Selected quad for the lemma: love_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
love_n let_v lord_n sin_n 4,896 5 4.6771 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 46 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

againe againe vpon the same point that at least by his importunity he might bring thē to repentance Whence we are to learne that it is not sufficient either in the publike ministery of the word or in priuate conference to reprehend and beate downe sinne once onely but considering how many shifts and deuices the hypocrisie of mans heart findeth to hide excuse and extenuate their sins and how soone they forget and cast behinde them the remembrance of their sinnes and Gods iudgements due vnto them it must not be thought much either of publike or priuate persons oftentimes to vse the same admonitions and reprehensions and to denounce againe and againe the same iudgements of God against the same sinnes which are not as yet forsaken by true repentance Secondly wee may obserue the infinite mercy of God who when his spouse the Church had innumerable times Gods mercy in inuiting the people to repentance committed spirituall whoredome with idols and professed her filthinesse like an impudent harlot openly to all the world yet laboureth to bring her to repentance that so hee might receiue her to grace and fouour againe for to this end he causeth her sinnes to be laid before her and the diuorce betweene him and her to be denounced not because he hated her or was delighted with her reiection and destruction but that she might forsake her idolatry which so impudently she professed and returne vnto him her Lord husband that so he might receiue her to grace and pardon her former wickednesse And therefore when we heare our sinnes sharply reproued and the iudgements of God denounced let vs not thinke that this is done for want of loue either in God or in his Ministers but to this end that wee should hereby bee brought to true repentance and so bee receiued into Gods grace and fauour Thirdly out of the metaphors and borrowed speeches here vsed we may obserue that the sinne of vncleannesse is Of the fornication of painted faces and naked breasts not onely committed in fact but that also there is a fornication of the face and an adultery of the breasts when as harlots with glancing and wanton lookes by painting of their faces and laying out of their breasts doe not onely by these signes testifie the adultery and vncleannesse of their hearts but also with these baits of lust indeuour to allure others to commit filthinesse and to inflame their hearts with the fire of vnlawfull concupiscence Whereby may appeare how common this sinne of adultery and vncleannesse is in our times wherein the signes and meanes thereof do so abound seeing not onely those who are harlots by profession but euen such as would be reputed pure virgins and chaste wiues shew these outward signes of their inward filthinesse and vse these baits to catch the foolish in the nets of vncleannes by painting their faces setting forth thēselues with adulterate beauty and by laying out their breasts after a whorish manner to be seene and touched for is it likely that those who lay thē out to the shew would haue them only seen Neither hath this corruption of manners entred into the court alone where wantonnesse and immodesty challenge vnto themselues a place by the right of prescription and long custome but it is crept also into the City and Country amongst those that should be modest virgins and graue matrons and examples of sobriety vnto others Euen here naturall beauty is hid with a painted vizard and naked breasts are laid out to the view if at least they may be called naked which are commonly couered with false colours or vncouered when as they are masked in a net But as there is no sin so vile which maketh not some kind of Apologie for it selfe so this against which I inueigh wanteth An excuse of vaine women answered not her excuses for whē those who are vain wanton in their attires haue their immodesty laid to their charge they are ready to say that whatsoeuer they seeme in shew yet their hearts are chaste and honest But to these I reply that if they haue the hearts of honest and chaste matrons what haue they to doe with the habit of an harlot why doe they Ezra 3 9. disguise themselues vnder the vizard of a false beauty vnlesse they meant to deceiue and allure why do they make shew of their wares vnlesse they would offer thē to sale why do they display the banners of lust vnlesse they meant to be at defiance with chastity and all honesty why doe they play the hypocrits by appearing that they are not if they be honest in deed why should they seeme harlots in shew if they be dishonest in shew and truth why doe they slander and disgrace the name of honesty and chastity by intitling themselues vnto it In a word if either they are pure virgins or chaste matrons and would haue others so to iudge of them let them take away their fornications from their face and their adulteries from betweene their breast But they further answer that though in their owne iudgement they like not of these practises yet they yeelde vnto A second excuse taken away frō those who paint their faces and discouer their breasts them in regard of the fashion because they must be like others of their sort and ranke To which I answere that if this be a fashion it is the fashion of harlots who first inuented it and most cōmonly practise it and therefore why should this moue any that are honest women to imbrace it not rather to detest it that we are commanded by God not to fashion our selues to the world nor to follow a multitude in that which is euill that if they will follow the fashion they must set themselues to worke wickednesse seeing no fashion is more common that those who for fashions sake are thus immodest and impudent would become farre worse if it were the fashion that those who professe themselues Christians should fashion themselues according to the example of those who are modest sober and religious and not of the wanton and lasciuious for otherwise they will plainely discouer themselues that their hearts are corrupt and wicked seeing they like and imbrace rather the fashion of prophane worldlings then of the faithfull and vertuous And lastly that if they sinne for company they are like for company sake to suffer the punishment of sinne in hell fire But they will say that they doe not thus adorne themselues A third excuse taken away either to shew their owne lust or to prouoke it in others but that their beautie which in it selfe is good and commendable may be liked and praised of the beholders To this I answer that vn● si qua placet culta puellasat est graue Propert. lib. 1. eleg eleg 2. matrons are to thinke themselues beautifull enough when they please and content their husbands that by these wanton and lasciuious ornaments they doe not more commend
Lord said vnto Verse 1 me goe yet and loue a woman beloued of her husband and was an harlot according to the loue of the Lord towards the children of Israell yet they looked to other Gods loued the wine bottles In which words the loue of God is typically propounded The exposition and afterwards plainely expounded it is typically shadowed vnder another vision not much vnlike vnto the former Chap. 1. 2. wherein the Lord commaundeth the Prophet to loue an adulterous and vngratefull harlot not that indeed he would haue him to set his affection vpon such an one seeing it was a thing vnlawfull and dishonest for the Prophet of God to loue an Adultresse being another mans wife but that hee hauing receiued this commaundement by vision might propound it as a Parable vnto the people that hereby they who were dull of conceit might see both the loue and mercy of God and their owne wickednesse and vnworthynesse represented as in a cleare glasse or plaine picture As though he should say go yet againe vnto the Israelites and propound this parable vnto them that the Lord is like vnto a husband who continueth to loue his wife though she neglecting his loue and forgetting his benefits haue forsaken him committed whoredome with her louers and giuen ouer her selfe vnto all voluptuous pleasures But let vs come to the words more particularly And the Lord said vnto mee that is after I had deliuered the former Prophecie the Lord againe spake vnto me by vision saying goe yet againe that is content not thy selfe to haue spoken once of my mercy loue and gracious benefites and of the wickednesse and vnworthinesse of this people but againe repeate and reiterate these things vnto them that so eyther they may be moued at the second hearing or that their obstinacie and hardnesse of heart may be manifested and they left without excuse And loue a woman beloued of her husband and was an harlot that is by propounding vnto them this Parable shew them that I am a gracious Husband in that notwithstanding their manifold whoredomes I continue to loue them and withall conuince them of their grose wickednesse and vnthankfulnesse in that all my loue and gracious benefits will not restraine them from committing Idolatrie and spirituall adultery with false Gods In which Parable vnder the husband wee are to vnderstand God himselfe who loued his people from all eternitie and continued constant in his loue euen after the people had broken their mariage faith plighted vnto him in mount Sinai and committed spirituall whoredome with false Gods By the wife wee are to vnderstand the people of Israell and not the people of Iuda as some haue imagined for first in this first verse here mention is made of the children of Israell and secondly it is not true of the Iewes that they should be without Magistrates and gouernement for the Scepter might not depart from Iuda till the Messias came Gen. 49. 10 Gen. 49. 10. But is was verified in the ten tribes who had no Magistrates of their owne in the time of their captiuitie Yea but the ten Tribes were diuorced from God excluded out of the couenant and for euer debarred of mercy how then could it be said of them that God loued them as his spouse and that they should being conuerted seeke the Lord I answere that we are not to vnderstand these words generally of the whole people of Israell but of those onely amongest them which belonged to Gods election for of these alone it could truely be said that God loued them and that being conuerted they should seeke the lord And vnderstanding it of them we may easily answere the former obiections for though they were excluded out of the couenant of works yet this hindreth them not from being admitted into the couenant of grace though they were debarred of mercy in respect of their deliuerance out of a temporall captiuitie yet they obtained mercy in regard of their spirituall freedom out of the captiuitie of sinne and Sathan though they were for euer exiled out of the earthly Canaan yet being reconciled vnto God in Christ they might neuerthelesse become Citizens of the heauenly Ierusalem Lastly by the Prophet who is commaunded by God to loue this Adultresse beloued of her husband wee are to vnderstand Iesus Christ who loued these elect Israelites which were exculded out of the couenant of works and marryed them vnto himselfe by making with them the new couenant of grace and this appeareth in that hee willeth him to loue her with such loue as the Lord loued her namely with a constant most infinite and eternall loue which properly can be ascribed to no other sauing to our Sauiour Iesus Christ alone And this is the meaning of this parable The exposition followeth According to the loue of the Lord towards the children of Israell yet or when as they looked to other Gods and loued the wine bottles In which words the Lords loue is amplyfied by the wickednesse and vnworthinesse of the people and the peoples sinne aggrauated by the loue and goodnesse of God towards them The Lords loue is hereby commended in that he did not onely loue this people whilest they loued him kept their coniugall faith and serued him according to his word but euen when they dispised him forsooke him violated their faith and committed spirituall whoredome with false Gods the which he could neuer haue done had not his loue beene infinite most constant and eternall Secondly their sinne and wickednesse is exceedingly aggrauated in that they were so vngratefull and obstinate in their Idolatry that neyther Gods loue nor all his manifold benefits which he had multiplyed vpon them as pledges of his endlesse loue could moue them to loue him againe nor containe them in their fidelitie nor restraine them from committing spirituall fornication with false Gods If a wife doe not loue her husband who loatheth her and behaueth himselfe towards her cruelly and inhumanely though this doth not altogether take away her fault yet it doth much extenuate and excuse it but if she loue not such a husband as entirely loueth her nor will be restrained by his great kindnes and manifold benefits from breaking her faith and following her louers her fault is so haynous that it admitteth of no excuse but such a louing husband was the Lord to this Church of Israell and such a rebellious and vnfaithfull wife was she to him and therefore her wickednesse was so much the more grieuous and intollerable But let vs come to the particular branches of their sin the first whereof is expressed in these words Yet they looked to other Gods by which phrase with the Hebrewes is vsually signified loue and desire hope and trust reposed in that thing which they are said to looke after Wheras therefore they are said to looke after other Gods the meaning is that they set their hearts and affections vpon them and hoped and trusted in them and in these respects
appeareth Ezech. 45. 11. and the Epha was almost a pottle lesse then our bushell whereby is signified first the slauish condition of the people in their captiuity for Barley was eaten onely of slaues and captiues and not of free women secondly their pouerty which is noted by the small quantitie of this course fare alotted vnto them as their onely sustenance for a long time so that their fare was both course and sparing thirdly here is imployed the Lords loue in that he gaue them some maintenance for the preseruation of life and but a sparing measure of course foode that hereby hee might humble and reclaime them The meaning then of this part of the vision is as the Prophet bought the adultresse so shall the people be bought and sould and liue like slaues and seruants as he bought her at a low base rate euen for halfe the price of a seruant so they shal be basely esteemed and meanly valued more like vassels and slaues then the spouse of God as he doth not giue vnto her Wheate but Barley and that in small quantitie so the Lord will afflict them with course dyet whereof they shall not eate vnto saciety but sparingly by measure as if the Lord should haue said seeing you haue abused your liberty vnto licentiousnes and when the reigne was laied on your owne necks haue runne away from me like vnrulie colts therefore I will bridle and curbe you in with captiuitie and make you to returne vnto mee seeing euery base trifle hath moued you to sell your selues to be slaues to sinne I will also cause you like slaues to be bought and sould at vile rates seeing you haue abused your honourable estate vnto which I called you namely to be my Church and people and haue thereby bene puffed vp in pride I will humble you with your enimies contemptible disdainefull vsage of you seeing your plentie and prosperitie hath made you to forget and neglect me I will rub your memorie with pouerty and want but yet I will not leaue you comfortlesse for I will not vtterly forsake you and suffer you to perish in your penurie but will allow vnto you some poore maintenance and by my hard vsage I will not destroy you but buy you that is reclaime and reduce you againe vnder my gouernment And this is the meaning of the words The instructions hence to be gathered are these First wee may obserue that the Lord approueth his loue to the people of Israell by Afflictions a signe of Gods loue those afflictions which hee layeth on them to the end that he may reclaime them from their sinnes For as there is no greater signe of Gods hatred and our rejection then when the Lord giueth vs ouer vnto our selues to doe what we list to prosper in our sinnes and without any checke to run forward in the wayes of wickednesse to our destruction so can there not be a more euident signe of his loue then when like a carefull father he correcteth vs that he may not disinherite vs and maketh the pleasures of sinne loathsome vnto vs by mingling them with the Wormewood of afflictions And hence it is that the Apostle sayth that whom the Lord loueth he chasteneth and he scourgeth euery sonne whom he receiueth Heb. 12. 6. Apoc. 3. 19. Heb. 12. 6. So Apoc. 3. 19. For the Lord aymeth not at our hurt and punishment but at our good and profit that we might be pertakers of his holinesse Heb. 12. 10. And Heb. 12. 10. when wee are iudged we are chastened of the Lord because wee should not be condemned of the world as it is 1. Cor. 11. 