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A14900 Balletts and madrigals to fiue voyces with one to 6. voyces: newly published by Thomas Weelkes. Weelkes, Thomas, 1575 (ca.)-1623. 1608 (1608) STC 25204; ESTC S103041 2,366,144 144

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time though not now 5. Confut. Adams sinne pardonable 5. WHereas we say that all sinnes are veniall to the faithfull and elect Bellarmine replieth that Adam committed a mortall and damnable sinne because it was said vnto him in what day thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death lib. 1. de amiss grat c. 7. Ans. Wee say that though this sinne was damnable in it owne nature yet by Gods grace through Christ it was made veniall and pardonable to Adam unlesse Bellarmine say with the hereticke Ta●iane that Adam was damned 6. Confut. Adam lost not his faith 6. BY this place also he would proove that Adam and Eve lost their saith because they beleeved not the sentence of God that they should die if they transgressed the commandement lib. 3. de amission great c. 6. Ans. This prooveth that they failed in faith not that their faith was utterly lost and extinguished for if Adam had no faith remaining to what purpose should God have propounded the promise of the Messiah to a faithlesse man Places of Exhortation 1. IN that God sanctified the Sabboth and rested therein from all his works he did it for our example that we therby should learne religiously to observe the Lords day 1. in abstaining from all bodily and servile workes 2. in keeping our selves undefiled and unspotted of all sinnefull works 3. in sanctifying it to holy exercises to the praise of God and our owne comfort 2 v. 7. In that God made man of the dust and put the breath of life into his nostrils man is here to learne humilitie by the consideration of his base and poore beginning and to remember how brittle his state is whose life is but a blast of the breath a puffe of the aire Isay 2.22 Cease from man whose breath is in his nostrils 3 Seeing that goodly garden of paradise replenished with such goodly plants and fruitfull trees is now destroyed and not to be found in earth we are taught to sequester our affections from all earthly delights and to seeke for a paradise much better in heaven 4 v. 15. Seeing man even in the state of his innocency was not to live idlely but God assigned him to keep the garden we are thereby admonished that now much more every man should occupie himselfe in some honest labour of a lawfull vocation 5 In that God made the woman out of man from whom shee had her beginning thereby is described the dutie of the wife to be obedient to her husband as her head and principall for whole cause shee was made 6 And seeing the woman is bone of mans bone and flesh of his flesh thereby the husband is put in remembrance to love tender and cherrish his wife even as his owne flesh 7. verse 18. It is not good for man to be alone in that God first taketh care to provide an helper for man before he saw his owne want and while Adam slept and thought nothing the Lord prepared him an helpe we see how Gods providence watcheth over us foreseeing for us many things which we see not our selves yea taking care for us while we sleep as it is in the Psalme Hee giveth his wel-beloved sleepe Psal. 127.3 Mercer CHAP. III. The Analysis or Method THis Chapter describeth the fall of man first his sinne and transgression from verse 1. to verse 9. then his punishment verse 9. to the end In their transgression is to be considered the tentation of Sathan verse 1. to verse 6. the seduction of the man and woman verse 6. thirdly the effects and fruits of their sinne verse 7 8. In Sathans temptation wee haue his subtill insinuation verse 1. the womans simple confession verse 2 3. the suggestion it selfe verse 4 5. In their seduction verse 6. first are set downe the inducements or provocation the goodnesse of the tree for meat the pleasantnesse to the eye the fruit thereof supposed to be knowledge then the pravarication or offence they did eat The effects of their transgression are shame which causeth them to cover their nakednesse verse 7. feare which maketh them to hide themselves verse 8. In the punishment there is first their conviction of the man and woman verse 9. to 14. then the malediction or curse denounced first then executed The sentence is denounced against the tempter or parties tempted The tempter is either the ●ccessary that is the serpent which was the instrument whose punishment is set forth verse 14. or the principall namely Sathan who is censured verse 15. The persons tempted first the woman is punished with sorrow in travaile subjection to her husband verse 16. secondly the man is judged the cause is first shewed his transgression verse 17. then his judgement in the cursing of the earth with thornes and thistles in cursing of man with misery in his life mortality in his end verse 19. The sentence lastly is executed in the expulsion of man out of Paradise verse 23. with the consultation going before verse 22. and his perpetuall exile from thence the Angels keepe the way to Paradise with a sword that Adam should not returne thither The difference of translations v. 1. the serpent was wisest S. wiser C. craftier than any beast cat heb gnarum subtill v. 1. yea hath God indeed said B. G. A. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quare wherefore hath God said S.H. it is true that God hath said Ch. quia because God hath said T.P. heb aph ci yea because Sathans abrupt beginning sheweth a long communication before and here hee giveth a reason as though God were not equall toward man in the prohibition c. v. 6. to be desired to get knowledge G.T.S. or to make one wise B. heb delightfull to behold aspectu delectabibile C.H. which was said before v. 8. the voice of the word of God C. the voice of God walking caet v. 8. in the coole of the day B.G. