Israelites or whosoeuer Let this teach vs all to looke to our liues make conscience of all sin especially great capitall crying sins for the sinnes of a people are wormes and Cankers eating out the life and strength of a cōmon-wealth And let our State and gouernment learne here to look to the reformation of our people especially for great sinnes For open profanenesse or vncleanenesse or oppressions or iniustice or extortions or cruelties and exactions all these or any of these sinnes raigning in a State are able to ouerturne the best established Kingdome on the earth and will at last doe power and policie what they can make the land spewe out her inhabitants and in the meane time let the wily wits of men iudge as they list it will proue true that the sinfull and profane man is the worst and the godly and conscionable man the best friend to a State and best subiect in a Kingdome Thus much for the second point in Abrahams obedience namely the end of it The third and last point is the manner of his obedience which followeth in these words And he went out not knowing whither he went The manner of this his leauing his Country in mans reason would seeme strange nay the world will condemne it for plaine foolishnesse for a man to leaue a certainty for an vncertainty But it may here be doubted how the Apostle can here say that he knew not whither he went seeing these words are not in the Storie of the olde Testament doth not that practice allow traditions beside Scripture I answer first We refuse no traditions which are agreeable to the Scripture and analogie of faith but such as are agreeable to one of these wee receiue them though not as Scripture Secondly if the Apostles in the new Testament doe adde any thing in any Story which is not in the olde as S. Paul doth the manner of the Sorcerers of Egypt Iannes and Iam●res 2. Timoth. 3.8 that circumstance by them so added is to be holden as Scripture and no tradition because they hauing the same spirit of God which the Writers of the olde Testament had haue inserted it
hitherto intreated Now here and s● forward to the end of this chapter is set downe a third order of examples of faith namely of such as liued from the time of the giuing of the Law to the time of the raigne of the Maccabees This 30. verse containes the first example of this ranke namely the example of Iosuahs faith of those that went with him into Canaan And their faith is commended vnto vs by a notable fact of theirs the causing to fall the walls of Iericho the History whereof we may reade at large Iosuah 6. The summe of it is this Whereas the Israelites came vnto Canaan and could not enter into the Land by reason of the strength of Iericho by which they must needs passe nor could win it by reason of the huge walls of Iericho the Lord promiseth to deliuer Iericho into their hands onely the people must doe this they must compasse-about the walls seauen daies carie the Arke of the Lord with them sounding with Rammes hornes and showte and so the walls should fall downe Now the Lord hauing made this promise vnto them the Israelites and specially Iosuah obey his commaundement and beleeue his promise and thus doing by faith the walls of Iericho fell downe after they were compassed-about seauen doyes Indeed the power of GOD was the principall cause of this ruine of the walls but yet because vpon their beleeuing GOD shewed this power therefore is the downfall of them ascribed to their faith Here are many notable points to be learned 1. Whereas the Text saith By faith the walls of Iericho fell downe wee may obserue the wonde●full power of true faith Iosuah and the Israelites beleeued Gods promises that hee would ouerturne the walls of Iericho and as they beleeued so it came to passe So our Sauiour Christ saith Matthew 17.20 If a man had but as much faith as a graine of mustard-seed he shall say vnto the mountaine remooue hence and it shall remoue and nothing shall be vnpossible vnto him signifying that by the power of true faith such things as are impossible to mans reason shall be brought to passe if God haue promised them as we see in this place the mighty walls of Iericho fall downe by faith which to mans reason is impossible So the Lord promised to Abraham That he should be the Father of many Nations yea that all the Nations of the earth should be blessed in him This was strange but Abraham beleeued it and as hee beleeued so it came to passe for many Nations descended from him and after the time of Christes ascension when all the Nations of the world were called to the light of the Gospell they were blessed in Christ the promised Seede of Abraham and therefore is hee called the Father of the faithfull in all Nations And to come vnto our selues To miserable men it may seeme a strange thing that the power of the diuell and the strength of the flesh should be ouercome in vs yet let a man beleeue this promise of God God so loued the world that hee gaue his onely begotten sonne that who so beleeued in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life Iohn 3.16 I say let him beleeue this effectually and hee shall finde by faith the Kingdome of sinne Satan in his heart and conscience weakned euery day more and more And therefore S. Iohn saith not without cause This is the victorie that ouercommeth the world euen our faith 1. Iohn 5.4 2. Here obserue that among the causes of the change ouerthrowe of Townes Cities Kingdomes this is one namely faith in Gods promises Many men haue written of the change of Kingdoms do giue diuers reasons therof But most of them omit the principall and that is faith by vertue whereof many times Kingdomes and Townes are brought to ruine and ouerthrow God promised to Abraham to his seed that he would giue thē the land of Canaan for their inheritance now they beleeued this promise heere wee see it comes to passe as they beleeued Iericho by faith is ouerturned the rest of their Cities the people of Canaā dispossessed So that we see faith in Gods promises is a means to Gods people to ouerturn cities kingdoms that are enemies to Christ and to his Gospell God hath made a promise vnto his Church that the whore of Babylon Reuel 18.2 that is the Kingdome of Antichrist shall flourish for a while but after it shall be destroyed yea such a ruine shall come vnto it that the Kings of the earth and all great men and Marchants shall bewaile the destruction thereof Now this promise being receiued by faith and beleeued of Gods Church shall vndoubtedly come to passe It is in some part verified already for we see some Kingdomes and people haue renounced the cursed Doctrine and tyrannie of Rome and many Christian Princes haue alreadie shaken off the Popes yoke yea and this promise shall come to passe daily more and more Let all the Kings of that sort doe what they can and let the people set themselues neuer so much against Gods Church yet Babylon shal downe for God hath promised so to his Church and his Church beleeueth the same and therefore by their faith it shall be brought to passe in despite of the diuell Thirdly here we learne that when any City Towne or Kingdome is to make warre either in defence of themselues or in lawfull assault vpon their enemies a speciall meanes for good successe heerein is true faith Christian policie is a commendable thing in this case but if policy be seuered from faith it is nothing Faith in Gods promises of protection and assistance doth farre surpasse all worldly wisedome And therefore good King Iehosaphat when he was to fight against the huge Armies of the Moabites and Ammonites giues this counsell to his people 2 Chron. 20.20 Put your trust in the Lord your God and ye shall be assured Beleeue his Prophets and ye shall prosper giuing a most notable instruction and shewing that the best help for our defence is faith in God whereby we rest vpon his word and promise that hee will helpe vs yet this taketh not away the vse of meanes but it giues the blessing and efficacie vnto them Faith wee knowe is called a shield among the spiritual armour of God whereby a man awards the blowes of Satan and though that be the principal vertue of it yet is it also a notable shield to defend men euen against their outward visible enemies a most strong engine aginst thē to work their ouerthrow Hence Dauid saith He will not be afraid for tenne thousand of the people that should beset him round about They therefore that would defend themselues against their enemies yea and ouercome them in lawful assault must embrace obay true religion with Christian policy ioyn faith in Gods promises for by faith we make God our Captain throgh him we shal do
valiantly and beate downe our enemies on euery side Lastly heere wee may learne what a vaine thing it is to trust in outward worldly meanes The walls of Iericho were both strong and high and hard it had beene to haue ouerthrowen them by ordinary meanes but yet we see it proued but a vaine thing to trust vnto them as the men of Iericho did for they found but little reliefe and defence in them for the Lord layes them flat to the ground and so the people of Israell went straight forward and tooke the Citie So likewise it is a vaine thing to trust to mans strength or in the strength of an horse or in the number of men or in riches or in gifts of wisedome and learning or in any other outward ordinary meanes whatsoeuer the reason is because God can ouerturne them with the least breath of his mouth This must admonish vs that howsoeuer we vse ordinarie meanes of our preseruation and helpe yet euer wee must cast our whole care on GOD and put all our confidence in him for helpe and safety for without him all other outward meanes are nothing but vaine helpes For vaine is the help of man And thus much for the fact it self Further this fact is set out vnto vs by two circumstances to wit by the meanes which they vsed and by the time which they obserued for this exploit For the first when they come to Iericho this strong Citie which they must needes subdue or else they could not this way enter and possesse the Land they do not goe about to ouerturne the Citie by vndermining battering or scaling the walls but according to Gods appointment they go one by one in order round about the Citie walls day by day for one weeke space and on the seauenth day they compasse it seuen times during all which time they kept great silence saue onely that seauen Priests sounded vpon seauen trumpets of Rammes-hornes before the Arke till Iosuah bade them shout Now in common reason a man would iudge this rather to be some childish sport then a means to fling downe these great walls Nay consider it well and it may seeme a course tending rather to ouerthrowe themselues then the walls of Iericho for they marched not in battell ray as though they would pitch a field against the people of Iericho or lay siege to their Citie but they went in length one before another so as they might compasse the Citie about Now if the men of