32. 1. Cor. 11. 32. The Lord bridleth vs with afflictions that we may not run headlong in the course of sinne and like a good scholemaister he correcteth vs that he may teach vs in his wayes and make vs more diligently apply our lessons And this Dauid well knew by his owne experience and therefore he sayth Psal 119. 67. Before I was afflicted I went astray but Psa 119. 67. 71 now haue I kept thy word And verse 71. It is good for me that I haue beene afflicted that I may learne thy statutes When our heauenly Physition dyeteth vs from the pleasures of sinne which we loue better then out meate and drincke giueth vs the bitter pils and loathsome potions of afflictions it is a signe that he intendeth the cure and that there is some hope of our recouery but when he letteth vs haue whasoeuer we lust after and letteth our appetite bee the onely rule of our diet it is a shrewde token that he hath giuen vs ouer as being a desperate cure when our father suffereth vs to goe on in all wicked and licentious courses it is a signe he neglecteth vs and meaneth to disinherite vs when our Lord and maister lets vs neglect all dueties without controlement and suffers vs to goe on in our stubbornenesse and disobedience without any reproofe or correction hee makes it manifest that his purpose is to turne vs out of his seruice and when he lets vs feed at will in the pleasant pastures of sinne it is more then probable that hee hath destinated vs to the slaughter The vse which we are to make hereof is first that wee The vses faint not in our afflictions imagining that they are signes of Gods hatred and our rejection but beare them with patience considering the Lord hereby sheweth his loue and care ouer vs especially let vs be not onely patient but also ioyfull and thankfull when the Lord crosseth vs in our sins and restraineth vs from going forward in any course of wickednesse for such afflictions are blessed which preserue vs from Gods eternall curse and that is a sweet chastisement which keepes vs from being condemned with the world Secondly seeing the Lord in loue correcteth vs that hee may reclaime vs from our sinnes let vs when we suffer any affliction labour to finde out our sinnes bewayle them and turne from them vnto the Lord by true repentance and then the same loue which moued the Lord to correct vs will also moue him when we are reformed to ease vs of our affliction neyther will he cause vs any longer to drink these bitter potions when hee hath already recouered vs of our health Thirdly wee learne to iudge charitably of those whom the Lord exerciseth with afflictions and not to imagine that because any are extraordinarily afflicted therefore they are more then ordinary sinners as the Iewes did Luke 13. 1. 2 Luk. 13. 1. 2. And the Barbarians Act. 28. 4. For then we shall condemne Act. 28. 4. the generation of Gods children Psal 73. 15. Yea euen the Son Psal 73. 15. of God himselfe as it is Esa 53. 3. 4. Esa 53. 3. 4. Secondly wee may here obserue what fearefull punishments The punnishment of Idolatrie the Lord inflicteth vpon those Idolaters whom hee purposeth to conuert and saue first
infinitely more indebted The third thing to be obserued is that the Lord condemneth Vngratefulnes condemned as a great sinne this vngratefull abuse of his blessings and benefits as a great sinne not onely in this but also in many other places So Esay 1. 2. 3. he condemneth it as a vice worse then brutish Esay 1. 2. 3. 5. 5. Esay 5. 5. he complaineth that when he had done what hee could for his vineyard yet still it brought forth wilde grapes so Ezech. 16. 16. 17. that the people abused his blessings Ezech. 16. 16. as meanes to further them in Idolatry So Hos 10. 1. Hos 10. 1. and 13. 6. and 13. 6. But as this sinne is in all men grieuous so it is in Gods Ministers most haynous both because the blessings which they injoy being extraordinary doe require extraordinarie thankfulnesse and also in that they are daylie informed out of Gods word both whence they haue these benefites and that the Lord for all onely requireth a thankfull heart wee hauing nothing else to returne vnto him Now this vnthankfull abuse of Gods benefits vnto sinne Ingratitude diuers wayes committed is committed diuers wayes First when as wee doe not acknowledge God the authour of the benefits which we injoy but ascribe them vnto some other things as vnto Idols an example vvhereof vvee haue in the Israelites Ierem. 44. 17. Ier. 44. 17. Hos 2. 5. 8. Hos 2. 5. 8. or vnto a mans owne wit power industrie and labour an example whereof vvee haue in the King of Ashur Esay 10. 13. and in Nebuchadnezzar Dan 4. 27. Esay 10. 13. Dan. 4. 27. Hab. 1. 16. and this is to sacrifice to our owne nets as is is Hab. 1. 16. Secondly when as knowing God to be the authour of the blessings which we enjoy we doe not praise him with thankfull hearts nor imploy his gifts to the aduancement of his glory which are the chiefe ends for which he hath bestowed them Psal 105. 45. Psal 105. 45. Lastly vvhen as vve abuse Gods blessings as meanes and motiues to with-draw vs from performing the dueties which God requireth of vs and to incite vs to the committing of the contrary vices As vvhen by Gods blessings vvee are made more slack and negligent in the dueties of his worship and seruice as those are who to maintaine state come not to the assemblies of Gods Saints to heare the Word and call vpon his name when as injoying prosperitie we be moued thereby to with-draw our hearts from God and to set them vpon the world when as honours make vs neglect him who hath aduanced vs when as riches like thorns choak in vs the seede of the word so as Gods spirituall graces cannot spring in vs when as injoying pleasures we wallow in these worldly delights and spend that precious time wholy in them which should bee bestowed in Gods seruice when as by worldly prosperitie we are made more proud insolent disdainefull impatient reuengefull cruell vnmercifull voluptuous spending we care not what vpon back belly and vpon the filthy lusts of the flesh And this is the chiefe and most vngratefull abuse of Gods benefits when as we doe not onely not glorifie him but dishonour and injure him in his owne gifts as if the poore Subject being inriched by his Prince should imploy his riches in furnishing himselfe for the seruice of the Princes enimie or as if the wife hauing from her husband abundance of all things should abuse his gifts for the hiring and rewarding of filthy adulterers as Ezech. 16. 16 17. 33. The ingratitude of this land it is Ezech. 16. 16. 17. 33. The vse of this doctrine serueth to conuince the greatest part of our land of this sinne of vnthankfulnesse seeing the more the Lord multiplyeth his benefits of peace prosperitie and abundance of all good things the more we multiply our sins abusing his grace vnto wantonnesse and his manifold blessings as arguments to continue vs in our impenitencie securitie and hardnesse of hart For are not those most colde in all dueties of religion who most abound with these benefites doe they not choake the seed of the Word in the most and make it vnfruitfull and in stead of louing and praysing God the more for his blessings doe not men hereby grovv louers of the world and forgetfull of God doe not those vvho abound most in wealth honours and pleasures imploy all to the dishonour of God and the seruice of sinne and sathan spending Gods gifts in pride excessiue brauerie surfetting drunkennesse and filthy lusts of the flesh so that the Lord may in our time justly take vp this complaint of England that the more he hath increased it in his benefits the more it hath sinned against him The last thing to be obserued is the punishment of this vngratefull abuse of Gods blessings and that is wheresoeuer The punishment of ingratitude Gods gifts are thus abused by any there he will strip them of them and not onely so but will also bring vpon them the contrarie euils as in this place because they abused their honour and aduancement hee doth not onely threaten to take it from them but to turne it into shame and reproach So he threatneth his vineyard that because in stead of the sweete grapes of righteousnesse it brought forth nothing but the sower grapes of sinne after he had bestowed all his cost and labour about it he would not onely abandon and let it alone but pull downe the hedge and lay it waste to be deuoured of the beasts of the field So when as the children Esay 5. of Israell were not moued by Gods benefits to loue and obedience but sinned and prouoked him with their rebellions he doth not onely with-draw his blessings but his wrath being inflamed against them he bringeth vpon them his fearefull judgements Wherevpon one maketh this conclusion Quantò maiora beneficia sunt hominibus constituta tantò grauiora peccantibus iudicia the greater benefits that Chryso super Math. wee receiue from God the greater shall bee our punishments if we abuse them vnto sinne Mat. 11. 21. Mat. 11. 21. The vse hereof is that seeing the Lord with a liberall hand That we must returne thankfulnes to God for his benefits hath sowen the seed of his benefits amongst vs wee returne vnto him the haruest of loue obedience and thankfulnesse otherwise if wee vnthankfully abuse Gods blessings vnto sinne the Lord will not onely strip vs of them but also bring vpon vs the contrary euils he vvill turne our peace into war our libertie into tharldome our health into sicknesse our plentie into penurie vvant our glory into shame and that vvhich vve most feare shall come vpon vs or else vvhich is worst of all if he continue these his gifts yet he vvill make them of blessings curses of benefits punishments by giuing vs ouer to our owne wayes and suffering vs to goe on as in
himselfe by vnlawfull means he got gods curse with his gaines euen the leprosie vpon himselfe and all his posteritie When Absolon would needs sit on the throne Ezek. 7. 10. before his time though hee purchased the crowne with his fathers head he was hanged in a tree When Haman would raise himselfe though it were with the ruine of all Gods Ester 7. 10. people he was raised indeed but it was vpon the Gallowes The vse hereof is that as wee are to desire nothing but We must waite on Gods blessing in the vse of lawfull meanes that which is good so wee are for the compassing of it to vse onely lawfull and good meanes wayting vpon Gods leasure and watching for his blessing vpon our honest indeauours and then we may vndoubtedly hope that if that which wee desire be good for vs to receiue the Lord will graunt it vnto vs according to his promises Psal 27. 14. Hope in the Lord be Psal 27. 14. strong and he shall comfort thine hart So Psal 37. 34. Waite on the Lord and keepe his way and he shal exalt thee that thou shalt Psal 37. 34. inherite the land Prou. 20. 22. Waite vpon the Lord and hee Pro. 20. 22. will saue thee But if we will preuent the Lord by our owne subtill meanes and take a speedier course for the compassing of our desires then hee hath prescribed vs namely by our crafty fetches and vnfaithfull and vnhonest dealing let vs rest assured that eyther the Lord will crosse all our deuises and frustrate all our wicked indeauours or if we obtaine by these meanes the things which we desire they are giuen vnto vs in Gods wrath and not in his loue and accordingly wee shall finde in the vse of them a curse and not a blessing ANd thus much concerning the sinnes and punishments both of the Priests and people Now whereas it might bee well wondred at that the people who professed themselues the people of God a chosen nation and more holy and religious then al others that these priests who boasted that they were the Priests of the Lord and had the Law and testimonies which they were dayly to reade study and publish vnto the people should be besotted with ignorance and corrupted with so many enormious crimes in the next words he rendreth the reason namely that they were become brutish in their sinnes because by wallowing themselues in brutish pleasures they were wholy infatuated and depriued of their vnderstandings This reason is expressed Verse 11. Verse 11 Whoredome and wine and new wine take away their heart As though hee should haue said it is no meruaile that these The expositiō Priests and people howsoeuer they make profession of religion are sottish in their sinnes and more like beasts then men seeing by addicting themselues wholy to brutish pleasures they haue lost the vse of common reason and haue no vnderstanding in any good thing But let vs more particularly set downe the meaning of the words By Whoredome and wine some vnderstand their Idolatry and delight in superstition but I rather take them in their literall sense First because they better so agree with the verse going before wherevpon they seeme to depend in the which they were condemned of voluptuousnes Secondly because howsoeuer Idolatry is vsually signified by whoredome yet delight in Superstition is not so fitly signified by wine Thirdly because I hold it alwayes best and safest to rest in the plaine and naturall meaning and not to runne to Allegories when such a sense agreeth with the Analogie of faith and with the circumstances of the place By Whoredome and Wine therefore wee are to vnderstand generally all voluptuous pleasures and more especially the sinne of vncleannesse and drunkennesse which aboue all other brutish pleasures rob men of their hearts and vnto which they were principally addicted as before hath beene shewed Neither are we so to take it as though Wine in it selfe were a stealer of harts seeing if it be moderately vsed it cheareth and refresheth the hart of man and maketh him more sit for Gods seruice to which end it was created but by Wine wee are here to vnderstand the excessiue abuse of Wine vnto drunkennesse which taketh away the hart and quite extinguisheth the light of reason Esay 28. 7. Esay 28. 7. It is further added vnto Wine New wine or sweete wine Pro. 23. 30. that by this repetion or rather addition he might amplyfie and more fully set forth their voluptuous excesse in drinking in that they mingled the new with the old or when they were glutted with the one vsed the other that so they might set an edge on their dulled appetites and wher their cloyed intemperance that thus they might gull it downe in greater abundance So that by this addition he chargeth them that not onely they were addicted to drunkennesse being ouertaken through the infirmitie of their nature but that they did voluntarily wallow in this sinne with delight and because they would vse it with greater pleasure they tryed new and wanton conclusions and did as it were set vp a schoole of riot and intemperance Where by the way he also tasketh their great ingratitude in that the better the Lord fed them the more they kicked against him the more liberally he multiplyed his benefits the more they abused them to wantonnesse voluptuousnesse and all beastly Epicurisme It is further said that Whoredome Wine and new Wine did take away their hart Where by hart wee are to vnderstand all the chiefe faculties of the soule as the vnderstanding and reason the will and affections so that through their voluptuousnesse their mindes were infatuated with blinde ignorance their wils with-drawne from all goodnesse and their affections become so brutish that they delighted in nothing but in beastly sensualitie And in this sense the hart is vsually taken in the scriptures for whereas man consisteth of two principall parts the body and the soule the body is vsually called the flesh the soule the hart So Psal 84. 2. My Psal 84. 2. hart and my flesh reioyce in the liuing God 1 Pet. 3. 4. Let the 1. Pet. 3. 4. hid man of the hart be vncorrupt Psal 16. 9. Wherefore my hart Psal 16. 9. is glad my tongue reioyceth my flesh also doth rest in hope Gen. 6. 5. and 8. 12. Gen. 6. 5. and 8. 21. And this is the meaning of the words the doctrines are The doctrine these First we may obserue that prosperitie and abundance The abuse of prosperitie through our corruption are the causes why men wallow themselues in voluptuous pleasures not in their owne nature for being so considered they are Gods good blessings and benefits but as through our corruption they are abused vnto sinne And this sheweth the poysonous contagion of our natures which so infecteth Gods creatures that of wholesome drinkes they become deadly potions of good euill and of blessings curses The