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at noone S. ad auram post meridiem in the coole aire after noone H. ad ventum in the wind or aire of the day T.P.C. heb lervach haiom the soft wind brought Gods voice unto them v. 11. unlesse thou hast eaten c. S.H. hast thou eaten caeter v. 12. the woman which thou gavest to be with me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 B.S.C. which thou gavest me G. gavest my fellow sociam H. allocasti didst place with me T. g●imads with me heb v. 15. he shall breake 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 G.S. ipsa she shall H. it shall breake ipsum T.B.P. heb his it shall that is the seed he shall observe thee from the beginning thou shalt observe him to the end Ch. thou shalt lye in wait for his heele H. bruise his heele caet v. 16. thy desire toward thy husband T.B. subject to thy husband G. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thy turning to thy husband S.C. subpotestate under the power of thy husband H. heb to shuchah desire lust
idlely without labour yet his labour should have beene pleasant rather for delight than necessity Mercer QVEST. XXVII Of the growing of Thistles Vers. 18. THornes also and thistles c. 1. The earth should have brought forth thornes and thistles before but now it bringeth them forth as noxious and hurtfull to man 2. And whereas he is bid to eat the herbe of the field this is neither interlaced as a consolation as Calvin for all this here uttered belongeth unto mans punishment neither is man here deprived of the eating of all other fruit saving hearbs But here the Lord sheweth how man had deserved by his sinne to bee deprived of the pleasant fru●t of Paradise and to live of the herb as other bruit beasts though by herb corne is especially signified ordained for the use of man 3. But where mention is made of the sweat of the browes by this particular all other kinde of labour in severall vocations as of Magistrates Ministers handi-crafts men is implied Luther Likewise under one kinde of labour and sorrow all other miseries and cares of this life are comprehended Calvin 4. Yet God sheweth mercie in infflicting of these punishments in turning them from eternall to temporall 5. And whereas the Lord giveth this as a reason that man should returne to dust because he was taken out of it this is not so to be understood as though he should have turned to dust if hee had not sinned for as S. Paul sheweth death came in by sinne Adam should have beene translated and changed as Henoch and Elias were and they shall be that remaine alive at the comming of Christ. But while man stood in his integrity and happinesse he remembred not his terrene beginning as hee considered not his nakednesse but now the Lord maketh it an argument of his mortall condition and bringeth it to his remembrance to humble him thereby Mercer QVEST. XXVIII Why Eva is called the mother of the living Vers. 20. ANd the man called his wives name Hevah 1. Neither as Lyranus thinketh is she so called because she was the mother of all which live in sorrow and miserie 2. Neither as Rupertus that Adam of incredulity so named her not beleeving that shee should returne to dust as the Lord had said but that he and his posterity should live 3. Neither need we referre it to the birth of Christ who brought true life into the world the woman cannot be truly said to be the mother of the spirituall life she was the mother of him that was the Author of spirituall life 4. And it is but a fond conceit to derive Ave the first word of the Angels salutation to Marie of Eva as though she repaired what was lost by Eva for the one is a Latine word the other Hebrew neither did the Angell say Ave all haile but the translater and the right word is not Eva but Hevah 5. Neither is Adam here to be noted of insolency and pride that having received sentence of death doth give unto the woman a name of life but Adam being confirmed by Gods promise concerning the seed of the woman that although they themselves were mortall yet by them mankinde should be propagated so calleth his wife 6. But the conceit of R Levi here hath no ground that shee is called the mother of all living that is of bru●t beasts in respect of the stupidity and dulnesse of her minde for by living man is here understood as sometime he is called flesh because of his excellencie among the rest 7. Neither was this name given unto Eva before they had sinned when Adam gave the names to the rest of the creatures as Pererius thinketh with the Hebrewes nor yet was it given so long after when he had some children as some other thinke but the name was given at such time and place as is here set downe before Adam called her Ishah as if you should say Mannesse as a name of the whole sex but here he calleth her Hevah as by her proper name so that these words because she was the mother of all living were not the words of Adam who yet by prophesie did foresee that it should so bee but Moses inserteth this sentence Mercer QVEST. XXIX What the coats of skinnes were which God made for Adam and Eve Vers. 21. VNto Adam also and his wife did the Lord God make coats of skins and cloathed them 1. These coats of skinnes were not their bodies as Origen with some other of the fathers seeme to thinke for God had made man before of the dust of the earth cap. 2.7 2. Neither were these coats made of the barkes of trees as Barcephas and Gregor Nazianzane for the Hebrew word gnor is no where found in that sense 3. Neither is Theodorets reason sound that they could not bee the skinnes of beasts which were created but two and two and so if any of them had beene slaine the generation of that kinde should have