Iericho should haue come forth and made assault vpon them in all likelihood the Israelites had been ouerthrowen so weake and feeble were the meanes And yet the Lord for waighty causes prescribes this course vnto them to wit 1. Heerby to try the faith of his people whether they will beleeue his promises or no when they are enioyned to vse weake and feeble meanes and in mans reason foolish Secondly to make manifest in the weakenesse and insufficiencie of the meanes his owne all-sufficient power and wisedome for the furtherance of his glory for through weakenesse is Gods power made perfect 2. Corinthians chapter 12. verse 9. Hence our Sauiour Christ when hee was to cure the man that was borne blinde tempers clay of spittle and layes it to his eyes Iohn chapter 9. verse 6 A meanes in cōmon reason rather fit to make a man blinde then to recouer his sight and yet Christ vseth it for the furtherance of Gods glory in the manifestation of his Diuine power whereby the people might knowe hee was able in himselfe to doe whatsoeuer he would Now looke what course the Lord here takes for the battering of the walles of Iericho the like he vseth in ouerthrowing the kingdome of the diuell the spirituall Iericho especially in the new testament For after Christs ascension when he intended to destroy the Kingdome of darkenesse vnder which all the nations sate he sets apart a fewe fisher-men simple persons wāting worldly wit policy neither did hee put a sword of flesh into their hands but the word of God into their mouthes and thus sent them to dispossesse the diuell out of all the world and to batter downe the kingdome of darkenesse by their preaching And now in these later daies wherein the Antichristian kingdome of the Pope had spread it selfe through all places almost God vsed the same weake meanes to ouerthrow it For hee set apart a silly Monke and indues him with gifts to preach the truth by which meanes the kingdome of Antichrist receiued a greater wounde than if tenne Princes had set themselues against it And strange it is to see how GOD ouerturneth all the stratagems deuised against his Church and how hee vanquisheth the power of sinne by the weake meanes of the Gospel preached and by the praiers of the Church than which to the world nothing seemes more feeble or foolish The consideration hereof is of speciall vse for it may be wee shall see Kings and people of great power and number to make reuolt from the Gospel of Christ and to fall to Antichrist embracing popery hereat indeede wee must be grieued but yet withal here is good cause of comfort vnto vs for wee must knowe that Satans kingdome must bee battered downe not so much by the power of Kings as by the breath of GODs mouth not so much by the sword of flesh as by the sword of the spirit So it is said that the man of sinne euen Antichrist must bee abolished not by the power of Princes yea let all the princes potētates in the world do their best for him yet his kingdome must downe in Gods good time for God will consume him with the breath of his mouth and abolish him by the brightnesse of his comming 2. Thes. 2.8 that is by the preaching of the word in the mouthes of his Ministers who are men voyde of all worldly power and policie Yet further obserue the meanes They walke about the walles of Iericho seuen daies together If men should attempt the like enterprise at this day in all likelihood it would cost them their liues for now there are deuised such instrumēts of warre I mean great ordinance field pieces that will kill afar off vndoubtedly if ther had bin such instruments of war in this city the Israelites could not so safely haue compassed the walles so many daies together Whereby it appeares more than probable that in those daies there were no gunnes knowen no not amongst the heathen which at this day are so rise amongst Christians Whence may be gathered that these later daies are perillous times for now mens heads are set to deuise more hurtfull meanes against the life of man than euer the sauage heathen knew For beside the inuention of gunnes which put downe all euidence of prowesse and valour seene in Ancient warres our age exceedes in contriuing such strange kindes of poysons as were neuer knowen in former times For men haue now deuised poyson of that sort that will
priuat reuenge and so it maketh nothing against lawfull warre For what though a priuate man may not reuenge himselfe nor make warre yet that hindereth not but that a Magistrate who beares the sword may lawfully vse it Againe it is friuolous to imagine that resisting is onely by a weapon for the chiefe resistance that God respecteth is in the heart and affection And a priuat man may resist that is breake this commandement by vnlawful resistance though he carry no weapon and the publike person breake it not though he make warre Obiect 2. Secondly they obiect the prophecy of Isay who speaking of the kingdome of Christ vnder the Gospel saith That then they shall turne their swords into scithes and their spears into mattocks therfore say they there must be no warre vnder the Gospel Ans. That Prophecy signifies that in Christs kingdom there must be great loue and peace wonderfull concord among all the true seruants of God But here they take aduantage say If this be so what then needeth any warre Ans. We must knowe that as there bee two kindes of Kingdomes a spirituall kingdome and a politicke so there be two kindes of peace spirituall and politicke Spirituall peace is inward in the Church and politicke peace is outward in the common wealth Spirituall peace i● begun and preserued by spirituall meanes of grace in the ministery of the Church but warre is an ordinary meanes for the establishing and preseruing of politicke peace Secondly hence wee learne that Gods people may make warre not onely by way of defence but also in assault vpon their enemies that according to Gods word For here it is said that Gedeon Sampson Dauid the rest by faith subdued Kingdoms making warre against them by way of assault and not in defence onely Indeede speciall care ought to bee had that offensiue warre in assaulting an enemie be made vpon iust good grounds one speciall ground or cause is heere implied in this worke of faith to wit the recouery of iust right in matters of importance for the Kingdoms of Canaan were giuen to the Israelites by God himselfe and for the recouery of them they made warre by way of assault So when Lot was taken Captiue by Keder-laomer the Kings of the Nations Abraham Lots kinsman gathers his seruants together and pursues the Kings and ouertaking them destroyed them for the recouerie of Lot and his goods Other respects there be for which offensiue warre in assault may be made but because they are not heere mentioned I will not propound them The second fruite of their faith is this they wrought righteousnesse that is some of these men in their places wherein God had set them gaue to euery man his owne This working of righteousnesse consists in two things First in giuing rewards to such as deserued them Secondly in inflicting due punishment according to mens deserts In both these the men before named did all excell but especially two of them Dauid and Samuel for Dauid it is a wonder to see how righteous he was for when he was anointed King in Sauls steed and Saul reiected how did hee behaue himselfe towards Saul Did hee seeke Sauls blood No But when Saul hunted him as the hunter doth the Partridge Dauid euen then gaue himselfe to studie and practice righteousnesse yea when Saul was fallen into his hands both in the Caue and asleepe in the campe 1. Samuel chapter 24. verses 5 6. c. and chapter 26. verses 7 8 he would not touch him nor suffer others to doe him hurt because hee was the Lords anointed yea so righteous was Dauid towards Saul that his heart smote him for cutting off but the lappe of his coate Therefore Dauid is heere commended especiallie for this effect of faith the working of righteousnesse To apply this vnto our times If this be a fruite of faith thus to worke righteousnesse then what may be saide of the Church of Rome and of the Popish sort among vs They pretend the auncient faith and none must be so good beleeuers and Catholikes as they but how doe they shewe this their faith Is it by the practice of righteousnesse Doe they giue to euery one his due Nay verily but they set themselues to worke the ruine of Kingdomes that ioyne not with them in religion This witnesse their manifolde diuellish plots against our State from time to time This did not Dauid no not against Saul though hee were reiected of God and also most vniustly sought his death But they haue many times sought the death of the Lords anointed ouer vs whereby they declare their state to all the world that they haue no sparke of true faith at all for true faith will make a man practice righteousnesse and innocencie And therefore we may iudge of them and all their adherents that be of this mind to allow such practices that they haue none other but the faith of diuels which is to beleeue the word of God to be true This the diuels do with trembling And as their faith is diuellish so are the fruites thereof namely treachery and falshood such as the diuel most approues But we must learne that true faith is especially commended by these fruites The study and practice of innocency and the maintaining of peace in Christian estates for true faith and treachery and contention wil no more stand together than light and darknesse Secondly Samuel also wrought righteousnesse as appeareth by his protestatio before all Israel whē he gaue vp his office of gouernment ouer them vnto Saul 1. Sam. 12.3 Behold saith hee heere am I beare record of mee before the Lord and before his anointed whose Oxe haue I taken or whose Asse haue I taken or whom haue I done wrong to or whom haue I hurt or of whose hand haue I receiued any bribe to blinde mine eyes therewith and I will restore it Now as these two Samuel and Dauid were famous for this fruite of faith in working righteousnesse So likewise were the Iudges and Prophets before named in their places carefull of this vertue and did practice the same partly in rewarding the good and partly in punishing the wicked But some will say To worke righteousnesse cannot be a fruit of faith for the very Heathen which neuer heard of Christ by the light of nature haue done Iustice and are highly commended by Heathen Writers for the same Now that which the Heathen can doe by the light of nature is not thus to be extolled as a fruite of faith Answer True it is the Heathen haue done many workes of iustice but we must wisely consider that euery iust worke is not a fruite of faith vnlesse it be done by a righteous person in obedience to God and for his glory But in all these the Heathen failed in their workes For though the things they did were good in themselues yet seeing the Heathen were corrupt trees remaining in the sinfull state of corrupt nature their workes