remained in the wildernesse as a priuate man till the appointed time came that he should shew himselfe vnto Israel Luke 1. 8. Yea though our Sauiour Christ had the Spirit Luke 1. 8. of God and the gifts thereof without measure yet he executed not his publike ministery till the day which God had appointed came and til he was prepared thereunto by his fortie daies fast Matth. 4. None of the Pastors and Doctors Matth. 4. might take vpon them to discharge the works of those callings till they were allowed of the Church by the imposition of hands 1. Tim. 4. 14. 5. 22. Those therefore which are Gods true Prophets as they are furnished with gifts so they 1. Tim. 4. 15. and 5. 22. haue Gods speciall warrant and calling before they vndertake the execution of their office And contrariwise to speake before God sendeth is a note of a false Prophet as appeareth Ier. 23. 21. I haue not sent these Prophets saith the Lord yet they ranne I haue not spoken to them yet they prophecied Ier. 23. 21. 14. 13. 27. 15. 28. 8 9. Gods loue to his Prophets Ier. 14. 13 14. 27. 15. 28. 8 9. Thirdly we may obserue that before the Lord executed those punishments vpon the people which their sinnes deserued he first reuealeth his will vnto his Prophets Whence we learne Gods speciall loue towards them and their dignitie in that the Lord maketh choyce of them to be as it were his priuie counsellers without whose knowledge he will do no worke of great importance according to that Amos 3. 7. Amos 3. 7. The Lord will doe nothing but he reuealeth his secret to his seruants the Prophets The practise whereof wee may see towards Abraham Gen. 18. 17. Gen. 18. 17. Fourthly whereas the Lord vseth the ministerie of his The benefit of the ministerie to both Teachers and people Prophet for the manifestation of his will hereby he declareth his great mercy and goodnesse both to the Prophets and people to the Prophets in that he vouchsafeth them this dignitie to be his Ambassadours and Ministers of our reconciliation with God and eternall saluation which office belonged also to his most dearely beloued Sonne In which respect the Apostle saith that they were co-workers with Christ 2. Cor. 6. 1. To the people to whom he appointeth the ministerie 2 Cor. 6. 1. of man like vnto themselues because in respect of their sinne and corruption they could not indure the glorious voice of God vnlesse this glorious maiestie were as it were veiled and shadowed with the ministery of man as appeareth by their suit made vnto God Exod. 20. 19. The which is graciously granted Deu. 18. 16 17. And because we could Exod. 20. 19. Deu. 18. 16. 17 not conceiue and vnderstand his glorious and most wise speech he hath appointed his Ministers that they like nurses in their childish and broken language which is most fit for our capacitie might instruct vs in the knowledge of Gods will Fiftly whereas it is said that the Lord speaketh in the Prophets we learne with what feare reuerence and attention Reuerence required in hearing the word we are to heare and receiue the word of God in that the Lord himselfe speaketh vnto vs by them and vseth their mouth and tongue as his instrument and as it were the interpreter of his minde as it is Luke 1. 70. And in that they are Gods Ambassadours representing vnto vs his person Luke 1. 70. and in Christs stead bring vnto vs the glad tydings of the Gospell and of our reconciliation with God 2. Cor. 5. 20. 2. Cor. 5. 20. Whom if wee receiue wee receiue Christ himselfe whom if we contemne wee contemne not man but the euerliuing God as appeareth Luke 10. 16. Luke 10. 16. Lastly whereas he sendeth the Prophet with special commandements Gods mercy in denouncing punishments to the people to shew vnto them their sinne and to denounce such punishments as by them they had deserued We are to obserue a double mercy of God towards his Church For first before he will punish them hee giues them warning that by their repentance they might preuent his iudgements threatned And secondly if they went forward in their sinnes till the punishments were inflicted they might then call to minde who punished them to the end that then at the least they might forsake their sinnes and turne vnto the Lord by true repentance that so hee might haue mercy vpon them Where as otherwise such is our corruption they would neuer looke vnto the hand of God correcting them nor consider the cause of their punishment but ascribe all either to chance fortune or to some inferiour cause and so goe forward in their sinnes to their destruction And so much concerning the commander and the person Goe take vnto this a wife of fornications commanded Now wee are to speake of the commandement it selfe which is inioyned vnto the Prophet which is that he should goe and take vnto him a wife of fornications c. where first we are to cleare that question of great difficultie which hath troubled many namely whether the Whether Hosea was commanded actually to marrie an harlot or but in vision only Lord inioyned the Prophet indeede and truth to take to wise an infamous harlot or whether it were a vision onely and to be propounded by the Prophet by way of parable to the people Many thinke that it was inioyned by the Lord to be done indeede and that it was accordingly performed actually to which iudgement they are moued by the outward letter of the text And amongst these expositors are generally the Papists whose custome is to expound things done by allegories and allegories and parables as things done though innumerable absurdities follow thereupon But that this was onely shewed to the Prophet by vision and inioyned that by way of parable he should declare it to the people it appeareth plainely by these reasons First because God commandeth nothing which is contrarie Reasons prouing that the Prophets mariage was onely in vision to honestie the law of nature and good manners but that the Prophet of God should marrie with an infamous and common harlot is contrarie to all these and therefore God did not command it actually to be done but onely by way of parable But against this is obiected that God commanding it it becommeth honest and lawfull I answere that this is to beg that which is in question neither doth God command euill and vnlawfull things that so they may become good and honest but his will being the rule of goodnesse and iustice doth onely command things good and iust and therfore they are so to be esteemed because not onely they are good and iust in their owne nature but also because he willeth and commandeth them But it is further vrged that God commanded the Israelites to spoile the Egyptians of their gold siluer iewels
whoredome departing from the Lord. The Hebrew text hath it From after the Lord that is forsaking the Lord and leauing to follow after him in the paths of true holinesse and righteousnesse and cleauing vnto their idols following them in the by-paths of superstition and idolatry The sense therefore of these wordes is this Goe and propound vnto the people of Israel this parable and thereby conuince them of their grosse idolatry for howsoeuer they may flatter themselues through selfe-loue yet the trueth is they are no better then common harlots for after that I haue vouchsafed them this dignity to espouse them to my selfe and they haue plighted vnto me their faith and vowed their obedience they both forgetfull of my mercie and of their owne dutie haue commonly impudently and continually committed spirituall whoredome with stockes stones and diuels forsaking me their Lord and husband and refusing to follow me in the waies of my commandements and prostituting their bodies and soules to commit spirituall fornication with their idols according to their owne inuentions and their burning and vnbridled lusts and appetites Where first we may obserue that the Lord intending to The vse of parables to conuince the sinner of his sins conuince this people of their sinnes doth before he plainely sets downe their sins propound it vnto them by way of parable to the end that they who were blinded with self-selfe-loue and partiall Iudges in their owne cases might better see their sinnes in the person of others and without partialitie condemne them when they appeared like strangers which they would suffer to passe without any hard censure if they discerned them to be of their familiar acquaintance And thus Nathan dealt with Dauid 2. Sam. 12. And our Sauiour Christ with the Scribes and Pharisies Matth. 21. 33. 2. Sam. 12. Matth. 21. 33. And here in this place the Lord maketh the people to condemne themselues and their sinnes in the person and practise of an adulterous harlot and so inticeth them as it were to wound and kill their beloued friend whilest it is masked and disguised in the habit of an enemy Out of which we may further gather how farre wee are naturally in loue with our sinnes so that we cannot be moued Our naturall and corrupt loue to sinne to hate condemne and mortifie them so long as they beare our owne names but rather are ready to mince excuse and defend them vntill we view them in the person of others and see them enrolled vnder their names Secondly wee may note our too too great loue of our selues and too too small loue towards our neighbours That self-selfe-loue makes vs exceeding partiall which maketh vs easily to discerne and heauily and seuerely to censure other mens faults whereas we are readie to excuse or defend the same or greater in our selues and therefore ●●● Lord when he would haue vs to see and condemne our sinnes doth not offer them to our censure as they are in our owne selues whom we loue too much but in the person of others whom for the most part we loue not so much as we should as appeareth in the former examples and in this place wherein the Lord is faine to deale with vs as tender mothers deale with their wanton and wayward children whom when they would as willingly amend as vnwillingly displease them they vse to chide and beate the standers by and sometime shadowes and pictures for those faults which their children haue committed to the end that so they may see and learne to dislike their faults in others which they would not so easily discerne nor so vnpartially condemne in themselues Thirdly we may obserue what exordium or beginning The thundring exordium of the Prophet of speech the Prophet here vseth namely hee doth not vse faire words and sweete inticing allurements to make them attentiue hee doth not first sweeten his seuere and bitter reprehensions and legall threatnings with any commendation of their persons or mitigation of their faults but by propounding vnto them this parable whereby he laboureth to make them vnpartiall Iudges of their owne sinfull and miserable estate he accuseth them to be no better then an adulterous generation of adulterous parents adulterous children and that by their often adulteries they had made the land as it were a common stewes and therefore that the Lord would no longer beare with their spirituall whoredomes but would withdraw his loue and diuorce them from him So that now our Prophet commeth not as an Ambassadour sent from God with conditions of peace and with gracious promises to allure them to obedience but as a sonne of thunder and like an Herauld sent from the Lord to denounce open warres against the people for their grosse idolatry and outragious rebellion hee beginneth his speech vnto them The reason why the Lord causeth his Prophet thus thunderingly to beginne his prophecie was because the Why the Prophet dealeth so roughly with the people people had a long time euen since the beginning of Ieroboams raigne continued in their sinnes especially their grosse idolatry notwithstanding that the Lord had sent diuers of his Prophets to reproue them for their sinnes of which their consciences were conuinced by Gods law and to draw them to repentance sometimes by propounding vnto them Gods sweete promises of gratious benefits if they would turne vnto them and sometimes by threatning punishments against those who went forward in their sinnes All which notwithstanding the people continued vncorrigible and grew worse and worse and therefore the Lord causeth the Prophet to deale with them in this hot and rough manner because they had a long time lien frosen in the dregs of their sinnes And this course haue other of Gods faithfull ambassadours vsed when they had to deale with such obstinate and incurable sinners As Iohn the Baptist with the Saduces and Pharises Matth. 3. 7. Peter with Ananias and Sapphira Act. Matth. 3. 7. Act. 5. 8. 13. 10. Matth. 21. 23. Gods Ministers must sit their speech to their auditory 5. and with Simon Magus Act. 8. Paul with Elymas Act. 13. 10. And our Sauiour Christ himselfe with the Priests and Pharises Matth. 21. 23. Out of which examples Gods Ministers may learne in the deliuerie of Gods word spirituall discretion in fitting their speech according to the condition of their auditorie and not to deale with ignorant and vntaught men after the same manner that they deale with wilfull and obstinate sinners but as Physitions put a difference in their patients applying to ordinarie sicknesses ordinarie remedies and to desperate diseases desperate physicke and as Chirurgions to small cuts applie healing plaisters and for the curing of deepe festered wounds vse eating corrosiues and the sharpe lancher So the Physition and Surgion of the soule for the curing of some desperate disease or healing of some festered sore which sinne hath made in mens consciences must vse bitter potions a rough hand and desperate
sentence is pronounced that execution may be delaied and we reprieued till the next assises that in the meane time by true repentance we may procure our pardon and so escape deserued punishment And this is notablie set downe Esa 30. 18. Yet therefore will the Lord waite Esa 30. 18. that he may haue mercie vpon you c. Secondly we may obserue Gods infallible truth in performing 2 Gods infallible truth in performing his promises his promises notwithstanding mans vnworthines of the least of them After that Iehu had executed Gods iudgements vpon the house of Ahab the Lord promised him that he would confirme the kingdome vnto him and his posterity vnto the fourth generation Now after this promise made by God Iehu who had shewed his hatred to Achabs person and posterity shewed notwithstanding his loue to his sinnes forsaking the Lord and betaking himselfe to the worship of idols And in his steps did his progenie walke adding one outragious wickednesse to another but yet neuer the lesse the Lord made good his promises to him and his posteritie The consideration whereof may comfort those that are cast downe in the sight of their vnworthinesse thinking that because they deserue not Gods mercie therefore they shall not be partakers of it seeing we haue his gratious promises of grace and mercie the which though there be no cause in vs why he should performe yet there is cause enough in God himselfe who is infinite in mercy and infallible in his truth Rom. 3. 3 4. Rom. 3. 3. 4. Thirdly we may obserue that this people at this time 3. Pride goeth before a fall when as the Prophet threatneth Gods neere approaching iudgements were in the top of their pride presumptuous and secure fearing nothing lesse then such dangers and yet at this time destruction hasted and vengeance watched at the doore to seise vpon them Whereby it appeareth that when the wicked is most proud presumptuous and secure he is neerest to destruction when he thinketh himselfe out Psalm 37. 35. 36. of the gunshot of all danger then is hee most ready to be ouertaken of it as appeareth by the examples of Nebuchadnezzer Haman Herod and many others Lastly we may obserue that though the Lord spareth for 4. Punishmēts deferred are in the end inflicted a time yet he will not for euer deferre punishment for as sinne increaseth iudgement approcheth and though the Lord long delay to visit mens wickednesse yet the time runneth on and expireth and that which remaineth in the end will be very short and little before vengeance be inflicted And therefore let not Gods patience and long suffering harden vs in sinne and cause vs to deferre but rather hasten our repentance let vs lay hold of the acceptable time and day of saluation whilest it lasteth otherwise if we delay our conuersion the Lord within a little while when we least looke for it will cause his iudgements suddainly to surprise vs. And thus much concerning the time the punishment it selfe is expressed in these words I will visit The which word The Exposition is of ambiguous signification for it is sometime taken in the best part when as the Lord visiteth in mercy to bestow a benefite which hath been promised but somewhile deferred So he is said to haue visited Sara Gen. 21. 1. And so he promiseth to visit the children of Israel Exod. 13. 19. And Luk. Gen. 21. 1. Exod. 13. 19. Luke 1. 68. 1. 68. God is said to haue visited and redeemed his people Sometimes it is taken in the worst part and signifieth to reuenge and punish as in the second Commandement So Exo. 32. 34. In the day of my vengeance I will visit their sin vpon Exod. 32. 34. Psalm 89. 32. thē Psal 89. 32. I wil visit their transgression with the rod. And in this latter signification it is to be vnderstood in this place The doctrines which from hence we learne are these First The Do ∣ ctrines we may obserue the mercifull iustice of God who doth not rashly punish but first visiteth and then finding the fault inflicteth 1. Gods mercifull iustice who examineth before he punish Gen. 18. 20 21. Esa 26. 14. the punishment in which respect his punishments are called visitations And thus the Lord visited the Sdomites Gen. 18. 20 21. And so he is said first to haue visited and then to haue scattered and destroyed the wicked Esa 26. 14. Whence we are not to gather that the Lord needeth any such visitation to finde out mans wickednesse or that before he can spy out our sinnes he must make a quest of inquirie or priuy search for he is omnipresent and omniscient so that all things though neuer so much cloaked and disguised lye open before him and appeare naked in his sight as it is Heb. 4. 13. But by such borrowed phrases God setteth forth his orderly proceedings and approueth vnto men his iust Heb. 4. 13. iudgements in that they are not rashly executed but with good aduice and deliberation teaching them also in his own example to follow the like practise Here therefore Princes Magistrates Masters of families and all superiours are to learne their lesson namely that Superiours must visit before they punish they visit before they punish and by due examination finde out the fault before they giue sentence or proceede to execution for if God thus behaue himselfe in iudgement before whose eyes all things lie open how much more should men who are oft mistaken and easily deceiued vnlesse they vse great deliberation in their iudiciall proceedings Let therefore all such consider that where there is the most power there should be the least passion that rashnesse is a fault in all dangerous but in superiours pernicious that reasonable men should first iudge before they punish because punishment deferred may be inflicted but being inflicted cānot be recalled that they sustain the honorable place of a Iudge whilest they examine causes but the place of an executioner when without iudgement aduice they inflict punishmēt that they are Gods deputies represent his person therfore are according to his example first to visit and then to punish lest for want of due examination they punish the innocent in stead of offenders The second thing which hence we learne is that though God doth not rashly punish yet he will not suffer the wicked altogether to escape for though the Lord doth not punish euery day yet in the day of his visitation he will not spare And therefore let vs keepe our selues vndefiled from sinne or if we haue stained our consciences with sinne and haue as it were in these bookes registred vp our faults let vs by a liuely faith apply vnto vs the blood of Christ whereby these spots and writings may be washed away for if they remaine vntill the day of Gods visitation they will giue in such witnesse and euidence against vs as will conuict and condemne vs. In