beene hindred for that there were no more created but two of a sort is not extant in Scripture 4. Neither need we imagine with Hugo that these skinnes might be made of the Elements or some other matter we are not to runne to miracles where an ordinary course is offered 5. Some would have these skinnes made of sheepes wooll but that is not skinnes 6. Ionathan of the Serpents skin but this is too curious 7. Neither did the Lord onely teach man how to make him garments for his necessary use afterward for the text is that he cloathed them that is actually presently 8. Therefore there is no inconveniencie to say that God caused skins whether of slaine beasts or otherwise by the ministery of his Angels or how else it pleased him to be brought to Adam whereof he made them coats QVEST. XXX Why God cloathed man in beasts skinnes ANd thus it pleased God to cloath man not for any such typicall signification as either to betoken the incarnation of Christ that was cloathed with our flesh or the cloathing of the nakednesse of the soule by repentance But for these causes 1. to shew him how his mortall body might bee defended from cold and other injuries which use of skinne or leather cloathing was first used in the world 2. To cover his nakednesse for comelinesse sake and therefore the Chalde Paraphrast calleth them vestimenta honoris garments of honour 3. To teach man that it was lawfull to use the beasts as for meat so for cloathing 4. And to give a rule that modest and decent not costly or sumptuous apparell should be used 5. And that he might know what difference is betweene Gods works and mans invention betweene coats of leather and figge leaves 6. And to put him in minde of mortality by his cloathing of dead beasts skins as Origen well noteth talib indici oportebat peccatorem ut essent mortalitatis indicium QVEST. XXXI How Adam is said to become as God Vers. 22. BEhold man is
30.5 Muscul. 4. Observ. Not good to make haste to be rich Vers. 13. THe man waxed mighty and still increased Isaack was not made rich at once but hee increased by degrees for the wise man saith He that maketh haste to be rich shall not be innocent Prov. 28.20 Men should not therefore strive suddenly to be rich but wait patiently for his blessing Perer. 5. Observ. Envy for good things Vers. 14. THe Philistims had envy at him c. They had no reason to envy at him and to send him away whom they saw to bee blessed of God But as Chrysostome saith Ita se habet invidi● nihil cum ratione operatur Such is the nature of envy it doth nothing with reason Bonis proximi magis quam propriis malis intabescit invidia Envy rather pineth at other mens goods than her owne evill Hom. 52. in Gen. Such was the envy of Cain toward Abel that slew him because his owne workes were evill and his brothers good 1 Ioh. 3.12 6. Observ. The Kingdome of God must first be sought Vers. 25. HE built an altar c. First Moses maketh mention of the building of an altar for the service of God and afterward of the digging of the well which sheweth that first of all things must be sought that belong to the worship of God as our Saviour saith Seek ye first the Kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof c. Calvin CHAP. XXVII 1. The Argument or Contents THis Chapter sheweth the purpose of Isaack intending to blesse Esau vers 1. to 5. and the disposing of the blessing to Iacob by Gods providence and the preventing or disappointing of Esau in the rest of the Chapter where concerning Iacobs obtaining of the blessing we are to consider 1. The meanes which was the counsell and device of Rebeckah vers 5. to 18. 2. The execution or putting of the same in practice by Iacob vets 18. to 27. 3. The successe which God gave unto it Isaack giveth Iacob the blessing vers 27. to vers 30. In the rejecting of Esau 1. his griefe and sorrow is expressed for the losse vers 31. to 37. 2. his importunity to receive a blessing of his father which hee had to vers 41. 3. His hatred toward Iacob because of the blessing and his malicious purpose to take away his life vers 41. 4. Iacobs deliverance from his brothers cruelty by departing into Mesopotamia through the counsell of his mother 2. The divers readings v. 9. goe to the sheep and bring two kids S.C. goe to the flock cat tsun signifieth a flock of sheep or goats two of the best kids H. faire and tender S. two kids of the goats caeter that is sucking kids T. v. 13. It is told me by prophecie that the curse shall not come upon thee C. the curse be upon me cat v. 23. his hairy hands did expresse the likenesse of the elder brother H. his hands were rough or hairy as his brothers hands cat v. 29. the sonnes of thy father S. of thy mother caet v. 33. he wondred C. was afraid and wondred beyond measure H. he was in an ecstasis or trance S. he was greatly afraid T.B.G.P. heb charad to tremble v. 38. Isaack being pricked in heart Esau cried out c. S. Esau lift up his voyce and wept cater v. 39. the fatnesse of the earth shall be thy blessing H. thy dwelling cat v. 40. it shall come to passe that thou shalt put off his yoke S.H. when his sonnes shall transgresse the w●rds of the law thou shalt take away the yoke C. when thou hast mourned thou shalt breake the yoake T. when thou hast got the mastery thou shalt breake his yoke B.G.P. he ro●h to beare rule to mourne I preferre the latter see q. 13. following v. 41. Esau was angry S. Esau hated Iacob caet heb satam to hate v. 42. doth threaten to kill thee H.S. lie in wait to kill thee C. ●oth comfort himselfe against thee by killing thee cae● nacham to comfort v. 43 flye to my brother Laban in Haran caeter to Mesopotamia to my brother Laban in Aran. S. 3. The Explanation of doubtfull questions QUEST I. Of the cause of Isaacks blindnesse and of his age Vers. 1. ISaack was old and his eyes dimme