Then assuredly his heart is voide of true faith and farre from the life and power of religion For assuredly where God is knowen and beleeued there that mans heart though hee be a King cannot once thinke of God without a reuerence of his Maiestie and an admiration at his greatnesse and his owne basenesse therefore the want of this argueth a want of true religion and true faith in mens hearts Secondly this profanenesse discouers it selfe to the world by want of reuerence to Gods workes Let the Lord send vnseasonable weather or famines or plagues or any strange signes in heauen or in earth forthwith they are but fooles that cry out Behold the finger of God the hand of God No this is nature and is produced by naturall causes Ill weather comes from the starres famines from ill weather and mens couetousnesse Plagues from famines or from ill aires or else by apparant infection from another place But cannot Nature and naturall meanes haue their place vnlesse they haue Gods place God ouerthroweth not them why should they ouerthrow God Yet thus it is in the world and thus God is robbed of his glory and he is but a simple fellow which is moued with reuerence at sight of such things or begins to magnifie Gods power and iustice in them This is too apparant to be denied for haue wee not now as great causes of feare as can be Noah heard of water and wee heare that fire is to destroy the worlde and ye● where is hee that is mooued with reuerence as Noah was and yet Noah could saye The floud shall not be these 120. yeeres but who can say and proue that this world shal not be destroyed by fire within these 120. yeeres And till the floud came they had doubtlesse many othe● plagues which were fore-runners of the generall destruction all which as they came Moued Noah vnto reuerence and so wee in this age doe see the great workes of Gods Iudgements vpon men vpon families vpon townes vpon countries and whole kingdomes and wee feele his heauie hand in many sharpe strokes but who and where are they whose hearts feare God the more and doe tremble in the consideration of his Iudgements Nay alas amongst many it is but a matter of mockerie so to doe This is not the fault of our religion but the want of it for if men truly knew and beleeued in God they could not thinke nor speake of God nor looke at his workes but with feare and reuerence For as our feare of God is so is our faith little feare of God little faith and no feare at all no faith at all Let therefore all men shew their religion by their feare of God and let euery Christian acknowledge God in his workes England hath beene faulty herein in one point especially Wee haue had great plagues which haue taken away many thousands in short time wherein God hath shewed himselfe mighty against our sinnes But Gods hand would not be seene nor acknowledged but onely nature and naturall causes But let England take heede that God send not a plague so generall and so greeuous that euen the most profane men euen the sorcerers of Egypt if they were here doe acknowledge that it is the finger of God and so giue God that due reuerence which in his ordinary visitations he hath not Thus wee see the ground whence this reuerence in Noah sprang namely his faith Now let vs see the occasions or considerations in Noahs heart that made him feare The ground wherupon he feared was true faith for else he had not beene capable of any feare or reuerence of God but the occasions which stirred vp this feare in him were some things else Now if we looke to humane reasons Noah had no cause at all to feare as he did For first the Iudgement was farre off 120. yeeres after and common reason saith its folly to feare any thing so farre off but its time enough to feare when it is neere at hand Againe he was one single man and the world was full of wise and mighty men they all heard of it yet none of them feared therefore their exsample might preuaile with him to keepe him from feare and to make him secure and careles●e with the rest for exsamples are strong especially when they are so generall Thirdly the strangenesse of the Iudgement threatned was such as might driue any man in reason from fearing it at all For first who would euer beleeue that God would drowne all the world with water such a thing neuer had beene and therefore how could it be And againe If all should be drowned who would thinke that Noah should escape and none but he These three considerations being wayed in the ballance of mans reason would haue kept Noah from fearing or beleeuing this word of God But behold the power of faith it goeth beyond all humane reach fixeth it selfe fast on Gods word and therfore he not only beleeueth it but hath furthermore his heart possessed with a great reuerence of Gods Maiestie vpon this message And there were three motiues stirring him vp vnto this Reuerence First the consideration of Gods strange Iudgement vpon the sinfull world to see that his wrath was so prouoked that he should bring so vnwonted a plague so strange both for the nature of it a floud of water to drowne men whereas generally all men can auoide the violence of that element for the measure of it so great as it should drown all the world and destroy all men Now that which this Iudgement of God wrought in Noah the same effect should Gods Iudgements worke in vs namely they should moue vs with reuerence For as Christ saith Our dayes are like Noahs As it was in the dayes of Noah so shall the dayes be before the comming of Christ Mathew 24.37 These dayes are as wicked men are as couetous as cruell as malitious as voluptuous and yet as secure as they then were as full of sinne and yet as dead in sinne as they were then Therefore Noah looked for a floud 120. yeeres after and who can tell whether our world shall last so long a time or no At least wee may safely say whatsoeuer the world doth there is no man liueth but within farre lesse time then 120. yeeres is assured to be throwen to hell by a floud of Gods wrath at his death vnlesse in the meane time hee repent and yet alas where is hee that is moued with reuerence at consideration hereof The wicked man may escape the water of a floud but hee cannot scape the fire of hell hee cannot escape death hee cannot escape the last Iudgement These are to come yet they are sure why then doe not men feare as Noah did hee feared 120. yeeres afore it came We can indeede tremble a little at a present Iudgement as when fire breakes out when waters ouerflowe when the plague destroyeth or when famine consumes but to tremble at a Iudgement threatned though it
into our house that is giuen to stealing we trust him as long as hee is in our sight but if he be out of our sight we thinke euer he is stealing So if men see the meanes of Gods prouidence they will take his word and trust it but else God must excuse them they may not trust him further then they see him And if the Commaundements of God sound to their content and tend to their profit they will obay them but if not they will cast them behinde their backe at least they will make a pause at the matter and take their owne time And if Gods wayes seeme pleasant and profitable they will walke in them or else they will leaue them and walke in their owne And hence is it that men in distresses runne to Wizards and Wise-men others deale fraudulently and deceitfully others worke on the Sabaoth day and thus by indirect and vnlawfull dealing they labour to inrich themselues and to bring their purposes to passe And why all this but because Gods commaundements doe not sound to their purpose nor tend to their profit and therefore they will not obay them If these men had beene in Abrahams case they would neuer haue gone out not knowing whither to goe but they would haue argued the matter with God and haue thought it good wisedome to pause well afore they leaue a certaintie for an vncertaintie But contrariwise Abraham thought it foolishnesse to reason with God and therefore performed absolute obedience and for this cause hee and his faith are renowned to this day namely 3000. yeares after him and shall be till the worlds end This was the obedience of faith and this to doe is to be true subiects to Gods Kingdome If the King call a man from his owne liuing to come to himselfe and to the Court who will not leaue what he hath of his owne and trust his word So who will not leaue his owne wisedome and relie on the promise and word of God and obay his commaundements though there seeme at the first no profit can come thereby Thus shall wee be sure both to haue sufficient for this world and shall also be true children of faithfull Abraham Hitherto of the first example of Abrahams Faith VERSE 9. By faith he abode in the land of Promise as in a strange Country as one that dwelt in Tents with Isaak and Iacob heires with him of the same Promise HEre is the second example of Abrahams faith and the fift in order and is concerning Abrahams abiding or dwelling in that land whereinto God had called him and this he also did by faith As he went out of his owne Countrey and came into Canaan by the power and leading of his faith So by the same faith hee abode and dwelt in the same Land The parts are two 1. The Action of Abrahams faith in the ninth verse 2. The Reason of that his so doing in the tenth The action in the ninth verse is spoken of two wayes 1. It is laide downe to bee his a biding in the Lande of Promise 2. It is amplified by two circumstances 1. The manner how he dwelt there in two points 1. As a Stranger or in a strange Country 2. As one that dwelt in Tents and not in houses 2. The persons with whom with Isaac and Iacob Heires with him of the same Promise The first point in order is his dwelling in the land of Canaan called here the land of Promise By faith he abode in the land of Promise Canaan is now called the land of Promise because it was promised in the verse afore-going as we then heard so that the meaning is he abode in that Land which was promised him when he came out of his owne Country Which Country Abraham knew not by name when he left his own nor till he came thither but then God told him This is the Land I will giue thee and thy seede Genesis 12.7 In this Land thus promised Abraham dwelt and remained the rest of his life which was a hundreth yeeres In this Action of Abraham are three particular points 1. He dwelt in Canaan 2. That Canaan was the Land of Promise 3. He dwelt there by faith For the first Concerning Abrahams dwelling in Canaan diuers questions may be moued First how it is true that he abode or dwelt there seeing it is apparant in the Story he dwelt in Egypt Gen. 12.10 and in Gerar. Gen. 20.1 I answer The meaning is not that he stayed there euery day of his life but that he liued and died there and made it the place of his residence and ordinary habitation whereunto he alwaies resorted againe if any occasion drewe him abroade And further hee went not into Egypt but vpon such special cause as could not be