let vs doe it in the loue of God which is the fountaine of euery good worke and in obedience to Gods commandement Secondly let vs propound as the maine ends of our actions the glory of God the good of his Church and our owne saluation Thirdly let our outward obedience proceede from the inward obedience of the heart and be done in sincerity and in vprightnes Fourthly let all be done in faith which by applying Christ and his pretious bloodshed vnto vs doth wash away the corruptions and imperfections wherewith our best actions are stained For though our actions in themselues be neuer so good yet if they be done in self-selfe-loue for our owne praise pleasure and profit without the sinceritie of the heart or true faith they are but glorious sinnes which displease God and make vs obnoxious to his iudgements and punishments Secondly we are here admonished that we doe not with Iehu and other hypocrites rest and content our selues in We must obey all Gods Commandements some one or two outward workes neglecting obedience vnto the rest of Gods Commandements assuring our selues that if our obedience be true and sincere it will be also whole and intire both in respect of the subiect and obiect that is both in respect of euery part of our selues who obey and in respect of al and euery of Gods commandements to which we are to yeeld obedience for true sanctification is not of one part alone but of the whole man and it maketh vs to hate all sinnes and to loue all vertues with the like affection although not in the same proportion Thirdly we here learne not to make our religion and the We must not make religion a cloake to couer our sins commandements of almightie God a cloak for our corruptions to couer our ambition malice cruelty morosity and other vices as Iehu did For if we do for corrupt and worldly ends imbrace and obey thē then when they wil not further but rather hinder vs in these respects we will cast them off and imbrace the contrarie sinnes and wickednesse according to the example of Iehu and all other apostates as appeareth daily by too too lamentable experience And so much for the sin of Iehu and his posteritie The fourth thing is the subiect or obiect of the punishment which is threefold first the house of Iehu by which is meant Iehu his posteritie which was destroyed by Shallum and so the kingdome taken from them namely Zachariah who was the last king of this family and the fourth from Iehu Here it may be demanded how it could stand with Gods How the child beareth the fathers sinnes Ezech. 18. 20. iustice to punish Iehues sinne in his posteritie seeing he saith that the child shall not beare his fathers iniquitie Ezech. 18. 20. I answere that the Lord may iustly punish the fathers sinne in the child by withholding his grace from him which he is not bound to giue him and so the child being destitute hereof and following his owne natural corruptions liueth in his fathers sin and transgressions and hereby iustly maketh himselfe obnoxious to Gods anger punishment It is true that the child is neuer punished with any positiue punishment for his fathers faults but for his owne sinnes into which being depriued of Gods grace he falleth For if he seeth his father sinnes and feareth and forsaketh them and indeuoureth to doe the contrarie workes of righteousnesse his fathers sinnes shall not be imputed vnto him but he shall liue in his owne righteousnesse as appeareth Ezech. 18. 14. which by Gods Ezech. 18. 14. infinite and vnlimited mercie oftentimes commeth to passe The vse hereof first concerneth parents that they be hereby Admonition to parents mooued to flee sin if not for their owne sake yet at least for their posterie seeing the child vnborne shall smart for their iniquities if the Lord as hee iustly may withhold his grace from them and suffer them to be carried away with their corruptions the which he often doth as he also threatneth in the second commandement Secondly the children of wicked parents may here learne Admonition to children of wicked parents carefully to flee their fathers vices and to indeuour to performe holy obedience vnto the Lord that so they may bee reconciled vnto him for if they follow their fathers steppes the Lord will certainely punish in them not only their own but also their parents sinne in the day of his visitation The second thing which here wee are to obserue is that God threatneth to begin his visitation with the King and God seuerely punisheth the sinnes of princes his posteritie because their owne sinnes were great and grieuous and also because they were accessarie to the sinnes of the people for whereas by their authoritie and good example they might haue restrained them from their open sinnes and stirred them vp to the profession and practise of righteousnesse and holinesse they contrariwise both by their law licensing idolatrie and by their practise liuing in it drew the people to follow their example and therefore the Lord first beginneth to punish them because they were the first agents and moouers vnto sinne So that here we may learne that it is not the great glorie and power of Princes which wil exempt them from punishment when God visiteth For howsoeuer they are gods Psal 82 6. 7. with men yet they are but men with God and as they shall die like men so shall they be punished like men neither shal their great authoritie and high place any thing priuiledge them Nay they aboue and before all others shall surely smart for it seeing they are seldome wicked alone but with their authoritie and example draw others into the like wickednesse The vse hereof concerneth not only Princes but also Magistrates and masters of families yea al that are in any place of authoritie ouer others that they most carefully auoide all sinnes especially such as are ioyned with scandall of their inferiours seeing against the day of Gods visitation they hasten and redouble their punishment The second obiect of this punishment is the state and Exposition kingdome in these words And will cause to cease the kingdome of the house of Israel The which punishment the Lord begun to execute presently after the ouerthrow of Iehues posteritie when as there were no lawful kings which gouerned the Commonwealth but such as vsurped the kingdome by treason murthers al outragious cruelty but it was fullie accomplished 41. yeeres after the death of Zachariah vnder the reigne of Hoshea when as all Israel were carried away captiue and neuer more had any kings of their owne to rule ouer them Where first wee are to obserue what a singular blessing Doct. of God it is when there is a continued sucession of lawfull Succession of lawfull Princes is a great blessing to a land Princes for it is the sinewes of a State wherein consisteth her chiefe strength which being cut
of all and euery of them neither must we imagine that these two not my people and the sonnes of the liuing God are alike generall as though all and euery man amongst them of whom it might be said not my people of them it should be said that they were the sonnes of the liuing God but it is to be vnderstood of Gods elect onely who should be called from amongst them both and added to the Church For many were eternally reiected many who neuer heard of the Gospel and of Christ many outwardly called by the ministery of the word who were not called effectually and so neither iustified nor made Gods soones by adoption and grace The third thing which is signified in these words is the instrumentall cause or meanes whereby they should attaine vnto this dignity namely by the preaching of the Gospell the which is implied by the phrase of speech here vsed for he doth not say they shall begin to be or they shall be made or they shall be adopted the sonnes of God but it shall be said vnto them Yee are the sonnes of the liuing God to wit in the preaching of the Gospell which is the strong power of God to saluation vnto all that beleeue Rom. 1. 16. and the onely ordinary meanes of begetting faith Rom. 10. 17. by which Rom. 1. 16. 10. 17. Iohn 1. 12. 1. Cor. 4. 15. faith we attaine vnto this prerogatiue of being the sonnes of God Iohn 1. 12. And this the Apostle plainely sheweth 1. Cor. 4. 15. where affirming himselfe to be the Corinthians spirituall father who had begotten them vnto God he sheweth likewise whereby they were begotten and regenerate namely through the preaching of the Gospell Furthermore it is to be obserued that it is set down absolutely it shal be said vnto them without expressing by whom but we are to vnderstand it of God himselfe who had said ye are not my people for he onely after their reiection from being his people could make them his sonnes notwithstanding we are not to vnderstand it that this should be spoken by God himselfe immediately but as he said yee are not my people by the ministery of his Prophet so he saith yee are the sonnes of the liuing God by the ministery of his Apostles and Ministers in the preaching of the word The last thing to be considered is the dignity or prerogatiue it selfe expressed in these words Yee are the sonnes of the liuing God Where we are to note that he doth not obserue a perfect antithesis betweene these and the former words which should haue bin thus expressed In the place where it was said yee are not my people it shall be said vnto them ye are the people of God but in stead thereof he saith ye are the sonnes of the liuing God The reason whereof is this first because he would hereby signifie that through Christ in the couenant of grace we haue a far more excellent estate then vnder the law by the couenant of works for then they were but the people or subiects of God but now they are his sons adopted in Iesus Christ and being sonnes they are likewise Rom. 8. 17. heires and coheires with Christ as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8. 17. Then they were the people of God on the condition of their perfect obedience to the Law which when they obserued not they lost this dignity and were reiected from being Gods people but now they are sonnes on the condition of faith and heires of an inheritance immortall vndefiled and that fadeth not away as the Apostle speaketh 1. Pet. 1. 4. because 1. Pet. 1. 4. they shall neuer fall from the couenant nor forsake or be forsaken of God seeing his seed remaineth in them 1. Iohn 3. 9. 1. Iohn 3. 9. Secondly by this phrase he excludeth in the worke of our saluation all kind of merit and sheweth that it is wholly to be ascribed to the free grace of God If he had said ye shall be called Gods people it had not so fully excluded all merit seeing there may be some desert in a people which mooueth the Prince to take them for his subiects but when he saith Ye shall be called sonnes it shutteth out all merit seeing no sonne can deserue of his father to be begotten of him before he hath his being Thirdly he vseth this phrase of speech because it containeth All the benefits of the Gospell comprised vnder this title The sons of God in it the summe of those benefits which are offered and bestowed in the Gospel is as it were a briefe abridgement of the whole worke of our saluation for those who are sons are likewise predestinate to eternall life seeing he hath therfore predestinate vs to bee adopted through Iesus Christ vnto himselfe as it is Eph. 1. 5. If we are sonnes then need we not Ephes 1. 5. to doubt of the loue of our heauenly father if we are sons then are we called to this high dignitie seeing before our calling we were strangers and enemies if sonnes then are we iustified in Gods sight freed from sinne and indued with righteousnesse and so fully reconciled vnto God seeing the Lord infinit in iustice would neuer admit any into such a high degree of fauour who were yet polluted in their sinnes and destitute of righteousnesse If we are sonnes then haue we receiued the spirit of adoption which leadeth and ruleth vs mortifieth our corruptions and quickneth vs in the inner man raising vs vp from the death of sin to holines and newnes of life Finally if we are sons then also we are heires and coheires with Christ of the kingdome of glorie Rom. 8. 17. Rom. 8. 17. Lastly as hereby he expresseth the inestimable benefits of The name of sonnes stirreth vs vp to all Euangelicall duties the Gospell so also doth he hereby stirre vs vp to all Euangelicall duties for sonnes more beleeue trust hope in loue their fathers then people their gouernours and with more alacritie and diligence performe obedience vnto their commandements and therefore if wee bee the sonnes of God wee must bee mindfull to performe these duties to our heauenly father The last thing to bee considered in this royall dignitie is that they shall be called the sonnes of the liuing God whereby the greatnesse of this benefit is amplified as though hee should say Ye shal be the sonnes of a God not like vnto the idols and Gods of the heathen which either neuer liued or but for a short time but of the eternall and euer liuing Iehouah who is and will be euer willing and able to defend and prouide for you who are his children And as hereby is signified the eternitie of our heauenlie father so there is implied also the eternitie of vs his children For as Christ saith God is not the God of the dead but of the Matth. 22. 32. liuing so may I say hee is not a father of the dead but of the liuing