vers 2. I know not the day of my death c. 1. Isaacks blindnesse neither was caused by the smoke of the sacrifices which Esaus wives off●red to their idols as the Hebrewes nor yet was he by any extraordinary worke of God smitten blind although God disposed of his blindnesse so that thereby his purpose tooke place concerning Iacob but Isaack was now very old being of 137. yeares and blindnesse is incident to old age as other infirmities of the senses as of the hearing the taste as Barzillai confesseth to David 2 Sam. 19. Moses example whose eyes were not dim at 120. yeares Deut. 34.7 is extraordinary 2. Isaack thinketh his end at hand not as the Hebrewes thinke because he was within five yeares of his mothers age that is 123. Whereas Sarah died at 127. for Isaack was now 137. yeares of age Iacob being now 77. yeare old at what time hee went into Mesopotamia as is shewed before qu. 19. in chap. 25. But Isaack who lived after this 43. yeares doth daily meditate of his end Mercer Perer. 3. Though Isaack was blind and weake in his eyes yet it seemeth his body was of a strong constitution seeing he was able to eat of wild flesh which is of harder digestion Pererius QUEST II. Wherefore Isaack biddeth Esau prepare him meat which he did love Vers. 4. MAke me some savoury meat that my soule may blesse thee c. 1. Some thinke that it was the manner of those dayes that the eldest before he received his fathers blessing did performe some service Lyran. But this no where appeareth in Scripture 2. Some thinke 〈◊〉 this was done that Esau might seeme to deserve his fathers blessing Thom. Anglic. But spirituall blessings such as Isaack bestowed upon Iacob cannot be merited by temporall service 3. Gregory compareth the Jewes to Esau which sought by their owne workes to please God the Gentiles to Iacob that found a more compendious way by faith Hom. 6. in Ezechiel 4. Some by Esaus portion of meat to the which a spirituall blessing is promised doe signifie the duty of the people in paying temporall things for receiving spirituall 5. Rupertus by Isaack promising a blessing for a temporall meat shadoweth forth such Bishops in the Church as doe for temporall rewards sell spirituall blessings 6. But Isaack blind in eyes and blind in affection doth herein shew his partiall love to Esau the Lord in his secret providence over-ruling this action and disposing this occasion to the effecting of his owne purpose QUEST III. Why Isaack preferred Esau for the blessing before Iacob Vers. 4. THat my soule may blesse thee c. 1. Neither is it like as Ramban and other Hebrewes
whatsoever he hath decreed concerning any mans salvation shall stand Calvin For the gifts and calling of God are without repentance Rom. 11.29 Yet must not this doctrine make us secure to sinne presumptuously trusting to Gods election but as the Apostle saith We must worke out our salvation with feare and trembling lest we be circumvented of Sathan and prevented of that which we vainly hoped for Confut. Against the errour of the Novatians THis example of Ruben notwirhstanding his fall restored to his patriarchal dignity doth further confute that error of the Novatians who denied pardon to those which were fallen and refused to receive them into their society and congregation Calvin We see that our Saviour Christ when Perer had thrice denied him yet vouchsafed to receive him to mercy and to confirme him in his Apostleship 6. Places of morall observation 1. Observ. Amendment of life delivereth from dangers Vers. 2. THou said Iacob put away the strange Gods c Iacob being in great danger doth purge and cleanse h●s houshold so the next way to finde deliverance and to obtaine ptotection from God is to amend our life and to renew our hearts and to turne every man from his evill wayes Perer. Heereupon Balaam gave that wicked counsell to put a stumbling blocke before the Israelites to cause them to sinne that they might run into Gods displeasure and be out of his protection 2. Observ. The people must shew themselves willing to be reformed Vers. 4. THey gave unto Iacob all the strange gods Herein appeareth the singular and prompt obedience of Iacobs houshold who are contented to put away their idols iewels and caterings wherein they had so much before delighted Mercer which ●eacheth that the people should shew themselves ready and willing to be reclaimed from their superstitions and corruptions of life as we read that the souldiers and people came unto Iohn and asked him Master what shall we doe Luk. 3. 3. Observ. God striketh feare into mens hearts Vers. 5. THe feare of God was upon the cities Thus God is able to command the affections of men and to smite them with feare where otherwise there is no apparent cause of feare as here the strong and populous cities of Canaan are afraid of Iacob So Rahab confessed to the spies the feare of you is fallen upon us Iosu. 2.9 Thus God is able to deliver his Church whereas no other meanes are at hand by terrifying the hearts of the enemies thereof 4. Observ. It is lawfull and commendable to mourne moderately for the dead Vers. 8. IAcob and his company made such lamentation for the departure of that godly matron Deborah that he called the place the ●ake of lamentation It is not then unlawfull to mourne for the dead nay it is an uncomly thing to shew drie cheekes in the funeralls of parents wives and children as some doe S. Paul forbiddeth not to mourne for the dead but not as they that have no hope 1. Thessal 4. Muscul. 