otherwise helped as vpon a famine or such like Genesis 12.10 Then there came a famine in the Land therefore Abraham went downe into Egypt to soiourne there Where it appeares first that the cause was extraordinarie secondly that hee went not to make any dwelling but to soiourne there for a time and then to repaire home againe Where wee learne that as a man is not to depart out of that Land where God hath appointed him to dwell but vpon good and sufficient causes So when those causes cease which drewe him out hee is not to stay longer from home but to repaire againe to the place of his ordinarie dwelling God would haue a man dwell at home and it is leuitie and a token of an vnconstant minde and a running-heade for a man to desire to bee alwayes abroade Birdes flie abroade but so as they may come to their neasts at night So men should endeuour as much as may be to take fewe occasions of being from their dwellings and when they needes must to let it be for as short a time as may be For as it is a signe of a light woman Prouerbs 7.11 Her feete cannot abide in her house So is it of an vnstayde man Vpon euerie occasion to bee caried from home We must therefore followe holy Abraham who is heere commended for abiding or dwelling in the Country which God had giuen him Againe this practice of Abrahams faith condemnes the wandring begger to be an vnfaithfull and vngracious generation Our Land by the abuse of our peace and plenty is full of such Aske them where they dwell their answere is They haue small dwelling but looke into the matter and they haue the largest dwelling of all for they dwell euery where all abroad they count it bondage to be tied to one Towne or dwell in one Parish and thinke it freedome and libertie to dwell euery where These are Carerpillers of a Common-wealth and the greatest robbers of the poore that are Common Theeues steale from rich men but these steale from the poore they get that from men which the true poore should haue No good comes to Church nor Common-wealth by these men but much hurt to both For a
might haue had in Pharaohs Court and Kingdome Which are called the pleasures of sinne not because they were so in themselues for so they were the good giftes of GOD but because Moses could not enioy them in Pharaohs Court without liuing in sinne for hee must haue refused the societie of Gods Church and people and so haue beene a stranger from the couenant which God made with Abraham Isaac and Iacob and with his seed after them if he would haue beene sonne to Pharaohs daughter Heere then the holy Ghost setteth downe two notable reasons which induced Moses to refuse these honours and dignities First because they were the pleasures of sinne And secondly because hee should enioy them but for a season The first reason affordeth vnto vs many notable points worthie our consideration 1. Here we learne that riches honour and dignity seuered from true religion are nothing but the pleasures and profites of sinne This was Moses iudgement as the holy Ghost here testifieth and it is the plaine truth of God as Salomon after lamentable experience disputeth and proueth at large concluding of riches honour pleasures and all earthly things separated from the feare of God that they are nothing else but meere vanity and vexation of spirit And Paul saith To the impure all things are impure his meate drinke and apparell which in themselues are otherwise the good giftes of God The consideration hereof is of great vse for first it lets vs see what is the state of these men which lay aside religion and good conscience and betake themselues wholly to the world to get riches and preferment most men are of this disposition and such indeede are onely counted wise For let there be speech tending to a mans commendation vsually this is the first matter of his praise that hee is a substantiall wealthy man and one that lookes well to himselfe as though riches or honour were a mans chiefe happinesse But howsoeuer the world iudgeth of these men yet hereby we may see and knowe that their case is miserable For without religion the feare of God their riches and honour are but the pleasures and profits of sin and therefore the more they heape vp riches after this sort not regarding Christ nor his Gospel the more they heape vp to themselues the treasures of sinne and consequently the greater condemnation for worldly treasures seuered from religion are but the Mammon of iniquity which causeth damnation Hence Christ said vnto his Disciples vpon occasion of the young rich man that it was as easie for a great Camell to goe through the eye of a needle as for a rich man to enter into the kingdome of heauen that is such a rich man as sets his heart to get riches and honour not regarding the religion of Christ. Whence also in another place he pronounceth this fearefull sentence against them Woe be to you that are rich for you haue receiued your consolation Luke 6.24 They therefore that lay aside religion and giue themselues wholly to seeke gaine and honour are before God most wretched and miserable and the longer they continue in this course the more miserable they are for the more sinne they heape vp and so the deeper shall be their condemnation Wherefore if any of vs haue beene thus minded heeretofore let vs now leaue this course as most dangerous to our soules for what will it profit a man to gaine the whole world if he lose his soule 2. Hence we must all learne especially they that haue any measure of wealth more or lesse to ioyne with the vse of our riches the feare of God and the practice of true religion for seuer these asunder and riches are nothing else but sinfull pleasures It is a good conscience which rectifieth the owner in the right vse of his honour treasures but without that he pollutes the blessings of God which he enioyes and they being polluted shal turne to his greater woe A man would haue thought that King Belshazzer had beene an happy man when hee kept his royall feast dranke wine in golden bowles before a thousand Princes that were vnder him and before his Concubines but the end of that his iollity may shew vs the nature of such prosperity For so soone as he saw the fingers of a mans hand writing vpon the wall he became quite confounded in himselfe his countenance was changed and his thoughts troubled him so that the ioints of his loines were loosed and his knees smote one against the other What comfort had he now from all his riches pleasures So Diues while he liued might seeme for his wealth and riches to be happy yet all this did him little good for hee had but his pleasure for his life time Luke 16.25 and after this life his soule went downe to hell A worldly man would iudge the rich man in the Gospell a most happy man that saide vnto his soule by reason of his great aboundance of outward wealth Luke 12.19 Soule soule thou hast much goods laide vp for many yeares liue at ease eate drinke and take thy fill yet because herewith he wanted religion a good conscience and the feare of God this sentence was denounced against him Oh foole this night will they fetch away thy soule th●n whose shall these things be Wherefore vnlesse wee will wilfully cast away our owne soules let vs sanctifie our interest in all earthly blessings by a sincere endeuour in all things to shew forth the feare of God with the keeping of faith a good conscience and let vs begin with this as Christ saith First seeke Gods Kingdome and his righteousnesse Mathew chapter 6. verse 33. Let vs hereby seeke to haue our hearts acceptable vnto God and then all things shall be cleane vnto vs. Thirdly are riches and honour being seuered from true religion but the pleasures of sinne then vndoubtedly all recreations all sports and pastimes seuered from religion a good conscience are much more the pleasures of sin This Salomon knew wel for speaking of such mirth hee calls laughter madnesse and to ioy hee saith What is it that thou doest Eccles. chapter 2. verse 2. Oh then how manifolde be the sinnes of all sorts of men for who almost doth not neglect religious duties for matters of sport and pleasure Wherefore if wee desire ioy indeede in any worldly things let vs first lay the foundation in our owne hearts by getting and keeping true faith and a good conscience Secondly whereas Moses refuseth dignitie and honour onely for this Because they would bee vnto him the pleasures of sinne heere wee are taught in what manner and order wee ought to enioy worldly riches and honour Moses practice heere must be our direction wee must enioy them and vse them with thankfulnesse to GOD so farre forth as they will further vs in the course of religion and true godlinesse But if the case stande thus That wee cannot enioy them both togethe● then
wee must followe Moses example choose religion and a goood conscience and let honour and preferment goe This is Moses practice we may resolue our selues that if hee might haue enioyed them together hee would haue refused neither but because he could not haue them both therefore he preferreth the religion of Christ with a good conscience before the honour and wealth of Egypt Thirdly note this Moses doth not onely refuse the riches and pleasures of Egypt when they would become vnto him the pleasures of sinne but rather than hee will enioy them hee is content to suffer great miserie and aduersitie with GODs people Where behold a singular vertue in Moses Hee iudgeth it too bee the greatest miserie to liue in sinne and therefore hee chooseth rather to suffer any aduersitie and reproach in this world than liue and lie in sinne because thereby hee should displease God his most louing father in Christ. A most notable vertue in this seruant of God and the like minde beare all those that haue the same graces of sauing faith and true repentance that Moses had S. Paul esteemed the Temptations vnto sinne which Satan suggested into his minde to be as beatings and buffettings and as pricks and thornes in his flesh 2. Cor. 12.7 And Dauid saith Psal. 119.136 His eies gush out with riuers of waters because men brake Gods commandements Was Dauid thus grieued for other mens sinnes Oh! then what a griefe did he suffer when he himselfe brake Gods commandements and thereby displeased God Now looke how these seruants of God were affected so must euery one of vs that professe the faith and religion of Christ labour to bee affected towards sinne wee must iudge it the greatest misery and torment in the world to doe any thing that shall displease God But alas come to our daies and the case is farre otherwise for to most men it is meate and drinke vnto them to commit sinne so farre are they from counting it a misery Yea if a man be ordinarily addicted to some speciall sinne you then may as soone take away his life as bereaue him of his sinne he will aduenture the losse of heauen for euer for the pleasure of sinne for a time But all such are farre vnlike these holy seruants of God for they counted it the greatest