their sinnes without any check and controlement and to haue a prosperous course and wished successe in their wicked designes without any let or hinderance yet he dealeth not thus with those that belong vnto his election but if they through the corruption of the flesh either of ignorance or of infirmitie resolue to prosecute wicked courses though he may suffer them for a time yet in the end he will lay in their way the thornes of crosses and afflictions to hinder them from atchieuing their wicked ends that so being stayed they may returne backe againe vnto him by true repentance So he suffered the Gentiles to go forward without stop in their idolatries but when the Israelites forsooke him and followed idols he laid continually thornes of affliction in their way to cause them to desist in their course and to returne vnto him as appeareth in the historie of the Iudges and the Kings the like examples we haue in Ionas in Dauid 2. Sam. 11. 12. in reprobate Ieroboam 2. Sam. 11. 12. and elect Manasses in the Scribes and Pharisies and the Apostle Paul Act. 9. in the rich Glutton the prodigall Act. 9. Luk. 15. 16. sonne Luk. 15. 16. Whereby it appeareth that the Lord will not suffer those which belong vnto him to be so euill as they would be but when they resolue to go forward in sin he layeth in their way a hedge of thornie afflictions either trouble of mind or sicknes or losse in their state that so they may not go on in the pathes of sinne but returne againe by true repentance Whence wee may gather a notable signe whether we belong to Gods election or be in the number of the reprobate for if wee go forward in our wicked courses without stop or hinderance with ease and prosperitie it is a signe that wee belong not to God for then he would not suffer vs to go on in the way of perdition but if we no sooner resolue vpon some wicked designe but straight we are either crossed in it or afterward afflicted that we cannot proceed in it as we purposed surely it is a signe that the Lord hath a care of vs in that he holdeth vs backe from running headlong to euerlasting destruction Secondly because though the Lord lay these thornes in our way yet through our negligence and securitie though We do not acknowledge Gods hand in our afflictions we see the hedge and feele the prickes of affliction pearcing our soules and bodies we oftentimes neither consider who hath set this hedge in our way nor for what cause but are readie to ascribe our afflictions to chance and fortune to our owne want of prouidence to the malice of our enemies or some secondarie cause therefore the Lord willeth them to behold and to consider that he it was that set this hedge in their way and for this cause in that they had resolued to go forward in their sinnes that knowing the meritorious cause of their punishment to be their sinnes they might labour to take them away by true repentance and knowing the Lord to be the author of them they might humble themselues vnder his hand and implore mercie and forgiuenesse Thirdly we may here learne that it is impossible for Gods elect to perish for he will not suffer them to goe on in sin to their perdition yea though they will desire and resolue to liue in wickednesse the Lord will finde meanes to pull them out of it for his will is aboue their wils his eternall purpose and decree which is vnchangeable causeth a change in their wicked designes and vnlawfull purposes so that they shall not atchieue them according to their setled resolutions as we may see in the example of Ionas Dauid Paul and many others So that Gods elect may certainly be assured that seeing their sinnes are insufficient therefore nothing else is effectuall to separate them from the loue of God in Christ Iesus Rom. 8. 38. 39. Fourthly here we learne most carefully to take heed that We must not leape ouer the hedge of afflictions we doe not when the Lord setteth this hedge in our way to restraine vs from sinne leap ouer it for if the fence bee not strong enough hee will make it stronger and in stead of an hedge he will set a wall to restraine vs that is if lighter afflictions will not withhold and stay vs from going forward in the course of sinne he will inflict those which are heauier and more intolerable Lastly wee may here obserue the great benefit which our afflictions cause vnto vs for they serue for sharpe thornie Afflictions restrain vs from sinne hedges strong walles to containe vs in the waies of Gods commandements and to keep vs from leaping ouer into the pleasant pastures of sinne and wickednesse where we should but bee fatted to the slaughter the Lord laieth in our way these thornie afflictions not to kill vs but to prick vs and by pricking to restraine vs from going the broad way that leadeth to destruction for when we are thus iudged we are chastened of the Lord because wee should not be condemned with the world 1. Cor. 11. 31. He correcteth vs not because he hateth 1. Cor. 11. 31. vs but because hee entirely loueth vs euen as his owne children not for our hurt but for our profit that we might be partakers of hie holinesse Heb. 12. 7. 10. And though no chastening Heb. 12. 7. 10. 11. seemeth to be ioyous but grieuous for the present yet afterwards it bringeth the quiet fruit of righteousnesse vnto them which are thereby exercised Heb. 12. 11. Though these afflictions be bitter and vnpleasant to the flesh yet are they profitable to the spirituall part for whilest the outward man perisheth the inward man is renued daily 2. Cor. 4. 16. Though these thornes 2. Cor. 4. 16. pricke vs yet they doe not mortally wound vs only they let out the winde of vainglorie and humble vs that wee be not exalted out of measure Though they seeme tedious and intolerable 2. Cor. 12. 7. and tending to our destruction yet in truth they are but light and momentanie and cause vnto vs a superexcellent and eternall waight of glorie 2. Cor. 4. 17. 2. Cor. 4. 17. But yet wee are not to imagine that affliction in it owne Afflictions not good in themselues but through Gods blessing nature worketh al these benefits but by the secret operation of Gods Spirit inwardly applying it vnto our hearts and teaching vs to make a holy vse of it for such is our obstinate stubbornnesse that wee will like vntamed and wilde beasts rush thorow this hedge of afflictions that we may still continue our course in sinne and such is our senselesnesse in our securitie that either we feele not the pricking of these thornes or at least are not by the smart moued to sorrow for sinne as being the cause thereof or to flee vnto God
to haue any partners of his praises which are due to himself and therefore hee will haue all or none for well the Lord knoweth that they who serue praise him to the halues wil in the end neither serue nor praise him at all Wherby it may appeare that the seruice of the Church of Rome which they performe vnto God is no better then abominable idolatrie and their praises odious in his sight as sauouring of grosse ingratitude for though they serue God indeed yet not in spirit and truth but in their Idols though they acknowledge and praise God as the author of his gifts yet not him alone for they ioyne with him the virgin Marie and innumerable Saints many whereof are of their owne making as pettie gods and patrones vnto whom they yeeld a chiefe part of their thankes and praise though they acknowledge God to haue giuen vnto them the benefits which they enioy yet not of his meere mercie and grace but for their owne merits and through the intercession of Saints But the Lord esteemeth these halfe praises to be dishonors and this partie and shared thankfulnes to bee no better then grosse ingratitude 2. King 17. 32. 33. 41. 2. King 17. 32. 33. The excessiue cost which idolaters do bestow vpon their idols Fiftly we may obserue what excessiue cost idolaters are readie to bestow vpon their idols and images for though they highly esteeme their gold siluer and iewels yet doe they willingly bestow them vpon Baal that is for the making and adorning of their idols and for the furthering of their superstitions though they will hardly part with the least trifle in obedience to Gods Commandement to the aduancement of his glorie and furthering of his pure worship and seruice yet they thinke their whole substance little enough to be bestowed vpon their owne wil-worship for the maintenance of their idolatrie An example whereof we haue in this place and in the Israelites Exod. 32. 3. Ezech. 16. 16. to 21. And in the Papists who care not what they Exod. 32. 3. Ezech. 16. 16. 21. bestow vpon the making and adorning of their images in maintaining their Clergie the Priests of Baal in building Monasteries and Nunneries in Copes vestiments oblations in procuring pardons and such like their superstitions The which their bountie in their wil-worship and idolatrie should make vs ashamed of our base niggardlinesse in furthering setting forth and maintaining Gods pure worship and seruice which is enioyned in his word for what a reproach is this to our Christian profession that they should so much exceed in their blind zeale and forwardnes vnto idolatrie and wee bee so cold in Gods true religion that they should bestow such excessiue cost in building Churches in honor of their Saints and we be so backward in repairing of God house that they should so liberally maintaine such swarmes of locusts and innumerable numbers of the Priests of Baal and we suffer Gods true Prophets which in comparison are but few in number to liue in want that idolaters should endow the Church with goods and lands and professors of Gods true religion should rob and spoile it of necessarie maintenance Surely their fruitfull ignorance shall condemne our barren knowledge their superstitious deuotion our coldnesse and slackenesse their liberalitie in euil our niggardlines in that which is good and their great loue vnto their idols and idolatrie shall rise in iudgement against our little loue to God and his truth Lastly we may obserue that it is a grieuous sinne to abuse That it is a great sinne to abuse Gods gifts to his dishonor the gifts which wee haue receiued from God to other or contrarie ends then those for which the Lord hath giuen them for this is heere condemned in the Israelites in that they bestowed their gold and siluer vpon their idols which they should haue imployed to the glorie of God and good of his Church Thus the Papists offend who bestow their wealth vpon their Images Copes Monasteries Thus carnall Gospellers offend who spend their riches vpon gorgeous attire vnfitting their calling vpon excessiue cheere and vaine pleasures which they haue receiued from God to this end that out of their superfluitie they should releeue the penury of their poore brethren Thus do they offend who vse their tongue to the blaspheming of Gods name which is giuen them to glorifie him And thus doe they offend who abuse their wits and learning for the nourishing of contentions and the maintenance and vpholding of iniurie oppression and iniustice which were giuen them to make peace right wrongs and further iustice as it is the vsuall fault of the Lawyers of our times c. All which being not only vnprofitable seruants in not vsing the Lords talents but also wicked and malicious enemies who abuse them to his dishonour shall if they perseuere in this sinne without repentance haue their portion in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone ANd thus much concerning the sin of the people of Israel In the next place hee setteth downe their punishments for whereas he had vers 6. in generall threatned that he would hedge her in with afflictions now he proceedeth to specifie the particular kinds thereof First that he would depriue her of al those necessary benefits which appertained to the preseruation of their life vers 9. Secondly that hee would discouer her shame in the sight of her louers and expose her to reproch and contempt vers 10. Thirdly that he would cause to cease all her solemne festiuals and take away all cause of mirth and reioycing vers 11. Lastly that hee would destroy all her pleasant gardens and fruitfull vineyards and turne them into a vast wildernesse vers 12. After which comminations he repeateth againe their sins which were the causes of the punishments namely their vnthankfulnes in the latter part of the 12. verse and their idolatrie vers 13. and so hee concludeth the first part of this Chapter But let vs come to the particulars Vers 9. Therefore I wil Vers 9 returne and take away my corne in the time thereof and my wine in the season thereof and will recouer my wooll and my flaxe lent to couer her shame In which words hee threatneth that because The exposition the Israelites would not acknowledge the Lord to be the author and bestower of those manifold benefits which they enioyed but vngratefully ascribed the praise of them to their idols therefore he would strip them of all his blessings to the end that they who could not learne in the time of their plentie that the Lord had bestowed vpon them these his gifts might at least learne this lesson by the want of them I will returne and take away c. Some resolue these words thus I will receiue or resume my corne because the former verbe in the Hebrew phrase hath in it sometimes the nature of an aduerbe So Genes 26. 18. Isaak returning digged the Gen. 26. 18.
wisedome against their follie nor suffer their stubborne willes to crosse my will and eternall counsell but I will now begin to take care of them seeing they will take no care of themselues and because they haue nothing profited by all my threatnings and punishments I will mollifie their hard hearts and incline their stubborne and rebellious willes with my gratious promises and mercifull benefits So that the Lord behaueth himselfe like a tender hearted father and we demeane our selues like stubborne children though our stiffe harts relent not vnder his corrections yet his heart yearneth at our paine and he is sooner wearie of punishing then we of suffering punishment and when his chastisements will not ouercome our malitiousnesse hee laboureth to ouercome vs with his goodnesse and kindnesse and as the carefull and louing Physition is not moued by the desperate wilfulnesse of his impatient patient both refusing that which is good for him and eagerly seeking that which is hurtfull and pernicious to giue him ouer to himselfe but vseth the greater care and diligence by how much the lesse hee seeth that hee careth for himselfe and when he heareth for all his loue and labour nothing but distempered and railing speeches from his patient is rather thereby mooued to pitie then reuenge so dealeth the Lorde with vs who are sicke in sinne c. The vse which we are to make hereof is that we not onely praise the Lord for this his mercie and goodnesse but also that wee striue to follow his example not seeking reuenge when wee are iniured but striuing to ouercome euill with goodnes as the Apostle exhorteth Rom. 12. 19. 21. and so Rom. 12. 19. 21. shall wee indeed approue our selues to bee the children of our heauenly father as our Sauiour teacheth vs Matth. 5. Mat. 5. 44. 45. 44. 45. Thirdly we may heere learne that neither Gods terrible The Lord only leadeth to repentance threatnings nor sharpe afflictions are auaileable to worke in our hearts true repentance vnlesse the Lord allure and incline our harts with the inward operation of his holy Spirit for the more God punisheth the more naturally we repine and murmure and our steely hearts like the anuill with more blowes do waxe the harder and sooner will we breake then bow vnlesse the Lord incline vs as appeareth in the example of Pharaoh Saul the Israelites Esay 1. 5. and in our owne experience Esay 1. 5. Fourthly we here learne that the Lord is the principal and The Lord is the sole cause of our conuersion sole cause of our conuersion for vntill he incline and allure our hearts to leaue our sinnes and to returne vnto him neither his promises nor his threatnings neither his benefits nor his punishments will worke in our hearts vnfained repentance And as this is manifest in this place so also in diuers other places of Scripture Ieremie telleth vs that the Black-moore may as well change his skinne or the Leopard his spots as we can do good that are accustomed to euill Ier. 13. Jer. 13. 23. 23. And therefore the Lord when he would conuert his people saith that he will giue them a new spirit and taking the stoheart out of their bodies will giue them a heart of flesh Ezech. Ezech. 11. 19. 36. 26. 11. 19. so Ezech. 36. 26. And our Sauiour Christ teacheth vs that no man can come vnto him except the Father draw him Ioh. 6. 44. the Apostle likewise saith that before our conuersion Iohn 6. 44. we are not only sick but euen dead in our sins and therfore no more able to raise vp our selues from the death of sin to the life of righteousnes then a dead man to rise out of his graue Ephes 2. 1. Ephes 2. 1. But it may be demaunded that if this be so to what purpose serueth the ministerie of the Word and exhortations to repentance seeing he speaketh in vaine that perswadeth a dead man to rise to life I answere that the ministerie of the Word is the meanes of our conuersion which the Lord by the inward operation of his holy Spirit maketh effectuall for this purpose in the hearts of all his elect These exhortations therefore vnto repentance are not in vaine seeing the Lord worketh not vpon men as vpon stocks and stones but as vpon reasonable creatures whom he exhorteth to repentance and withall working vpon their hearts by his holy Spirit inclineth them to performe that vnto which hee exhorteth them and as he outwardly commandeth so inwardly he inclineth and enableth them to do that which he commandeth and hence it is that our Sauiour saith that the words which he spake were Spirit and life Ioh. 6. 63. because Ioh. 6. 63. they were not like the law which only commanded and did not enable to yeeld obedience but being made effectuall by the Spirit which gaue life vnto them they both enioyned and wrought in vs true obedience And this the Prophet implieth when as he saith that the Lord will allure or perswade them to turne vnto him so that his word is the instrument whereby he doth not only moue vs but throughly perswade vs to true repentance and this we may see verified Act. 13. 43. in the example of Lydia Act. 13. 43. 16. 14. 18. 4. 28. 23. chap. 16. 14. 18. 4. 28. 23. The vse which we are to make hereof is that we yeeld vnto him the whole praise of our conuersion and not with the Papists share with him ascribing part of the glorie vnto him and part to our selues Secondly seeing it is the work of God alone we must not rest in our owne power and strength for the effecting of this great worke but we must call vpon God for this grace saying with the Church Lament 5. 21. Conuert vs O Lord and Lament 5. 21. we shall be conuerted much lesse are we to deferre our conuersion from day to day as though it were a matter which we can easilie performe at our owne pleasure but considering it is the Lords free gift let vs receiue it when he offereth it and turne vnto him when he allureth and perswadeth vs to repentance And so likewise because it is the Lord alone who allureth and turneth the heart it behooueth al those who would conuert others not to rest too much in the force of their owne eloquence or the strength of their owne reasons but to ioyne with their earnest labour and endeauour humble and hartie prayers vnto almightie God desiring the assistance of his holy Spirit by which alone their perswasions are made effectuall to perswade Fifthly we here learne not to expect presently vpon our We must not expect secure peace after our conuersiō conuersion vnto God and adioyning to the Church secure peace and flourishing prosperitie for after the Lord hath allured and perswaded vs to turne vnto him he leadeth vs into the wildernesse of affliction before he bringeth vs to rest in our heauenly Canaan The