5. Observ. Our ●oyes in this life are mi●ed with sorrow Vers. 19. THus died Rachel Iacob doth not so much rejoyce for the birth of Benjamin as he hath occasion of griefe offered for the losse and death of deare Rachel thus the Lord seeth it to be good to temper our joy with sorrow and therein we see the mutable and changeable condition of this life which affordeth no perpetuall and constant joy Perer. And therefore amidst our joyes it is good to arme our selves against sorrow as Iob in the midst of his prosperous estate did looke for adversity saying The thing which I feared is now come upon me Iob 3.25 6. Observ. One affliction followeth after another WE see further that Iacobs life was a continuall warfare still one temptation followed in the necke of another 1. Dinah was ravished 2. Simeon and Levi put the city to the sword 3. Deborah dieth 4. Then Rachel his beloved wife 5. Then Ruben commiteth incest 6. Ioseph is sold into Egypt 7. Isaack dieth 8. Benjamin is also taken from him to goe into Egypt Thus many are the tentations and tribulations wherewith the Lord trieth his children Calvin We learne that while we live here we should prepare our selves for crosses and afflictions and when we are escaped one to looke presently for another This was Iobs case when one messenger followed at the heeles of another bringing him evill tidings Iob 1. 7. Observ. Godly women may die in childbirth Vers. 18. AS shee was about to yeeld up the ghost c. The Hebrewes note three women in Scripture that died in travaile Rachel the wife of Phinehes the sonne of Eli and Michol David● wife because it is said she had no children till the day of her death but this is a simple conjecture the meaning is that she had no children at all Mercer But we see by this example that even godly women may have Rachels lot to die in travaile and therefore such are not to hee discomforted if it please God that they so end their daies 8. Observ. Great blemishes sometime fall out in the Church of God Vers. 21. RVben lay with his fathers concubine c. It need not then seeme strange if such blemishes fall out sometime in the Church of God and families of Saints as Ruben here committeth incest in Iacobs house and it seemeth Bilha the mother of two tribes in Israel was consenting thereunto so among the Corinthians a young man had his fathers wife 1 Cor. 5.1 Mercer CHAP. XXXVI 1. The Method and Contents IN this chapter the externall state and happinesse of Esau is set forth first by his polygamie and marriage of many wives with the fruits thereof his children and the adjunctes thereunto his riches vers 1. to vers 8. Secondly by his genealogie where his children and nephewes are rehearsed and described 1. By their nativitie of what wives he had them vers 8. to 15. 2. By their dignity vers 15. to 20. Thirdly by the estate of his country where first the old inhabitants the H●rites are described vers 20. to 32. then the new inhabitants the Edomites first governed by Kings vers 31. to 40. then by Dukes againe vers 40. to the end 2. The divers readings v. 2. Eliba Sebagon S. A●libama Sibeon cat v. 5. Ieul Ieglom S. Iehus Iaalon cat v. 6. all the bodies of his house S. the soules of his house caet he went out of the land of Canaan S. into another country H. C. G. P. into a country away B. into the region of Seir T. from his brother Iacob H. from the face of his brother S. B.G.P. because of his brother C. before the comming of his brother T. from the face of his brother heb v. 8. Iacob dwelt in the land where his father dwelt in Canaan S. v. 11. K●nez and Ch●ra H. Kenes cater v. 13. Zaresome S. Zerach Sammah cat v. 14. The sonnes of Libemas the daughter of Enam S. of A●libamah the daughter of Ana caeter
handle them roughly to bring them to knowledge and confession of their treachery against him so Christian governors should not put the Iewes to death but use them hardly by laying taxes and impositions upon them that at the length they may be brought to repentance for their blasphemies against Christ as it is in the Psalme Slay them not lest my people forget it but scatter them abroad by thy power Psal. 59.12 Rupert lib. 9. comment in Gen. cap. 4. 2. Doct. Where the feare of God is not there can be no true vertue Vers. 18. THis doe and live for I feare God c. Ioseph biddeth them bee secure of his sincere and true dealing with him because he feared God so that true religion is the fountaine of vertue and honest dealing they therefore that feare not God may for a while make a semblance and shew of honestie but it cannot be in truth where the ground of true religion is wanting where therfore the feare of God is not we cannot expect any vertuous action as Abraham reasoned with himselfe when he sojourned in Gerar The feare of God is not in this place and they will slay me for my wives sake Gen. 20.12 3. Doct. The guilt of sinne remaineth when the act is past Vers. 21. THey said one to another we have verily sinned against our brother By this wee learne that although the act of sinne be done and past yet the guilt and conscience of sinne may continue as here the sinne which they had committed against Ioseph 23. yeares before is revived Muscul. As the Lord said to Cain If thou doest not well sinne lieth at the doore Gen. 4.7 It lieth lurking in the doore of the conscience ready upon every occasion to assault us 4. Doct. The author of affliction it commeth not by chance Vers. 28. WHat is this that God hath done unto us These men having a guilty conscience thinke that God meeteth with them in every corner yet this good perswasion they have that nothing hapned to them by chance as this the finding of their mony in their sacks mouth but they ascribe all to Gods providence they make him the authour of their crosses and affliction Calvin As David in like manner saith that the Lord bid Shemei curse him 2 Sam. 16.11 5. Places of Confutation 1. Confut. Saint Pauls prophecie of some that should give eare to the doctrine of devils fulfilled in the Synagogue of Rome Vers. 6. THey bowed their face to the ground before him Here Iosephs brethren unwittingly doe fulfill Iosephs prophecie that they should fall downe unto him and doe him reverence like as the Jewes did ignorantly accomplish many things in the passion of Christ which were foretold by the Prophets So also they which in these dayes give eare to the doctrines of devils in the Romish and Antichristian Synagogue doe fulfill the prophecie of the Apostle 1 Tim. 4.1 some of them of ignorance and simplicity but their blinde guides of malice and obstinacie against the truth Muscul. 