crosse and miserie that could be to doe any thing that displeased God and did checke and breake the peace of a good conscience And if we looke to enioy like peace and comfort with them we must striue against our owne corrupt disposition and labour to finde sinne to bee our greatest sorrow Worldly miseries may affect vs but in respect of sorrow for sinne all worldly griefe should bee light vnto vs. Indeede wee are otherwise minded naturally but herein wee must shew the power and truth of grace that to displease God by any sinne is our greatest griefe The second reason that mooued Moses to refuse the honours and pleasures of Pharaohs Court was because hee should haue enioyed them but for a time for the time of his naturall life was the longest that possibly hee could haue enioyed them And the same reason must moue euery one of vs to vse this world and all things herein euen all temporall benefits as though we vsed them not being alwayes willing and ready to leaue them whensoeuer God shall call This same reason doth Paul render when hee perswades the Corinthians to the same dutie 1. Cor. 7.31 Vse this world saith hee as though you vsed it no● for the fashion of this world goeth away As if he should say All things in the world last but for a time and if a man would neuer so faine he could but enioy them to the ende of his life and therfore vse them as though you vsed them not But pittie it is to see how farre men are from the practice of this dutie for they set their whole heart vpon the world and to get riches is their delight and their God This ought not so to bee God hath not laid downe these precepts and examples in vaine vndoubtedly if they draw vs not to the like practice they shal rise vp in iudgement against vs at the last day And thus much of Moses choyce and refusall VERSE 26. Esteeming the rebuke of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt for he had respect to the recompence of reward MOses as we haue heard refused the honour wealth of Egypt and chose to liue in affliction with Gods people Now because this might seeme to bee a strange choyce and a naturall man would soone condemne him of folly for his labour therefore here the holy Ghost laies downe a reason that mooued Moses thus to doe to wit Moses chose rather to suffer affliction with Gods people than to enioy the pleasures and honours of Egypt because he was perswaded that reproach for Christ his sake was greater riches than all the wealth in Egypt So that he refused not absolutely riches honour and other comforts but chose the best riches and honour and left the worser vpon a sound iudgement betweene things that did differ Hereby wee may obserue in generall how needfull a thing it is for euery Christian to haue sound knowledge vnderstanding in the word of God For he that would walke vprightly and approoued of God must be able to iudge betweene things that differ not onely betweene good and euill but betweene good and good which is the better and so of euils which is the worser Which no man can doe but he that hath a sound and right iudgement in the word of God for therein is attained the spirit of discerning Many there be that by the course of their liues choose hell and refuse heauen which vndoubtedly comes from their ignorance in the word But ignorāce wil excuse none He that will come to heauen must be able to discerne good from euill and accordingly to choose the good and to refuse that which is euill which without diuine and supernaturall knowledge no man can doe And therefore all ignorant persons and all such as are blinded through the deceitfulnesse of sinne must shake off their securitie and get sound knowledge in scripture with a good conscience that when things which doe differ are set before thē they may with Moses choose the better But let vs come to Moses iudgement more particularly Hee esteemed the rebuke of Christ c. that is hee was firmely resolued that reproach and contempt for Christ his sake was greater riches vnto him than the treasures of a whole kingdom But some will say This is a very strange iudgement can it possibly be true and good Ans. Yes vndoubtedly it is most sound iudgement and worthy eternall remembrance of euery one of vs that to suffer reproach for Christ his sake is greater riches than all worldly wealth The truth hereof is proued by many reasons out of Gods word 1 God hath made a promise of blessednes to those which
suffer for Christs sake Blessed are you saith Christ when men reuile you and speake all manner of euill sayings against you for my names sake c. And S. Peter saith If yee bee railed vpon for my names sake blessed are ye And lest any should doubt how this can be Christ shewes wherein this blessednesse consists saying He that forsaketh houses or brethren or sisters or father or mother or wife or childrē or lands for my names sake shall receiue an hundred fold more and shall inherit eternall life A most worthy promise assuring vs that no man loseth by suffering for Christs sake for hee shall be rewarded an hundred fold ouer In stead of earthly friends and worldly comforts he shal haue the loue and fauour of God shed abroad in his heart which will bee an ouer-flowing fountaine of comfort for soule and body for euer farre more worth than the wealth and treasures of all the kingdomes in the world A smal springing fountaine we know is better to an house than a hundred Cisternes full because of continuall supply from the springing fountaine when the Cisterns will be spent Behold the loue of God in Christ with other spiritual graces shall be in all that suffer for the name of Christ as liuing streames flowing vnto life eternall when as the cisterns of all worldly pleasures and treasures shal be spent and dried vp 2 By suffering afflictiō for Christs sake wee are made conformable vnto him in his humilitie that so we may bee made like vnto him after this life in glory So Paul saith Our light affliction causeth vnto vs an eternall weight of glory 2. Cor. 4.17 And againe it is a true saying If we be dead with Christ we shall also liue with him If we suffer we shall also raigne with him 2. Tim. 2.11 12. This assurance can no worldly riches giue and therefore wee may boldly say that the suffering of reproach for Christ his sake is greater riches than the treasures of a whole kingdome 3 To suffer for Christ his sake is a token of Gods speciall loue and therefore S. Paul biddes the Philippians Not to feare their aduersaries which is a token of saluation vnto them and that of God because it is giuen to you saith he for Christ that you should not onely beleeue but suffer for his sake Wherfore if suffering for Christ haue a promise of blessednes if it make vs conformable vnto Christ be a signe of Gods special loue then is it to be esteemed aboue the riches and honours of the whole world Are afflictiōs for Christ to be esteemed aboue the treasures of a kingdome then we must all learne to reioyce in the troubles and wrongs which we suffer for Christs sake So did the Apostles Act. 5.41 They departed from the councell reioycing in that they were counted worthy to suffer affliction for his name And S. Paul brags hereof greatly saying I beare in my body the marks of the Lord Iesus Gal. 6.17 And looke as these seruants of God reioyced in their sufferings for Christ so likewise must we labour for the same heart and affections in the like case for who would not reioyce to be made partaker and possessor of the treasures of a kingdome Well the rebuke of Christ is greater riches than the treasures of a kingdome This lesson is of great vse for howsoeuer many among vs come to heare Gods word yet there be many also that scoffe and mocke at religion and at the Gospel of Christ and the professors thereof whereby the most are hindred in profession and many daunted and quite driuen backe But wee must here learne not to bee discouraged by these mockes Indeede we must take heed we giue them no iust occasion to mocke vs and then if we be scoffed at we shal neuer be hurt by it nay though that be farre from their intent yet in mocking vs they doe vs great honour For the word of God that cannot lie is this that to suffer affliction for Christ his sake is greater honour and riches than the treasures of a kingdome And if Moses his iudgement be good which God himselfe doth here commend then we are happy and blessed in enduring these mockes and scoffes for Christ. Secondly wee must here learne instruction for the time to come We haue for a long time through the great goodnesse of God enioyed peace and wealth with the Gospel of Christ but vndoubtedly these daies of peace will haue an ende they cannot last alwaies Gods people must passe through the fierie furnace of affliction Well when this is come vpon vs how shall wee be able to beare it Surely we must now learne to be of this opinion that Moses was of we must iudge it to bee the greatest honour and riches that can be to suffer affliction for Christ his sake and this will be the ground of all constancy courage and Christian boldnesse in the day of trial For he that is of this mind wil neuer feare affliction nor reproach for Christ his sake nay he will be so farre from fearing it that he will reioyce and triumph therein Further whereas it is said Esteeming the rebuke of Christ here marke the rebuke of Gods church and people is called the rebuke of Christ. The people of God in Egypt were laden with reproaches and rebukes and behold Christ accounts it his rebuke and the holy Ghost so calls it Where learne this That Christ esteemeth the reproach and affliction of his Church as his owne affliction When Saul went to persecute the brethren at Damascus Act. 9.2 4 Christ Iesus calls to him from heauen saying Saul Saul why persecutest thou me Saul went to persecute the Christians and yet our Sauiour Christ taketh it vnto himselfe And after his conuersion he saith 2. Cor. 4.10 Euery way wee beare about in our bodies the dying of the Lord Iesus And againe Let no man put me to businesse for I beare in my body the markes of the Lord Iesus Gal. 6.17 This is a point of speciall vse First hence we learne that Christ hath a speciall care of his Church and Children in that he iudgeth their afflictions to be his owne afflictions and therefore he can no more forget or leaue off to helpe them in distresse than deny himselfe Secondly here is a speciall comfort for Gods children that be in affliction their afflictions are not their owne alone but Christs also he is their partner and fellow sufferer This may seeme strange but it is most true Christ puts as it were his shoulders vnder our afflictions and takes them to himselfe as though they were his owne than which what can be more comfortable For though thou thy selfe cannot beare it yet trust vndoubtedly that Christ who beares with thee wil giue thee strength to vndergoe it vnto victory Thirdly if the afflictions of a Christian bee the afflictions of Christ then it is a fearefull sinne for any man to mocke or reproach his brother