howsoeuer she might fall through infirmitie yet she should neuer fall away though she may offend her husband by her corruptions and imperfections yet she should neuer forsake him nor desist in her faith and holy obedience So that neither her sins past nor her sins to come should be able to separate her from the Lord her husband not her sins past because they should be blotted out of remembrance and washed away by Christs blood nor her sinnes to come for as much as shee should be endued with such sinceritie and indignitie of heart that she should neuer sin with full consent of will nor euer leaue the Lord to commit spirituall adulterie with sinne and Satan Neither should want of righteousnes cause her to be reiected seeing shee should bee adorned with the glorious robe of Christs righteousnes imputed vnto her and also by vertue of Gods Spirit dwelling in her she should be enabled to walke before the Lord in the integritie and vprightnes of her heart indeauouring to performe all duties of holines and righteousnes vnto him Secondly whereas error and blindnesse of iudgement is a 2 The Church is married vnto Christ in iudgement cause of diuorce and separation seeing thereby the wife is moued to preferre an adulterer before her lawfull husband therfore that this may not be a cause of separation betweene him and his Church the Lord promiseth that he will endue her with a cleare and wise iudgement whereby she shall bee able to discerne betweene good and euill right and wrong and how much more profitable will it be for her to embrace the Lord as her only husband louing reuerencing and obeying him in all things than to forsake him and to follow after her adulterous louers that is idols the world Satan and the pleasures of sinne which last but for a season and in the end bring euerlasting destruction and how much better it is to embrace his pure worship reuealed in his word then to follow humane traditions and her owne inuentions Thirdly the wife is moued to breake her coniugall fidelitie 3. The Church is maried to Christ in mercie and beneficence and to leaue her husband and follow her louers when as she is brought into doubt of his loue and good will in respect of his illiberall cariage towards her and when as by his niggardly restraining her of necessaries she is brought into extremitie and want for then being hopelesse at home she rangeth abroad and seeketh help of strangers when her husband neglecteth her Whereas contrariwise when shee hath assured testimonie of his loue by his readines to supplie all her necessities to the vttermost of his power it is a notable meanes to work in her loue towards him and to preserue her faith inuiolable And thus it fareth in this spirituall mariage when we doubt of Gods loue and fauour and are brought into extreame exigents through our spirituall or corporall wants then our corrupt nature inclineth vs to leaue trusting and depending vpon the Lord and to follow Idols Saints Angels and Images looking for by them a supplie of that wherein we thinke that the Lord is defectiue And therefore he heere promiseth that he will also marrie her vnto himselfe in mercie or as the word may more fitly in this place signifie in benignitie and beneficence that is that he will so multiplie vpon her mercies and benefits as thereby shee shall haue full assurance of his loue and prouidence watching ouer her and shall by his bountie be so furnished with all necessaries that she shall not need to depend vpon any other The which promise is accomplished both in respect of corporal and spirituall benefits for if the first be wanting the Lord giueth the other in such plentie and abundance that in the middest of worldly wants she shal haue little cause to doubt of Gods loue and liberalitie seeing he doth bestow vpon her these rich treasures and gifts of greatest value And thus haue we this prophecie expounded Ier. 32. 40. I will make an euerlasting couenant with them that I will neuer turne away Jer. 32. 40. 41. from them to do them good c. 41. Yea I will delite in them to do them good c. Fourthly because when the husband is of an austere rigorous and impacable nature so as he will not beare with his 4. The Church is married to Christs compassion wiues infirmities but punisheth euery fault in all bitternesse and extremitie it is a notable meanes to worke in her alienation of minde and to moue her to affect others more then him and contrariwise compassion and readines to pardon faults and passe by infirmities is a singular meanes to nourish loue and fidelitie therefore the Lord promiseth in the next place that he wil marrie the Church in mercy and compassion so that though through frailtie she fall and by her sinnes offend him yet this shall bee no sufficient cause to moue her desperately to forsake and flee from him seeing he is so full of mercie and compassion that she can be no more readie to repent then he to forgiue nor to aske pardon then he to grant it And that not only for light and veniall sinnes nor for offences seldome committed but for all her sinnes most grieuous and innumerable and this is implied in that he here vseth the plurall number saying that he will marrie her in mercies to note the multitude of his mercies whereby he is readie to forgiue a multitude of sinnes The like place vnto this we haue Ier. 31. 34. For I will forgiue their iniquitie Jer 31. 34. Esay 54. 10. and remember their sinnes no more So Esay 54. 10. The mountaines shall remoue and the hilles shall fall downe but my mercy shall not depart from thee c. Fifthly because all loue and benefits cannot restraine an 5. The Lord marrieth his Church in faithfulnes inconstant woman who is naturally addicted to lust and vncleannesse but that vpon euery occasion she is apt to forsake her husband and follow her louers therefore in the next place the Lord saith that he will marrie his Church in faithfulnes wherby we are to vnderstand that not only the Lord himselfe will continue faithfull and constant in his loue to the Church but that also he will by his holy Spirit wherewith his Church and he are ioyned in marriage so rule her affections mortifie her naturall lightnesse and pronenesse to spirituall adulterie and confirme and strengthen her in constancie and fidelitie that shee shall euer keepe her mariage faith inuiolable and reserue her selfe for him alone pure and vndefiled Where we may further note that he doth the third time repeate these words I will marrie thee vnto me to this end that we might by this his redoubling of his speech bee the more vndoubtedly assured of the certaintie of this holy and heauenly contract of which we are easily moued to make some question in respect of Gods glorious Maiestie and incomprehensible
greatnesse and in respect of our owne base vilenesse and vnworthinesse Lastly the wiues ignorance of her husbands perfections 6. The Lord marrieth his Church in knowledge whereby shee neither knoweth nor acknowledgeth his excellencies and good parts and whereby as she is often ready to vnderualue his worthinesse so also with an ouerweening conceit to ouerprize the gifts and qualities of strangers is a notable meanes to alienate her mind from her husband as being vnworthie of her loue and to moue her to affect others so the ignorance of the spouse the Church of Gods excellencie mercie goodnes and all perfections is a chiefe cause that moueth her to leaue the Lord and to follow her louers for if she did but know the Lord she should need no other arguments to rauish her heart with his loue nor any further inducement to moue her to forsake all others and to embrace him alone with constant affection And therefore the Lord in the last place promiseth that he will eternize the mariage betweene him and his Church by illuminating her mind with a true knowledge of him whereupon it must necessarily follow that shee will preferre him aboue all idols and false gods seeing she clearely perceiueth that he infinitly excelleth them all in goodnesse perfection and all true worthinesse The like promise we haue Esay 54. 13. And all thy children shall be taught of the Lord Ier. 31. 34. And they shal teach Esay 54. 13. Jer. 31. 34. no more euery man his neighbour and euery man his brother saying know the Lord for they shall all know me from the least of them to the greatest of them saith the Lord. So Ioel. 2. 28. 29. which was accomplished Act. 2. 17. Joel 2. 28. Act 2. 17. Now this knowledge of which he here speaketh is not so much what Christ is in himselfe namely most infinite most mightie most wise c. but especially what he is vnto vs to wit a carefull head and a most louing husband who hath not only created vs but also redeemed vs with his precious blood shead and hereby obtained for vs the pardon of our sinnes reconciliation sanctification and eternall saluation who giueth vnto vs also all benefits spirituall and temporal and protecteth vs frō all dangers With which sauing knowledge whosoeuer are indued it is impossible they should forsake Christ their husband or preferre a strange loue before the loue of him who hath so dearely loued them And thus haue I shewed the meaning of the words and The Do ∣ ctrines the chiefe points contained in them In the next place wee are to consider of those doctrines which arise out of them both for our instruction and consolation And first out of Gods couenant is grounded vpon his vndeserued grace goodnesse this contract of mariage wee may obserue that the couenant of grace betweene God and his Church is grounded vpon Gods free mercie and vndeserued goodnesse without any condition of our owne workes and worthinesse Neither is it here said that hee would marrie the Church if she were iust holy faithfull and worthie his loue but hee absolutely promiseth without all conditions that hee will marrie her and being married will endow her with righteousnesse iudgement pardon of her sinnes faithfulnesse so that these are not the causes mouing the Lord to espouse the Church but because in his free loue he hath married her therefore hee will prosecute her with his loue and bestow all these graces and benefits vpon her But this most cleerely appeareth whereas hee saith hee will marrie her in benignitie and mercie for benignitie presupposeth the Churches want and pouertie and mercie presupposeth her miserie neither if she were rich in her selfe should she neede the Lords beneficence nor if she were in happie estate should she neede mercie and compassion Secondly wee may obserue that the Lord alone is the author of this spirituall mariage for when wee neither seeke nor desire it hee wooes vs and also inclines vs to grant his suite And therefore let the Lord haue the whole glorie of his owne worke and let not vs rob him of any part thereof by ascribing it to our owne free will merits or worthinesse Thirdly we here leanre what is the great dignitie and excellencie The dignitie of the faithfull of the Church and of euery faithfull man for howsoeuer they are basely esteemed of in the world and accounted the very ofscouring of al things yet in truth there is none equall with them in honour and worthinesse seeing it hath pleased the Lord of Lords and King of Kings to espouse them vnto himselfe When Saul offered Dauid his daughter in mariage hee thought it such an high degree of honour as he was altogether vnworthie of so that in sight of his owne meannesse he crieth out What am I and what is my life or the 1. Sam. 18. 18. familie of my father in Israel that I should be sonne in law to the King how much more then may we filled with rauishing wonder exclaime what are we dust and ashes miserable and wretched men that wee should be aduanced to this royall dignitie as to be the spouse of the glorious King of heauen and earth The vse which we are to make hereof is that if we are not We must desire the spirituall honour of the faithful as yet inuested with this honour we labour to attaine vnto it for if we doe as it is the nature of all men desire honour and preferment why doe wee follow a shadow and neglect the substance why doe we like children runne after the bubble of vaine and momentanie glorie and in the meane time neuer seeke after that superexcellent and eternall glorie of being espoused vnto God especially considering that worldly honour is vncertaine both in getting and in the keeping and seeing if wee labour after this honour of being married vnto God wee shall most surely attaine vnto it for the Lord himselfe publisheth and offereth this contract and there can no impediment hinder it vnlesse we our selues forbid the banes And secondly those that are aduanced alreadie vnto this height of honour must neuer forget to be truly thankfull vnto him who is the author of their aduancement when they deserued by their sinner ignominie and disgrace Fourthly wee may heere learne that the poorest faithfull The poorest faithfull man richer then the wealthiest worldling man is in better estate and possessed of more rich treasures then the wealthiest Mammonist in the world for they haue Christ himselfe and all his benefits they are true owners of the treasures of his righteousnesse and obedience yea and by vertue of this spirituall mariage they haue right and interest not only to all the temporall benefits of this life but they also haue the ioynter of Gods kingdome assured vnto them Fiftly being espoused to God let vs euer remembring this We ought to behaue our selues as it becommeth the spouse of Christ honourable aduancement