2. Confut. Against Purgatory Vers. 8. IOseph knew his brethren but they knew not him Augustine propounding this question how it came to passe that all this time of Iosephs prosperity he sent no word to Iacob but he continued still mourning for his sonne giveth this reason Quoniam sine istis minutis peccatis Iacob esse non potuit volens Deus illa parva peccata in hoc seculo igne tribulationis consumere c. Because Iacob could not be without some small sinnes God would by this meanes purge them with the fire of tribulation in this world serm 82. de tempor If small sinnes then which they call veniall bee purged in this world then there is nothing remaining to be cleansed in purgatory fire afterward which they say serveth to the purging not of mortall but veniall sinnes and indeed Iob well sheweth that our purgatory fire is in the affliction and sorrow of this life where he saith Exibo ut aurum I shall come forth like gold Iob 23.10 And the Prophet saith That the Lords fire is in Sion and his furnace at Ierusalem Isa. 31.9 it is not then in hell or Purgatory I much muse that Pererius alleaging this sentence of Augustine could not perceive how strongly it maketh against Purgatory 3. Confut. Against the swearing by Saints Vers. 15. BY the life of Pharaoh ye shall not goe hence c. Thomas Aquinas justifieth this fact of Ioseph in swearing by the life of Pharaoh and would warrant thereby the swearing by creatures as namely by Saints for an oath saith he is made two wayes by execration when some creature is produced that God should shew his judgement upon if one sweare falsly as when one sweareth by his head or such like the other way is by contestation either directly when the name of God is mentioned or indirectly when some creature is named in whom the truth should be manifested so we sweare by the Gospell wherein Gods truth is expressed by Saints that beleeved in the truth so Ioseph sware by Pharaoh a minister of Gods truth and justice Thom. 2.2 qu. 89. ar 6. Con●ra 1. This subtill disputer doth justifie that kinde of oath which is directly forbidden by our Saviour himselfe as to sweare by the head Matth. 5.36 Neither shalt thou sweare by thine head wee may justly suspect him in the rest when at the first he dare controll the holy doctrine of the Gospell 2. Men use not to sweare by the Gospell but upon it when they lay their hands upon the book for so we reade that the Saints have used some visible ceremonie and rite in taking an oath as Abrahams servant layed his hand upon his masters thigh Gen. 24.3 Iacob did sweare unto Laban upon an heape of stones but neither did the one sweare by his masters thigh nor the other by the stones but by the name of God Gen. 24.3 Gen. 31.53 Iacob sware by the feare of his father Isaack after the same manner is a booke used as a visible object for further evidence in the ministring of an oath but Saints are neither visible nor present and therefore the case is not alike 3. It is also directly forbidden to sweare by any but by the Lord Deut. 6.13 Thou shalt feare the Lord thy God and serve him and sweare by his name and though onely be not here found yet our Saviour so interpreteth Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve Matth. 4.10 and so consequently by him onely shalt thou sweare 4. Concerning Iosephs act I have shewed before quest 9. that although it may be somewhat qualified and extenuated yet it cannot be justified but it savoureth somewhat of the Egyptian manners and seemeth to be against that place Zephan 1.5 where the Prophet reproveth those that sweare by the Lord and sweare by Malcham that is their King whether they made the idoll or a mortall man their King both abuses are here reproved 6. Places of
reverentiae vita jucunda for the honour of reverence a pleasant life pro honore fidei vita opulenta for the honour of faithfulnesse in recompencing our parents a plentifull life 3. Thomas Aquin understandeth here three kinde of lives Vitam naturalem vitam gratiae vitam glorie The naturall life the life of grace the life of glory He that honoureth his parents shall have both the grace and favour of God in this life and glory in the next as it is in Ecclesiast 3.9 Honour thy father and thy mother in deed and in word that thou maist have Gods blessing Another benefit is habere sibi silios gratos to have good and thankfull children Hee that honoureth his father shall have joy of his owne children Ecclesiastic 3.6 A fourth benefit is habere famam lau dabilem to have a good and commendable fame by honouring of parents Ecclesiastic 3.12 A mans glory commeth by his fathers honour The fift is habere divitia● to have riches Ecclesiast 3.5 He that honoureth his mother is as one that gathereth treasure Thom. in opuscul 4. Ecclesiasticus goeth further and sheweth how this duty of honouring parents is rewarded with spirituall blessings as namely these two first forgivenesse of sinne He that honoureth his father his sinnes shall be forgiven him chap. 3.4 And the hearing of his prayers vers 6. Who so honoureth his father c. when hee maketh his prayer he shall be heard And all this may well bee comprehended under this blessing as the Apostle expoundeth it Ephes. 