saluation of the Lord which he wil shew you this day for the Egyptians whom ye haue seene this day shall ye neuer see againe Exod. 14.13 Whereby it notably appeares that Moses departed in faith without feare of Pharaoh But some wil say For a man to come into another mans Kingdome and to carie away his Subiects without the Kings consent is a fact of rebellion and sedition and therfore worthy no commendation but rather shame and punishment And this did Moses he comes from Midian and caries away the Iewes which had beene a long time Pharaohs subiects and for whose seruice hee might pleade possession and a long prescription therefore it seemes to be no fact of faith Answere Indeede if Moses had done this on his owne head he might worthily haue beene thus censured But when hee came to Egypt hee had a calling immediatly from God to doe as he did and for confirmation hereof he had Gods promise of assistance in working strange miracles and when he caried the people out of Egypt he did it by commaundement from a King that was higher then Pharaoh Neither yet did Moses carie them away as a priuate man for he was a publike person an high Magistrate and no stranger but one of themselues yea he was a King as may appeare in Gods word for Deut. 33.5 He is plainly called a King and Gen. 36.31 it is said There were so many Kings in Edom before there raigned any King ouer the children of Israell Now the last of those Kings raigned at that time when Moses went with the Israelites out of Egypt so that Moses was their King had the aucthority and gouernment of a King ouer them from the Lord and therefore it was no fact of rebellion in him but a work that did greatly commend his faith being grounded vpon Gods commaundement and promise Thus we see how we must conceiue of Moses fact Now wee come to some particular points to bee considered therein How came it to passe that Moses now had this courage to depart from Pharaoh not fearing his commaundement whereas 40. yeares before being called to shew himselfe vnto his brethren as one whom they were to respect as their deliuerer Acts 7.23 25 hee fled immediatly out of Egypt vpon the notice of one fact of defence in behalf of the Israelites why did he not shew as much courage when hee slew the Egyptian as at his second departure Answer The cause of his courage at this later time was this God now renued his commission and confirmed his former calling For when hee was first called hee did his duty and reuenged their wrongs but yet being in danger and his calling being as yet but a secret instinct he was fearefull and fled But now when God called him the second time and confirmed the same calling both by promise and commaundement and power to worke miracles then fearefull Moses becomes couragious and bold Here then obserue that there is a difference of Gods graces there is a first grace and a second grace The first is that which God giues to any man for any calling the second is that which God adds to the first for the confirming thereof And the first is not effectuall without the second As heere we see Moses first calling was not effectuall with him till the second came And so Gods first grace is not effectuall till the second come by which the former is confirmed strengthened and encreased And the second is confirmed by the third and so we must goe on from grace to grace if wee will be bold and couragious in any duty either of our general or particular calling This must be well considered for that any man stands in grace or encreaseth therein either respecting his particular calling or his Christian conuersation it comes from this that God adds a second grace vnto the first And therefore whosoeuer is enabled for any duty hath great cause to praise God for whether we continue in grace or encrease therin it comes from the goodnesse of God who addeth grace to grace which if he should not do we shold fall away not be able to go forward in the feare of God and the duties of our calling for the first grace would not suffice to strengthen vs against temptation And therefore howsoeuer God hath strengthened vs for the time past yet still we must pray to God to deliuer vs from euill which plainly imports that our standing is from his daily supply of new grace 2. Point When went Moses out of Egypt The time is directly set down Exod. 12.41 Euen the selfe same day when the promise of God was expired for when the foure hundred and thirty yeares were expired then went all the hoast of the Lord out of Egypt neither before nor after but the very same day Indeed Moses was chosen to be their captaine 40. yeares before and sent vnto them by God and S. Stephen saith Hee thought they would haue vnderstood so much But then they would not take him for their guide Yet now 40. yeares after when Gods determinate time of 430. yeares was expired he comes againe vnto thē to carry them out of Egypt then they acknowledge him follow him out according to Gods commission Hence we learne first that no creature can alter the rule of Gods prouidence Fourty yeares before Moses would haue deliuered the people but he must stay till the time of the Lords promise was accomplished and then he carries them all away Secondly this must teach vs not onely to beleeue that God both can will keep his promises but also by faith to waite for the time wherein he will accomplish the same vnto vs. Moses is faine to waite 40. years for the fulfilling of Gods promise When Daniel vnderstoode how long the Israelites must be in captiuity he would not pray for the shortning of that time but when he knew that the time of their return drew neere then he praied vnto the Lord most earnestly waiting for the accomplishment of Gods promise in their deliuerāce And Dauid thus waited on God for deliuerāce in all his troubles And their examples must we follow for the fruition of all Gods blessings 3. Point In what manner doth Moses depart The text saith He went out not fearing the Kings commandement so that his departure was with courage Whence wee learne sundry instructiōs First here is a notable president for the framing of our liues which must be a rule vnto vs. We must walke diligently in our callings as Moses did and though crosses meete vs so that Pharaoh fall out with vs if Kings become our enemies yet we must not lay aside the duties of our callings but after Moses example goe on therein with courage Moses without fearing the Kings wrath went led all the people away And so must euery one of vs doe although dangers come wee must not feare but stand fast in our profession and goe on in the duties of our
therefore shee came to the Spies whom shee had receiued and hid vpon the roofe of her house there confessed the God of Israel to be the true God in heauen aboue and in the earth beneath Here we may note that when ordinary meanes faile for the beginning and increase of faith as the word preached and the Sacraments then God can worke faith extraordinarily euen by reports and rumors For thus Rahab and many of the heathen came to beleeue We say of the Church of Rome that it is no true Church and that their religion cannot saue a man Hereupon many that sauour that way reply and say Will you therefore condemne all your forefathers that liued and died in time of Popery Wee answer no we dare not giue such censure vpon them but rather iudge charitably of them yea wee haue great hope that many of them were saued For thogh they wanted preaching reading yet God might worke faith in them extraordinarily and blesse euen good reports and speeches vnto them with the reading of other godly bookes besides Gods word which some of them had We need not then giue so hard a censure of them because God is not tied to ordinary meanes but can saue extraordinarily when meanes faile Further concerning Rahabs faith it may be demanded whether it was weake or strong because before shee had done this fact of faith her whole abode was among the heathen Answ. Wee must knowe that there is in the childe of God a certaine seede or beginning or preparation to a true and liuely faith which our Sauiour Christ in the Scriptures doth honour with the title of a true liuely faith as when a man knowes no more but this that Christ Iesus is the true Messias hauing withall a care and conscience to profit and increase in the true knowledge of the Gospel and to ioyne practice therewith in his life and calling Examples hereof wee haue many in Gods word A certaine Ruler came to Christ and besought him to goe downe heale his sonne Ioh. 4.49 50. c. Iesus but said vnto him Goe thy way thy sonne liueth and the Ruler beleeued the word that Iesus spake vnto him and his sonne liued Now inquiring of the hower and finding it to be the same time when Iesus said Thy sonne liueth the text saith He beleeued and all his houshold Now what was this mans faith Surely he onely acknowledged that Christ was the true Messias and withall resigned himselfe and his family to be instructed further therein And though they knewe nothing particularly of the means wherby Christ should be a Sauiour yet for this willingnes in embracing Christ and readinesse to be taught the holy Ghost saith they did beleeue So in the same Chapter vers 29 the woman of Samaria beeing conuicted in her conscience of the things that Christ told her runnes into the towne and saith Come see a man that hath told me all things that euer I did Is not hee the Christ Then the text saith Many of the Samaritans beleeued because of the saying of the woman Now what faith had these Samaritans Surely they did onely acknowledge him to be the true Messias and were willing to bee further instructed in his doctrine which they testified by going to heare him in their owne persons So likewise Christ giues a notable testimony to the confession of the Apostles faith Math. 16.17 18 in the person of Peter saying Thou art Peter and vpon this rocke that is vpon this your faith which thou confessest will I build my Church and yet the Apostles were ignorant of some maine points of the Gospel For a little after when Christ tels them of his going to Ierusalem and of his passion for the redemption of them and all the elect Peter perswades him to the contrary saying Master spare thy selfe these things shall not be vnto thee Whereby it appeares that Peter did not know how Christ should be a Sauiour neither did the Apostles particularly knowe Christ his resurrection till he was risen againe yea at the very time of his ascension they knew not the nature of Christes Kingdome and therefore they asked him Lord wilt thou now restore the Kingdome to Israel Acts 1.6 dreaming still of a temporall Kingdome for which Christ rebukes them And notwithstanding all these wants Christ saith they had true faith yea such faith as the gates of hell should neuer preuaile against This then is a most comfortable truth That if a man in the want of meanes of further knowledge doe hold Christ Iesus to be