the earth and I will haue mercie vpon her that was not pitied and I will say vnto them which were not my people thou art my people and they shall say thou art my God In which words is set downe first the multiplication of the Church and secondly The exposition the meanes whereby it should bee multiplied The first in these words And I will sow her vnto me in the earth The which speech is allegoricall borrowed from the practise of husbandmen who desiring increase of their corne doe sow it in the ground so the Lord promiseth that hee will sow his Church that is he will multiplie and exceedingly increase it as the seed is multiplied which is sowne in the earth so that it shall no longer be contained within the narrow borders of the land of Canaan but be propagated farre and wide ouer the whole face of the earth Where he alludeth to the name Izreel signifying the seed of God of which hee had spoken in the former verse although the word her being of the feminine gender hath relation vnto the spouse for whereas his meaning was that hee would sow Izreel his seed he saith he will sow her because all this while he had spoken of his Church and faithfull people vnder the name and title of a wife But besides the multiplying of the Church here is also as I take it promised the continuall stabilitie therof for so this word sowing or planting signifieth as appeareth Ier. 24. 6. I will plant them and not roote them out Psal 92. 13. 14. Ier. 31. 27. 28. 42. 10. Iere. 24. 6. Psal 92. 13. 14. Iere. 31. 27. 42. 10. Further he saith that he will sow her vnto himselfe where he noteth the end why he would multiplie his Church and people namely that they being chosen and called might glorifie his name by seruing and obeying him and this is the maine end not onely of our calling but also of our creation and redemption 2. Cor. 6. 20. Ephes 1. 4. Tit. 2. 14. 2 Cor. 6. 20. Ephes 1. 4. Tit. 2. 14. Againe whereas hee saith that hee will sow her in the earth without any special restraint vnto any particular place the meaning is that hee would sow her thorowout the whole earth and no longer confine her within the limits of Canaan the which promise was accordingly accomplished when Christ gaue commandement to his Apostles and Disciples that they should goe teach all nations Matth. 28. 20. the which they also performed as appeareth in the Acts of the Apostles Matth. 28. 20. And this is the promise concerning the multiplying of the Church Now the meanes whereby hee would increase it to so great a number is expressed whereas he saith that hee will haue mercie vpon Lo-ruchamah and will call Lo-ammi his people wherby he vnderstandeth the calling not only of the ten tribes but also by occasion of them the Gentiles amongst whom they were scattered as the Apostle plainly expoundeth this prophecie Rom. 9. 24. 1. Pet. 2. 10. for of whom it might be said Rom. 9. 24. 25. 1. Pet. 2. 10. that they were without mercie and not Gods people of thē he promiseth that he would haue mercie and chuse them for his people but this might be said not of the Israelites alone but also of the Gentiles as the Apostles testifie and therefore of them also this prophecie is to be vnderstood And these are the meanes whereby the seed of the faithfull is multiplied In the last place he setteth downe the disposition affection and dutie of the Church being called in these words And they shall say thou art my God Where there is implied the entire loue of the Church towards God in that she vseth here the vocatiue case as the originall hath it and by a certaine kind of hearty acclamation crieth out O my God which briefe maner of speech doth most pathetically expresse the otherwise vnexpressable affection passion of the heart So Thomas rauished with Christs assured presence crieth out My Lord and my God Ioh. 20. Ioh. 20. 28. 28. and Mary v. 16. Rabboni Master Rom. 8. 15. Secondly that Rom. 8. 15. she shall not only beleeue that the Lord is her God but also acknowledge and make profession hereof for she shall not only thinke it but also say it Thirdly that she shall inuocate and call vpon his name as is signified in this phrase of speech O my God And this is the meaning of these words The doctrines which The do ∣ ctrines arise out of thē are these First whereas the Lord saith that he will sow his Church hence we learne that the Lord is the sole cause of The Lord is the principall cause of multiplying the Church Ephes 2. 5. the multiplying of his Church by his word and Spirit and not our owne inclination and free will for we are as seed in the hand of the sower vnlesse hee husband vs wee will euer remaine vnfruitfull Eph. 2. 5. And this the Apostle affirmeth namely that the faithfull are not borne of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Ioh. 1. 13. Iohn 1. 13. God multiplieth his church for his owne glorie 1. Pet. 2. 10. 11. 12. Secondly we learne here that the Lord doth sow or multiplie the Church vnto himself that is for his own glory worship and seruice that the Church being chosen to be a royall Priesthood and holy nation may abstaine frō fleshly lusts haue their cōuersation honest that so God may be glorified euen of those that are without And therfore seeing the Lord hath made choice of vs for this purpose let vs labour to attaine vnto our end otherwise we can haue no assurance that we are in the nūber of Gods people seeing it is impossible that he shuld be frustrate of his end Thirdly by this chāge of names no mercy into mercy no Gods anger turned into loue people into a people we learne that in the time of the Gospel Gods anger is turned into loue iudgement into mercy punishment into reward cōdemnation into life saluation by vertue of Christs merits mediation The which serueth notablie for the consolation of al those that mourne in Sion whē as being beaten downe by the apprehēsion of Gods anger the sight of sinne and the curse of the law they consider that Christ hath freed them from them all reconciled them vnto God and procured for them remission of their sinnes Fourthly we here learne that the wall of separation is broken The Iewes and Gentiles gathered into one Church downe both Iewes and Gentiles admitted into one and the same Church so that as our Sauiour speaketh there is now but one sheepfold one shepheard Ioh. 10. 16. See p. 125. 133. 135. Fiftly we here learne that our vocation was altogether free and vndeserued for when as we were without mercy deseruing Our vocatiō is
of free grace rather iudgement condemnation the Lord had mercy vpon vs whē we were no people but aliants strangers yea enemies vnto God the Lord of his free grace made vs his people yea of his owne familie and this the Apostle plainly sheweth 2. Tim. 1. 9. As therfore no conceit of our own worthines should 2. Tim. 1. 9. make vs to derogate any from Gods free grace vndeserued loue so neither ought our vnworthines cause vs to doubt of thē seeing without respect of our deserts the Lord hath chosen vs. Sixtly we here learne that our saluation hath his beginning in Gods mercy for by reason of our sins we are in misery in the Gods mercie the beginning of our saluation state of condemnation the which our miserable condition is so much the more miserable in that of our selues we cannot possiblie come out of our miserie but God in mercy pardoning our sins for Christs merits freeth vs from our wretched estate and aduanceth vs to all glorie and happinesse Seuenthly this serueth notably for the consolation of euerie The faithfull are consident in Gods mercie true mēber of the Church in that they are assured that they haue obtained Gods mercy so that though they haue fallē through infirmity they need not with Adam to hide thēselues frō Gods presence but in cōfident assurāce of pardon forgiuenes go boldly vnto the throne of grace that they may receiue mercy find grace to helpe in the time of need as it is Hebr. 4. 16. 10. 22. Hebr. 4. 16. 10. 22. As God chuseth vs so we chuse him Lastly we here learne that as the Lord maketh choice of vs to be his people so we answerably must make choice of him to be our God as he sheweth his loue towards vs so we must be ready to expresse ours towards him by our holy obediēce zeale of his glory as he professeth that we are his people aboue before al other natiōs not called so we must not only inwardly know and beleeue that he is our God in our hearts performe seruice vnto him but we must say with the Church in this place O my God that is acknowledge cōfesse that he is our Lord Sauiour opēly and in the sight of mē publikely performe vnto him his pure worship seruice which he requireth in his word that not only whē by our professiō glorifying God we grace our selues but also when we incurre thereby shame reproch affliction and persecution In a word we must with the Church here in all our need and necessaries inuocate and call vpon Gods name and wholly depend vpon and expect from him all things necessarie for this life and the life to come FINIS LECTVRES VPON THE THIRD CHAPTER OF THE PROPHECIE OF HOSEA IN this Chapter the Lord sheweth that The argument of the Chapter howsoeuer the Church of Israell had grieuously offended him by her Idolatry vnthankfulnesse and voluptuousnesse yet hee did not cease to loue her and in his loue to seeke her conuersion and saluation and therefore because fond and cockering loue would but cause her to continue in those her sinnes to her vtter destruction his purpose was to afflict and chastice her with a miserable and tedious captiuitie wherein shee should liue in a poore and contemptible estate vnder the tyranny of her enimies without her owne lawes magistracy or any forme of gouernement and without the publike meanes of worshipping eyther God or her Idols Howbeit least shee should desperately sincke vnder the waight of this tedious and grieuous affliction hee promiseth that in the end after that by his chastisements he hath humbled her hee will conuert and turne her vnto himselfe by true repentance and so receiue her into his former grace and fauour And this is the maine argument of this Chapter out of The generall parts which wee may obserue the parts thereof which are two The first is a testification of Gods loue towards the Church of Israell verse 1. The second is an approbation of this loue by a two-fold fruit thereof the first is by inflicting on her fatherly chastisements that so she might be restrained from running on in her sinnes to her perdition The second is the sanctifying of this affliction to her vse and benefit namely for her true Repentance and conuersion to God And these are the generall parts of this Chapter Now the maine drift and scope of all is that the Lord might containe The scope of the Prophecie the people in an euen course so as they should neyther presumptuously and securely goe on in their sinnes without repentance nor desperately sinck vnder the guilt and punishment of them For whereas their present prosperity might cause them securely to promise vnto themselues immunitie from punishment and Gods former promises of inriching and multiplying the Church of Israell might cause them to imagine that though the Lord suffered them to be led into captiuitie yet hee would in some short time deliuer them and speedely aduance them to all happinesse by multiplying vppon them the former benefits the Lord meeting with this their security and presumption assureth them that he would not so easily forget their grieuous sinnes whereby they had so long and often prouoked him but before he would be reconciled vnto them his purpose was seuerely to correct them with a miserable Captiuitie wherein they should bee grieuously afflicted with pinching pouerty and base contempt and that not for a short space but for a long time euen vntill the comming of the Messias And on the other side whereas when they were grieuously afflicted they might easily be moued to doubt of gods loue and to thincke their estate desperate both because misery and calamitie doth cause men more clearely to see and more sensibly to feele the haynousnesse of sinne and to apprehend the wrath of God due vnto them and also in that they found and felt the fruites of Gods anger loading them with afflictions and withall might doubt that they should neuer againe be reconciled vnto God or be made partakers of any of his gratious promises seeing they were so long deferred and their punishments so tediously continued therefore the Lord giueth them some comfort in the middest of trouble by assuring them that notwithstanding their manifold sinnes yet hee loued them that in loue hee did chastise and correct them for their conuersion and amendement and that howsoeuer their afflictions were grieuous and tedious yet they should not continue for euer for after hee had by them made them to forsake their Idolatry and other sinnes he would admit them to be his Church and people and continue them in his feare and pure worship ANd this is the maine scope and chiefe end of this Prophecie In the next place we are to speak of the special parts thereof And first of the testification of Gods loue towards the Church of Israell Ver. 1. And the
sinnes and chasticements and not onely to looke vpon the rod but also vppon the hand of our louing father who beateth vs that he may correct and amend vs. For if wee bee perswaded with Paul that afflictions cannot seperate vs from the loue of God Rom. 8. 35. Rom. 8. 35. Then shall we also with Paul reioyce in tribulations Rom. 5. 3. And conclude with Iob that though he kill vs yet we will trust in him Iob. 13. 15. If in our greatest extreamities we haue this hope and assurance that we are beloued of God it will be a sure anker-hold to preserue vs from making ship-wrack of our soules vpon the sands of desperation though we be tossed and turmoyled with the tempests of tribulations and the surging waues of troubles it will be a sure piller to vnder-prop our fainting soules so as they shall not ruinously sincke vnder the waight of affliction and an impregnable for t into which being retired as our last place of refuge we shall easily beare off and beate back the most violent battery that affliction and aduersitie can make against vs. Fiftly we may obserue how hainous and odious this sin of Idolatry is in the sight of God in that he compareth it to The hainousnesse of Idolatrie Adultery for as nothing can be more detestable in the eyes of a louing and iealous husband then that his wife should affect others more then him and prostitute her selfe to commit whoredome euen in his sight and presence so nothing can be more odious in the sight of God then that his church should thus desile her selfe with spirituall Adultery euen in his presence See Chap. 1. Ver. 2. Sixtly in the example of the Israelites wee may behold our exceeding great ingratitude in that being dearely beloued Our ingratitude of God we doe not loue him againe but are ready to prefer Idols and Images before him Who would not wonder at the vnthankfulnesse of such a woman who being base and beggerly deformed diseased and full of ill qualities should be chosen and espoused to a prince of great worth and dearely beloued of him if notwithstanding his excellency and loue she should defile her mariage bed and preferre some base groome before him but such is our ingratitude if being aduanced from such a base condition to such high dignitie by our husband Iesus Christ we set our mindes vpon Idols more then on him Seauenthly wee may heere obserue the Constancie of The Constancie of Gods loue Gods loue towards his elect in that notwithstanding their grieuous sinnes and great vnworthines he continueth to loue them for though the Israelits after they were espoused vnto God committed spirituall whoredome forsooke the Lord yet he sendeth his Prophet to assure them of the continuance of his loue So neither the fall of our first parents nor the originall corruption which was propagated from them vnto vs nor our own manifold actuall transgressions could break off his loue wherewith he had loued vs from all eternitie but that still euen whilst we were sinners he sent his sonne to dye for Rom. 5. 8. 10. vs and whilest we were enimies vnto him he reconciled vs vnto himselfe by the precious death and bloodshed of our Sauiour as Iohn 3. 16. the Apostle sheweth Rom. 5. 8. 10. Ioh. 3. 16. The consideration whereof serueth notably for our consolation when as we labour and groane vnder the heauy burthen of our sinnes for if the Lord so dearely loued vs euen whilest we were enimies how much more will he continue this loue when we are made friends If when we were wicked and vnrighteous he would not ouerwhelme vs with his iust displeasure much more then being iustified by his bloud we shall Rom. 5. 9 be saued from wrath through him as the Apostle reasoneth Rom. 5. 9. If he so loued vs when as we were wholy wicked that our sinnes could not change the constancie of his loue how much more will he now continue constant when wee are made perfectly righteous through the righteousnesse of Christ imputed vnto vs and haue true inhaerent righteousnes and sanctification begun in vs by his holy spirit whereby at least we desire indeauour in the vprightnesse of our harts to serue and please him If he loued vs whilest like rebellious enimies we neyther could nor would obey him how much more will he loue vs when like children we would willingly doe his will although we often fayle of our desire through our weaknesse and imperfection Eightly we here learne that if in our necessities we flee vnto Affiance in creatures is Idolatrie the creatures as vnto Idols Images Saints Angels gold and riches trusting depending vpon them for help and deliuerance more then vpon the Lord we may truely bee said with the Israelites to looke after idols to commit spiritual adultrie with them for that we make our God vpon which we most depend for reliefe in time of want for protection in time of dāger hence it is that not only those who worship Images are called Idolaters but also the couetous man who putteth more affiance in his gold then in his God Ephe. 5. 5 Ephe. 5. 5. Lastly we may heere obserue that with contempt of Religion Contempt of religion and corruption of manners inseperable companions and Gods pure worship neglect of honesty and corruption of manners with idolatrie and superstition drunkennesse and all manner of voluptuousnesse are ioyned together for as soone as men looke after Idoll Gods they also loue the wine bottles And this commeth to passe principally through Gods iust iudgement that they who worship the creatures and forsake the creator not regarding to know him nor his truth should be giuen ouer of God vnto vile affections and a reprobate minde whereby they run headlong into all maner of wickednes as the Apostle sheweth Rom. 1. 2. 1 to 31. Rom. 1. 21. Partly also through the violence of our corruption which if it bee not bridled and curbed in with true pietie the feare of God and conscience of our wayes carrieth vs swiftly into all manner of sin partly through the malitious subtiltie of the chiefe ring-leaders vnto idolatry who either inioyne as lawfull or permit as tollerable or dispence with as veniall all manner of voluptuousnes and vnlawfull pleasures that with these baytes which are so delightfull to the flesh they may catch the more and allure them to ioyne with them in their idolatrie and superstition A notable example whereof we haue in the Papists who The Papists patrones of licentiousnesse either allow or dispence with all maner of voluptuous pleasures that so they may gaine the more to the imbracing of their Religion for haue they not brought euen into the seruice of God whatsoeuer may be pleasing delightfull to the sences as goodly shewes sweet musick odoriferous smels c. Is it not the chiefe solemnity of their festiuals and holy dayes to