6.3 That it may be well with thee and that thou maist live long in the earth c. Whatsoever then belongeth to a mans welfare and well being in this life is here promised QUEST XXI This promise of long life did not only concerne the Iewes THis promise of long life and of other blessings thereby understood seemeth first to concerne the Jewes because mention is made specially of that land which the Lord promised them namely the land of Canaan and because they were an obstinate people disobedient and churlish to their parents as it may appeare by that evill use which continued untill our Saviour Christs time which hee reproveth Mark 7.12 therefore the Lord intended specially to allure them to this duty by this promise of long life Yet this blessing is extended generally unto all that shall performe this duty to their parents which is shewed by these reasons 1. Quia tota terra à Deo benedicta est All the earth is blessed of God as it is in the Psalme The earth is the Lords and all that therein is Psal. 24. and therefore wheresoever the Lord giveth long life it is his blessing Simler 2. Quia ●sta mandata erant moralia obligabant omnes homines c. Because these Commandements are morall and so binde all men therefore the reward for the obedience to these morall precepts belongeth unto all Tostat. qu. 20. 3. God giveth these promises ut sint in 〈◊〉 futurae terra viventiam that they may be for a type of the land of the living to come Lippoman So then though the land of the terrestriall Canaan were peculiar to the Jewes yet the celestiall Canaan belongeth to all the faithfull then consequently the promise of long life here a type of everlasting life there appertaineth likewise to them all 4. Saint Paul applieth this promise generally to all Ephes. 6.2 Basting QUEST XXII Whether long life simply be a blessing and to be desired BUt it will bee objected that this promise of long life here is no such blessing seeing this life is full of misery and of many incumbrances and therefore Saint Paul desired to be dissolved and to be with Christ. 1. Hereunto some make this answer that this promise of long life in respect of them that lived under the Law was a blessing because they imagined that before the comming of Christ they went not immediatly to heaven but to Limbus Patrum which they imagined to be in the brim of hell Contra. 1. But though it were admitted that the Saints under the Law went not immediatly to heaven which is notwithstanding contrary to the Scriptures Luk. 16. for Abrahams bosome whither the faithfull went before Christ was no part or member of hell even in Augustines judgement because it was quietis habitatio foelicitatis sinus an habitation of rest and place of happinesse Epist. 99. yet their state in that place which they imagine to be free and exempt from the labours and sorrowes of this life should have beene better than their condition in this life 2. But what say they then to this promise renewed in the new Testament by S. Paul where it is evident that the Apostle speaketh of a terrene and temporall blessing which is performed in this life 3. Saint Paul in wishing to be dissolved sheweth that everlasting life is chiefly and most of all to be desired yet so as this life also which is a degree unto that may bee desired also to the good pleasure of God for otherwise the Apostle in the same place would not have beene in a straight not certaine what to desire whether to be dissolved or to remaine still in life for the good of Christs Church Simler 2. Therefore thus rather this objection is to be answered 1. That notwithstanding the many troubles and miseries of this life it is to be esteemed in it selfe as a gift and blessing from God quòd autem vita misera est nostro vitto accidit and in that our life is miserable it is by our fault Gallas fit per accidens c. so that is by an accident that this life is full of misery not of it selfe Vrsin 2. The miseries of this life cannot extinguish this chiefe benefit quod creati sunt homines foventur in spem immortalitatis that men were created and are nourished to the hope of immortality Calvin 3. God hath promised unto his children to mitigate and allay the calamities of this life and further Celebratio Dei in hac vita tantum bonum est c. The setting forth of Gods praise in this life is such ● benefit as that it may countervaile all the miseries of this life Vrsin QUEST XXIII Why wicked and disobedient children are suffered to live long IT will be againe objected that many times the wicked and disobedient live long and therefore this promise of long life is not peculiar unto the faithfull and obedient children Answ. 1. Exempla pauca non evertunt regulam c. a few examples doe not overthrow a generall rule for the most part it falleth out so that the wicked and disobedient to their parents are punished as Prov. 20.20 He that curseth his father or mother his light shall be put out in obscure darknesse and Prov. 30.17 The eye that mocketh his father c. the Ravens of the vally shall picke it out Vrsin 2. If God doe give long life unto the wicked it is either of mercy to