the true Messias and yeeld himselfe willing to learne the doctrine of the Gospell and withall ioyne obedience to his knowledge the Lord is willing for a time to accept of this as of true faith Now to apply this to Rahabs faith Her faith was but a weake faith or rather the seede and beginning of a liuely faith afterward For as we may reade all that shee knew was this that the God of Israell was the onely true God and that hee would certainly deliuer the Land of Canaan into the Israelites hands This was a notable perswasion wrought by a report and accordingly she ioynes her selfe to Gods people and resignes her selfe to obey the God of Israel but whether she knew the particular doctrine of saluation by Christ it is not here set down and it is very like that as yet she was altogether ignorant of it For heere are all things set down that tend to her commendation So that her faith was very weake and onely the seede of a liuely faith and yet heere the holy Ghost doth commend her for her faith among the most renowned beleeuers that euer were Hence we may learne many good instructions First That God makes much account of a little grace if he see in a man but the seeds of grace he doth highly esteeme therof When the young man came to Christ and asked him what he should doe to be saued Christ tells him hee must keepe the commaundements the young man answeres that he had kept them from his youth at which answere it is said Christ looked vpon him and loued him This he he did for the shew of Grace which appeared in his answer much more then wil he like of that which is true grace indeede So likewise Christ reasoning with the Scribe concerning the first and great commandement and perceiuing that he had answered discreetly he said vnto him Thou art not farre from the Kingdome of God Mark 12.34 shewing hereby how deeply hee tenders the sparks and seedes of true grace nay hee makes much of a very shew of grace which if it be so then if God haue giuen to any of vs but one spark of true grace how ought wee to tender it and cherish it and to reioyce therein with all thankfulnes to God for it yea wee must seek to encrease the same for according to our grace is our acceptance and respect with God in Christ. Secondly whereas
did it not so much as burne their garments or the haire of their heads to cause the same to smel And the like is his goodnesse towards all his seruants Dauid saith The Lord preuented him with liberall blessings that is when Dauid neuer asked such blessings at Gods hand euen then did the Lord bestowe his liberall blessings vpon him as namely this when Dauid was following his Fathers sheepe and walking in his calling he neuer dreamed of any Kingdome yet thence the Lord took him to be King ouer his people Israell So the Israelites hauing been 70. yeares in captiuity neuer thought of returne and yet then were they deliuered and their deliuerance was so strange and miraculous that they were like them that dreame Psal. 126.1 When Peter was cast into prison by Herod and committed to foure quaternions of Souldiers to be kept the Angel of the Lord came and awoke him as he slept and led him out of prison past the watches and through the iron gate and then left him Now this deliuerance was so strange vnto him that he knew not whether it was true but thought he had seene a vision From hence it is that God hath made this gracious promise vnto his Church to answer before they call and to heare while they speake Isay 65.24 So endlesse is his mercy and his goodnesse so vnspeakeable towards his seruants that if they cleaue vnto him vnfainedly they shall finde his bounty farre surpassing all that they could aske or thinke The consideration hereof serues to stirre vp euery one of vs in our places to cleaue vnfainedly vnto the true God with all our hearts by faith in due reuerence and obedience If a seruant were to choose his Master and among an hundred should heare of one that besides his wages would giue vnto his seruants gifts which they would not think of this seruant would forsake all the rest to com vnto this one Behold the Lord our God is this bountifull master who doth not only keep couenant with his seruāts in a full accomplishment of his promises but is exceeding gracious preuenting them with liberall blessings aboue all that they can wish for thēselues wherfore let vs forsake all our bad Masters the world the flesh and the diuell in the seruice of sinne and resigne our selues with full purpose of heart to serue this our good GOD to the end of our dayes There is no man liuing that can haue such cause of true ioy in heart as Gods seruants haue for God shewes more kindenesse vnto them then they can aske or thinke of And take this for truth also there be none that thus giue themselues to serue God faithfully with all their harts but before they die they shal finde this to be true that God is a most mercifull GOD and his goodnesse endlesse towards them aboue their deserts Secondly this endlesse mercy of GOD must mooue vs all to repent vs of our sinnes and to trust in him for the pardon of them be they neuer so many or haynous for they can neuer reach to the multitude of his mercies Though they be in number like the sand of the sea they must not dismay vs from comming to him but considering that his goodnesse is endlesse and his mercy is ouer all his workes we must come vnto him for the pardon of our sinnes For GOD is mercifull to performe his promise yea and beyond his promise to doe for vs more than wee can thinke of Many indeede abuse this mercie of GOD by presuming thereon to goe on in sinne but such deceiue themselues For God will not be mercifull vnto them Deut. 29.20 It is the penitent person that shall finde mercy The sixt effect of their faith is in these words Escaped the edge of the sword The words in the originall are thus Escaped the mouth of the sword which is the Hebrew phrase in the olde Testament and heere followed by the Pen-man of this Epistle and before where he calleth the word of God a two mouthed sword Heb. 4.12 hereby meaning as it is translated a two edged sword This effect must be vnderstood of two worthy Prophets Elias and Elizeus for Elias wee may reade that when he had slaine Baals Priests 1. Kings 19.1 Iezabel the Queene threatened to kill him which he hearing fled into the wildernesse and thence was led to Mount Horeb and there escaped by meanes of his faith And for Elizeus wee may reade that when he disclosed the King of Syriah his counsell to the King of Israel 2. Kings 6. hee was compassed about in Dothan the city where he lay with a huge hoast of Assyrians but praying to the Lord the Lord smote the hoast with blindnesse and so the Prophet led them in safetie to Samaria So then the meaning of this effect is that when these seruāts of God were in distresse danger of death they denied themselues and their owne helpe by faith relied vpō God vnfainedly frō the bottom of their hearts so found deliuerance with God frō the perill of death First here wee learne that God prouides for the safetie and deliuerance of his seruants in the extremitie of peril and danger when both might and multitude are against them This point we haue touched in diuers examples before and therefore doe here onely name it Secondly in that these men in the extremity of danger beleeued and so escaped the edge of the sword we learne that when we are in greatest danger so as we see no way to escape euen then wee must put our trust in the true God and he will saue vs. This wee must doe not onely for the safety of our body but more especially for the saluation of our soule Put the case a man were in despaire of his saluation and that hee sees legions of diuels compassing him about to take him away what must this man doe in this case Answ. Looke what Elias and Elizeus did the same thing must hee doe hee must not lie dead in desperation yielding thereto but at the very same time when such terrors oppresse him hee must by faith lift vp his heart to God and put all his trust and confidence in him thorough Christ. And if hee can this doe hee may assure himselfe that hee shall as certainly escape these fearefull terrors of conscience and the torments of hell as Elias Elizeus did the edge of the sword for let a man put his whole trust in God and whatsoeuer his troubles bee God will deliuer him Great are the troubles of the righteous but the Lord deliuers him out of them all Psal. 34.19 Indeed wee must not limit God for time or manner of deliuerance but waite on GOD by faith accounting his grace sufficient till deliuerance come And thus much of the sixt effect The seauenth effect of their faith is this Of weake were made strong Or thus Of weake were restored to health This must bee vnderstood of Hezekias a worthy king of
Iuda who as we may read 2. Kings 20. beeing sore sicke euen vnto death was restored to health and obtained of GOD the lengthening of his daies for the space of fifteene yeares Which wonderfull recouery hee obtained by meanes of his faith which hee shewed in time of his sicknesse by a prayer he made vnto God the substance wherof stood in these two things First beeing very sicke hee praied for the pardon of his sinnes This appeareth by his thanksgiuing vpon his recouery Isay 38.17 where hee confesseth that God had cast all his sinnes behinde his backe Now looke for what hee gaue thanks that no doubt hee had before begged of God in praier Secondly hee made request vnto GOD for prolonging of his daies for some reasons which did concerne himselfe and this hee also prayed for in faith Now the reasons moouing him to pray for longer life were these First hee had then no issue to succeed him in his Kingdome and therefore hee praied for life to beget a childe which might sit vpon his throne after him And the ground of this praier was this GOD had made a particular promise vnto Dauid and Salomon 1. Kings 8.25 that they should not want issue after them to sit vpon the Throne of Israel so that their children tooke heede to their way to walke before the LORD as Dauid did Now King Hezekiah knowing this promise had regard hereunto and building himself hereon his conscience bearing him witnesse that hee had walked before the Lord vprightly hee praies for issue to succeed him and for that cause he desires strength of body and length of daies This appeareth notably by his praier 2. King 20.3 Lord saith he I beseech thee now remember how I haue walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart The summe of his praier is this All the kings succeeding Dauid and Salomon which walke in Gods commandements shall haue issue to sit on their thrones after them Now from hence he praies thus Oh Lord I haue walked before thee in truth and sincerity of heart and hereupon the conclusion followes grant me issue to sit vpon my throne after me and therefore life and health to accomplish the same Secondly he praied that he might liue to glorifie God in that weighty calling wherein God had placed him ouer his people This appeareth likewise by his thanksgiuing vnto the Lord vpon his recouery where hee saith Isay 38.20 ●he Lord was ready to saue me therefore wee will sing my song all the daies of our life in the house of the Lord. Thus by his worthy praier hee shewed forth his faith notably by vertue whereof beeing sicke vnto death hee obtained of the Lord the prolonging of his daies for the space of fifteene yeares And so we see to whom this seauenth effect of faith is to be referred Here we are taught a speciall duty for the recouery of our health in the time of sickenesse to wit before wee vse the ordinary meanes of Physicke wee must according to this example first put our faith in practice by humbling our selues for our sinnes past confessing them truely vnto God and praying for pardon from a resolute purpose of heart to lead a newe life and also by intreating health of God and his good blessing vpon the meanes which we shall vse for our recouery Thus haue other of Gods seruants done beside Hezekias When Dauid was grieuously sicke the principal thing he did was this practice of faith in humbling his soule before God for his sinnes and intreating earnestly the pardon of them as we may see Psa. 6. 