death The Romane lawes followed Moses president in punishing of adulterers so did some other nations beside The King of Babel burnt Zedekiah and Ahab two false Prophets with fire for committing adultery Ierem. 29.23 Among the Egyptians the man taken in adulterie was beaten with a thousand stripes the woman had her nose cut off Diodor. Sicul. lib. 2. cap. 3. The Germanes used to set the adulteresse naked before her kindred and cut off her haire and then her husband d●ave her before him through the street beating her with cudgels Cornel. Tacit. de morib German The Cumeans placed the adulteresse in the Market place upon a stone in open view that shee might be derided and scorned of all and then set her upon an asse and ever after shee was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an asse rider and the stone they abhorred as an uncleane thing Plutar. tom 1. in quastionib Graci● These or some other grievous punishment may be imposed upon the odious crime of adulterie where it is not recompensed with losse of life but to dallie with so great iniquitie and either to winke at it or to let it passe with a light and superficiall checke is displeasing to God and offensive to all good men See more of this question how farre Moses Judicials doe now binde 1 qu. generall in Exod. QUEST X. Whether it be lawfull for the husband to kill his wife taken in adulterie BUt whereas the ancient Romane lawes permitted the husband to kill his wife taken in adulterie as appeareth in the declamations of Seneca how a man having lost both his hands in warre comming home and taking his wife with another in adulterie commanded his sonne to kill them both and for refusing hee did abdicate and renounce him for his sonne Some would justifie this also as lawfull pretending the example of Phinehes that stroke the adulterer and adulteresse thorow at once Contra. 1. Though the ancient lawes did not punish the husband that killed his wife taken in adulterie yet that act was not thereby made lawfull but the law did therein beare with the just griefe of the husband 2. And though the lawes of men should tolerate it yet before God he committeth murther because he doth it in his rage and in his owne revenge 3. But the last●r Romane lawes gave no such libertie for the man to kill his wife but onely the adulterer with whom shee is taken in her husbands house for by this meanes if men hated their wives they might seeke occasion to be rid of them and if he were a Noble personage with whom the woman was found it was not lawfull for the husband to kill him but only to keepe him foure and twentie houres prisoner at home untill he brought the witnesses 4. Phinehes example is altogether unlike for beside that he was stirred by the extraordinarie motion of the Spirit if this president should be followed it might be lawfull for any man to kill the adulterer and the adulteresse and not for the husband onely for both of these whom Phinehes killed were strangers unto him the man was of another tribe and the woman a Midia●i●esse ex Simler● QUEST XI Simple fornication whether a breach of this Commandement THou shalt not commit adulterie c. 1. Some are of opinion that simplex fornicatio single fornication which is soluti cum soluta of a single man with a single woman is not here forbidden Oleaster Hee granteth that fornication with a woman quae esset alteri vel omnibus exposita which was either defiled by another or common to many was forbidden to the Israelites as Deut. 22.21 Shee that played the where in her fathers house should be put to death but otherwise it was not in this Commandement therefore he thinketh adultery only to be forbidden according to the native signification of the word na●ph which signifieth only to commit adultery Contra. 1. But I rather preferre the opinion of Aben Ezrah a learned Rabbin who thinketh O●●em concubitum qui non est viri cum uxore sua hîc esse prohibitum That all companying with a woman beside of the man with the wife is here forbidden for seeing single fornication is against the Law of nature as Iudah before the Law was written adjudged Thamar for her whoredome to the fire Gen. 38. as Oleast himselfe confesseth it must also of necessity be held to be a breach of the Morall law which is grounded upon the Law of nature 2. And as for the use of the word Augustine well sheweth by the interpretation of our blessed Saviour Matth· 5.9 that even adultery is a kinde of fornication Hee that dismisseth his wife except for fornication causeth her to commit adulterie the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fornication which is taken for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 adulterie Beza in hunc locum 2. But that single fornication even betweene parties both unmarried and unbetrothed is forbidden in this Commandement it shall bee manifested by these reasons 1. Augustine thus argueth 1. If that kinde of fornication be not forbidden here Vbi sit illa prohibita in decalogo utrum inveniri possit ignore Whether it can be found prohibited elsewhere in the decalogue I am ignorant c. But it is certaine that it is either forbidden here or no where in the morall law 2. Againe Si furti nomine bene intelligitur omnis illicita usurpatio rei alienae c. if under the name of theft is well understood all unlawfull usurping of other mens goods Profectò nomine moechiae omnis illicitus concubitus c. by the same reason also by the name of adulterie all unlawfull companie with a woman is forbidden August quaest 71. in Exod. 3. Further Augustine in another place thus reasoneth Say not Vxorem non habeo c. I have no wife and therefore I sinne not against her neither doe I covet another mans wife ad meretricem eo I goe unto an harlot In Deum pecccas cujus imaginem per diffluentias libidinis in te violasti c. Thou sinnest against God whose image thou hast violated in thy selfe by thy overflowing lust 4. Againe Dominus quiscit quid tibi utile sit uxorem concessit hoc pracepit hoc jussit The Lord who knoweth what is best for thee hath granted thee a wife that thou shouldest not wander in lust this he commandeth thee to doe if thou canst not containe thy selfe c. Therefore the fornicator in giving himselfe to lust and refusing the remedie which God hath appointed therein offendeth against God 2. Thom. Aquin. addeth these arguments 1. A rigno Dei non excluditur aliquis nisi per peccatum mortale c. one is not excluded the Kingdome of heaven but by a mortall sinne but fornication excludeth out of the Kingdome of God 1 Cor. 6.9 therefore it is a deadly sinne 2. Licet non detur corpus uxoris datur tamen corpus Christi c. although he have not a wife given