38. This is the principal thing which in those Psalms is propounded of Dauid And so the Apostle counsels Iam. 5.14 15 Is any man sicke among you let him call for the Elders of the Church and what must they doe Surely first pray for him and then as the custome was in those daies anoint him with oyle in the name of the Lord. And the praier of faith shall saue the sicke and the Lord shall raise him vp againe and if hee haue committed any sinne it shall be forgiuen him And here we must be admonished to beware of the bad practices of the world in this case the most men in their sickenesse first seeke to the Physicians and if that faile them they send for the Minister This was King Asa his practice for which hee is branded to all posteritie that beeing diseased in his feete hee sought vnto Physicians and not vnto the Lord 2. Chron. 16.12 though otherwise hee had good things in him as 1. King 15.14 And many do farre worse who seeke to witches and inchanters when they or theirs are in such distresse but this is to forsake God and to seeke help of the diuel like to Ahaziah who sent to Baalzebub the God of Ekron to know of his recouery when he was sicke vpon a fall 2. Kings 1.2 This should be far from all Gods children for as Ahaziahs sickenesse became deadly through his sending to Baalzebub so vndoubtedly many diseases become incurable by the bad and preposterous dealing of the Patient who either vseth vnlawfull meanes or lawfull meanes disorderedly or trusting therein Wee therefore in this case must remember our duty in the practice of faith as Hezekiah did The eight fruit of faith is this Waxed valiant in battell This effect may well bee vnderstood of all the Iudges before named and of all the good Kings in Iuda and Israel But yet there be two especially to whom wee may more peculiarly referre it to wit Samson and Dauid For Samson he by meanes of faith came to be so mighty Iudg. 15.15 that with the Iawe bone of an asse he slew a thousand Philistims And for Dauid he likewise was so incouraged by faith that with the same sling wherewith he kept his fathers sheepe which was but a slender weapon for warre hee encountred with Goliah that huge Philistim and hit him with a stone in the forehead and slew him Both these facts were the fruits of their faith which made them bolde to encounter with these mighty enemies In this effect of their faith first wee may obserue that true fortitude and manhood right valour and courage comes from true faith It must bee graunted that many heathen men had great strength and courage but indeed it was but a shadow of true valour for right valour coms from a beleeuing heart And therefore it is said that these Iudges and Princes of Israel waxed strong in battell by faith Secondly Doth true faith make men valiant in battell Then should the preaching of the word bee set vp and maintained as well in the Campe and Guarison and among Souldiers on the Seas as in Cities and Townes of peace For the preaching of the word is the meanes of this faith which giues valour in battell to them that fight in a good cause Hence it was that the Lord inioyned by Moses that when the people of Israel went out to battell the Priests
our selues and to lay it to our owne consciences and then no doubt we shall finde it to be a word of power able to reforme both the misdemeanour of our liues and the errours of our mindes Now to the reason more particularly Wee must be constant in the faith because we are compassed about with so great a cloude of witnesses Heere the ancient Fathers of the olde Testament which in the former chapter were commended vnto vs for their faith are compared to a cloude and then to a cloude compassing vs. Lastly to a cloude of witnesses They are compared to a cloude as I take it by allusion to the cloud which directed and led the Israelites in the wildernesse for when they came from Egypt and were 40. yeares in the Desert of Arabia all that while they were directed by a pillar of cloud by day Exod. 13.21 Now looke as this cloud guided the Israelites from the bondage of Egypt to the Land of Canaan so doth this companie of famous beleeuers direct all the true members of Gods Church in the new Testament the right way from the Kingdome of darknesse to the spirituall Canaan the kingdome of heauen And this is the true cause why these worthy beleeuers are compared to a cloud Mark further they are called a cloud but what a cloude namely compassing vs. A compassing cloud they are called by reason of the great company of beleeuers so as which way soeuer a man turnes him hee shall see beleeuers on euery side and they are said to compasse vs because they giue vs direction in the course of Christianity as the cloud did the Israelites in the wildernesse Now wheras the whole company of beleeuers is called a cloud compassing vs heere is answered a cōmon obiection of temporizers which argue thus against religiō There are so many kindes of religion now a-dayes that no man can tell which to be of and therefore it is good to be of no religion till we be certified which is the true religion This carnall reason is here answered for howsoeuer in som things there be variety of opinions in Gods Church yet for the substance of religion all agree in one For the company of beleeuers in this world resembles a cloud that goes before vs shewing vs the right way which we are to walke in to the Kingdome of heauen Secondly in that these ancient beleeuers are called a cloud compassing vs we are taught that as the Israelites did follow the cloud in the wildernes frō the Land of Egypt to Canaan so must we follow the example of these ancient beleeuing fathers Prophets to the kingdom of heauen It is a strange thing to see how the Israelites followed that cloud They neuer went till it went before them and when it stood still they stood still also though it were 2. yeares together and when it began to moue they moued with it So in the same maner must we set before our eyes for a pattern of life the worthy examples of beleeuers in the old Testament for whatsoeuer was written was written for our learning We must therfore be followers of them in faith obedience and other graces of God and so shall we be directed to life euerlasting in the spirituall Canaan the kingdom of heauen And yet we must not follow thē absolutely For all of thē had their infirmities som of thē had their grieuous faults wherby they were tainted their cōmendation somwhat blemished but we must follow them in the practice of faith other graces of God The cloud that guided the Israelites had two parts a light part a dark The Egyptians who were enemies to Gods people had not the light part before them but the dark part so following that they rushed into the red sea were drowned whē as the Israelites folowing the light part went through in safety Euen so these beleeuers had in them two things their sins which be their darke part which if we follow we cast our soules into great danger destruction and faith with other graces of God which are their light part which we must follow as our light which if we doe carefully it will bring vs safe to the Kingdome of heauen So Paul bids the Corinthians be followers of him yet not absolutely in euery thing but as he followes Christ and so must we follow the Fathers as they went on in faith in Christ. Further they are a cloud of witnesses that is a huge multitude of witnesses And they are so called First because by their owne bloud they confirmed the faith which they professed Secondly because they did all confirme the doctrine of true religion whereof they were witnesses partly by speaches and partly by actions in life and conuersation And so is euery member of Christ a witnesse as the Lord often calls the beleeuing Israelites his witnesses Quest. How came this to passe that these beleeuers should bee Gods witnesses Answere Surely because they testified the truth and excellencie of Gods holy religion both in word and action in life and conuersation Now seeing these in the olde Testament were Christs witnesses First hereby all ignorant persons must be stirred vp to be carefull to get faith and to learne true religion If any thing will moue a man to become religious this will for out of all the world God will chuse faithfull men to be his witnesses to testifie of his religion vnto others If a man were perswaded that some worthy mighty Prince would vouchsafe to call him to beare witnesse of the truth on his side he would be wonderfull glad thereof and take it for a great honour to him How much more then ought wee to labour for knowledge faith and obedience in true religion that we may become witnesses vnto the Lord our God if it be a dignity to be witnesse to an earthly Prince oh then what a great prerogatiue is this for a silly sinfull man to becom a witnesse to the truth of the euerliuing God who is King of Kings whose word needes no confirmation This must make vs al to labour for knowledge for faith and for the power of religion but if we wil remaine stil in our ignorance and neuer labour for knowledge then shall these seruants of God that beleeued in the olde Testament stand vp and witnesse against vs at the day of iudgement for they had not such meanes as we haue and yet they became most faithfull witnesses Secondly this must teach vs to be careful that as in word we professe Christ so indeed we may confesse him expressing the power of his grace in vs. For by this true confession of Christ we are made his witnesses but when wee confesse Christ in word onely and yet in life practice denie him then we are vnfaithful witnesses for we say vnsay In an earthly court if a mā should one while say one thing another while another thing he would not be accepted for a