spend the whole time in reuelling masking dicing carding surfetting and drunkennesse and least they should not runne fast inough into all manner of disorders doe they not allow of their Lords of mis-rule who haue for the time a large Patent to lead them into all licentiousnesse and these are their religious exercises for their solemne feasts That I may say nothing of the permission of their stewes their sanctuaries for malefactours their wincking at blasphemie prophanation of the Sabboth Adultry as though they were but veniall sinnes by all which their wicked courses they greatly increase their number seeing hereby all adioyne themselues vnto them who would be voluptuous and licentious by law and priuiledge of Religion And so much concerning the testification of Gods loue The Analysis of the rest of the Chapter towards the adultresse harlot the people of Israell Now followeth the approbation thereof first by his inflicting on her fatherly chastisements that thereby shee might be restrayned from running on in her sinnes and prouoked to turne vnto God by true repentance verse 2 3 4. Secondly by sanctifying this her affliction for her conuersion vers 5. The afflictions which he intended to correct her with are typically represented and shadowed in the Prophets vision vers 2 3. And after this vision is in part expounded vers 4. Concerning the former he sheweth first the end wherefore hee afflicted her that is that thereby he might buy her and so possesse and keepe her for his owne vse in these words So I bought her to me and secondly hee setteth downe the affliction it selfe where first he sheweth with what kinde of affliction he meant to chastise her namely with captiuitie signified in this phrase of buying her and secondly he expresseth the qualitie of this captiuitie to wit that it should be exceeding grieuous and that both in respect of the greatnesse of their miseries which they should suffer in their captiuitie and also in respect of their long continuance Their miseries consisted partly in the euils which they suffered and partly in the depriuation of such benefits as they had formerly inioyed namely their politicall and ecclesiasticall gouernment vers 3 4. The euils which she suffered were base contempt signified by her price of 15. peeces of siluer wherewith shee was bought and pinching pouertie and want signified by the Homer and a halfe of Barley BVt let vs come to the words themselues Verse 2. So I Verse 2 bought her to mee for fifteene peeces of siluer and for an Homer of Barley an halfe Homer of Barley In which words is contayned both the peoples punishment and the loue of The exposition God who inflicted it the punishment is that they should become captiues in a strange countrie and this is signified by this phrase of buying for no free people but onely captiues slaues and seruants were bought for money So that the meaning of this part of the vision is this as the Prophet buyeth an adultrous wife as though she were a captiue so the children of Israell shall be led into captiuitie and bought and sould for money Yea but the Prophet was commanded to loue this adultresse and heere no mention is made of his loue but onely that he bought her that is brought her into the base estate of a slauish captiue how then doth this signifie the loue of God seeing it seemeth rather an effect of hatred I answere if we respect Gods end which was the profit conuersion and saluation of the Israelits this was a singular note of gods loue For when they abused their libertie to all licentiousnesse God caused them to liue in captiuitie but to this end that by this miserie he might reclaime regaine them vnto himself So that the Lords seueritie was exceeding profitable and necessarie to reforme this adultresse and to make her keepe her marriage faith inuiolable for the time to come when as she felt the smart of her vncleannesse If a husband laying aside his right of superioritie and rule doe basely cocker and flatter his adultrous Wife and suffer her at pleasure to raunge abroad and company with her louers his fondnesse will harten her in her wicked courses and cause her the more to scorne and contemne him the Lord therefore like a wise husband dealeth otherwise here with this adultresse that is he retayneth his authoritie he handleth her roughly and restrayneth her of her libertie but yet inwardly he loueth her for he doth all this to coole the heat of her lust and to make her chast and faithfull that so being reclaymed hee may receiue her into his wonted fauour The Next point to be considered is the basenesse of their estate in their captiuitie signified by the price here giuen for the Adultresse to wit fifteene peeces of siluer What was the precise quantitie of this summe it is vncertaine neyther is it materiall to the vnderstanding of the Prophets purpose onely this we are to know that the Prophet maketh mention of a certaine price giuen that he might in more liuely manner set forth this vision as a thing done hereby more feelingly affect his hearers secondly that this Adultresse was bought at a very low rate seeing there is such a slender price payed for her as fifteene siluer peeces For there was three sorts of siluer coyne in vse amongst the Israelites the Shekell of the Sanctuarie which was about two shillings foure pence in value and this had on the one side Aarons rod and on the other the pot of Manna the common or halfe Shekell amounting to foureteene perice and the Gerah or Obolus which was about the value of our three halfe-pence Now we are not to vnderstand these words of the Shekell of the Sanctuary which was onely the price of holy things and therefore not of an adultresse and if wee vnderstand them of the common Shekell then the whole price amounted but to the summe of seauenteene shillings and sixe pence which was giuen for this Adultresse whereby the base estate and contemptible condition of this harlot is shewed in that she is valewed at lesse then a slaue or captiue For if an Oxe gored a seruant the owner was bound to giue to the maister thirtie Shekels in recompence as appeateth Exod. 21. 32. and here this Adultresse is prized but at Exod. 12. 32. halfe so much whereby is signified that the people of Israell should be contemned and exceeding basely esteemed of in their captiuitie And this agreeth with the complaint of the faithful Psal 44. 12. Thou sellest thy people without gaine and Psa 44. 12. 13 doest not increase their price 13. Thou makest vs a reproch to our neighbours a iest and laughing stock to them that are round about vs c. And this is the first part of the price the other is expressed in these words And for an Homer of Barley and halfe Ezech. 45. 11. an Homer of Barley The Homer or Chomer contained ten Ephaes as
reasoneth 2 Cor. 3. 6. 7. 8. 9. 2. Cor. 3. 6 7. The vse of this doctrine respecteth both Ministers and people the Ministers first for instruction that seeing the Lord hath aduanced them to such Honour and Dignitie they walke worthy this high calling thinking no paines too much which they shall take for the aduancement of Gods glory who hath so exceedingly honoured them Secondly for their consolation encouragement against all Consolation for Gods Ministers against contempt the miserie pouertie reproch contempt which they suffer in this life For though outwardly they are poore and destitute of all worldly pompe yet they are like the Kings daughter all glorious within though they are despised of men yet they are highly esteemed before God though the world esteemeth them as the very ofscouring of all things yet the Lord hath chosen them to be his chiefe Officers his Ambassadours his Stewards his Keepers of the inestimable Treasure of his Word and of his great seales the Sacraments of Baptisme and the Lords Supper The vse which concerneth the people is that they honour The people ought to reuerence Gods Ministers them whom God thus honoureth and that they behaue themselues towards their Ministers as it becommeth the rest of the familie to behaue themselues towards the steward or Treasurer the people towards the Ambassadour yea the children towards their fathers For looke what honor is done vnto them as being Gods Ambassadours that the Lord accounterh as done vnto himselfe whose person they sustain looke what disgrace and reproach is offred against them as being his Ministers the Lord esteemeth it as offred against himselfe and therefore will neuer let it goe vnpunished eyther in this life or in the life to come for if Dauid could not endure those insolent abuses which were by Hanun offered 2. Sam. 10. against his Ambassadours whom in loue and kindnesse he sent vnto him but reuenged them with the death and destruction of a great part of the people of Ammon how much lesse can the Lord endure that reproach injuries outrages should be offred against his Ambassadors and not reuenge these indignities which are not so much offred against men as in them against himselfe Fearefull examples hereof wee haue in the Scriptures as in the conspiracy of Corah and his associates whom the earth swallowed quick Numb 16. In Numb 6. 16. Ieroboam whose hand was withered vp for the contempt and violence which he offred against the Lords Prophet 1 Kin. 1. King 13. 13. In the two Captaines their fifties who were destroyed with fire from heauen because they came not to the Lords Prophet with that submissiue reuerence which beseemed them 2 King 1. 9. 10. 11. 12. In the fiftie two children 2. King 1. 9. 10 who were destroyed by Bears for scoffing at Elisha 2 Kin. 2 2. King 2. And the in people of Israell who because they mocked the messengers of God and despised their wordes and misvsed the Prophets therefore they were subjected to Gods heauie 2. Chro. 36. 16. 17. wrath and in the end vtterly destroyed 2 Chro. 36. 16. 17. The second thing to be obserued is the gorse ingratitude Our vngratefull abuse of Gods benefits of our corrupt natures whereby it commeth to passe that the more God multiplyeth his mercies the more ready we are to rebell against him and to prouoke his wrath by our sinnes for whereas Gods manifould benefits multiplyed vpon vs should make vs to humble our selues before him in that he hath made vs so deepely indebted to his infinite goodnesse we contrariwise abusing them make them serue as so many steps whereby we may ascend into the seate of pride whereas they should serue as so many common places to put vs in minde of Gods gracious goodnes towards vs we abusing them are made hereby more forgetfull of God as though now being throughly furnisht vve had no further neede of his helpe vvhereas they should serue as so many motiues to stirre vs vp to holy obedience that thereby vvee may glorifie God the author of all our good vve hereby grow more vndutifull like cockred children towards their Parents or pampred horses towards their maisters and are more ready to fall into the sinnes of pride voluptuousnesse loue of the world profanenesse and vtter neglect of religion and all religious dueties whereas the abundance of Gods blessings vvhich vve injoy should make vs to pittie and take compassion on those who want them they abused through our corruption doe make vs to disdaine contemne them furious and cruell in reuenge and insolent in offring wrongs and injuries And hence it is that the Lord doth so carefully vvarne the Israelites that when they did injoy all the blessings of Canaan they should not forget and rebell against him Deut. 6. 10. 11. 12. Into vvhich sinne they shamefully Deut. 6. 10. 11. Psal 62. 10. 1. Tim. 6. 17. fell notwithstanding they were thus admonished So Psal 62. 10. 1 Tim. 6. 17. Examples of this vngratefull abuse of Gods blessing we haue in Saul Ieroboam Naball Nebuchadnezzar Hos 10. 1. and 13. 6. the people of Israell but neuer vvas age more fruitfull of these examples neuer land more plentifull in these vngratefull presidents then this of ours wherein the more the blessings of God abound the more pride forgetfulnesse of God contempt of Religion and the vtter neglect of all holy duties abound likewise so that hard it is to finde a man bettered by Gods benefits or more zealous of Gods glory the more blessings they receiue from him but contrariwise the more they abound in honors riches peace health and all kind of prosperity the more they shew their profanenes irreligion worldlines and vtter neglect of all holy duties The vse of this doctrine is first that seeing through our corruption we are so apt to abuse Gods blessings we be made hereby more watchfull ouer our owne hearts when wee are in prosperitie that we be not ouertaken with this vnthankfulnesse and that wee bee no more earnest in begging these temporary benefits then in praying also for an holy vse of them that they may serue as helps and furtherances vnto vs in all holy and Christian dueties for if the more we abound in them the more we abound in sinne against God then doe they cease to bee blessings and benefits and become snares to intangle vs and thornes to choak in vs all vertue and godlinesse Secondly that we arme our selues with patience when as wee are not so much increased in these temporall benefits seeing the Lord herein respecteth the good of his children and with-holdeth worldly blessings from them because hee knoweth they would abuse them vnto sinne Thirdly that we be not vexed out of measure with impatiencie when as those of whom we haue best deserued doe shew themselues vngratefull to vs considering that wee continually shew our selues much more vnthankfull against God vnto whom we are
a side out of the way of righteousnesse the Lord is readie to whip him into it againe by the scourge of afflictions and that not for want but in the abundance of his loue because hee should haue no incouragement to goe on in sinne which would bring him to destruction And this Dauid himselfe well knew and therefore saith that before hee was afflicted hee went astray but being afflicted hee kept Gods word Psal 119. 67. And therefore hee saith that it was good for him that hee had beene afflicted seeing hereby hee had Psal 119. 67. and 94. 12. learned Gods statutes verse 71. And Psalme 94. 12. Hee pronounceth them blessed whom God doth chastise and teach in his Law So the Lord telleth Dauid that if his sonne Salomon sinned hee would chasten him with the rod of men but his mercy should not depart from him 2 Sam. 7. 14. giuing vs to vnderstand that hee will not let his children escape 2. Sam. 7. 14. in their sinnes without correction and yet neuerthelesse remaineth mercifull vnto them Finally howsoeuer the gentiles were suffered to goe on in their idolatrie and to flowrish in their sinnes yet as soone as his owne people Israell did leaue his pure worship and follow Idols hee did seuerely punish them as appeareth Exod. 32. and in the History of the Iudges and Kings Exod. 32. Lastly this appeareth by cleare euidence of reason for The former doctrine prooued by reasons as impunitie is a manifest signe that God giueth men ouer to goe on in their sinnes to their destruction because he denyeth them the meanes whereby they might come to the sight of their sinne and vnto true sorrow for it so it is a good signe that God loueth vs as his Children when hee vseth vs like his Children that is correcteth vs for our faults and affordeth vnto vs the meanes whereby wee may bee reclaymed Wee are so blinded with carnall securitie and selfe loue that wee cannot see our transgressions and iniquities and afflictions are that sharpe but yet soueraigne water which helpeth to the recouery of our sight when as therefore the Lord denyeth to afflict vs liuing in sinne what doth he else but leaueth vs to our own naturall blindnesse to goe on in our sins till we fall into the pit of destruction They are those precious salues which serue to draw out the core of our corruptions and those wholesome though vnpleasant potions whereby wee are purged from our sinnes when as therefore the Lord afflicteth vs hee intendeth to cure and purge vs but when he with-holdeth these meanes his purpose is to let vs fester and rot in our sin and to let vs abound in these grose humours which will bring the sicknesse and death of the soule vnto vs they are those purging fires which purifie vs from the drosse of our corruptions and therefore when the Lord casteth vs into them his purpose is to make vs pure gold fit for his treasurie of eternall happinesse but when he letteth vs alone in the drosse of our sinnes his meaning is to let vs rust and canker and to cast vs away as refuse siluer The vse hereof serueth to confute the vaine bragges of The Papists confuted who glory in the outward pomp of their church the Papists who boast of the glory pompe riches and the flourishing estate of their Church vsing it as an argument of Gods loue towards them and of the truenesse of their Church and Religion that they are blessed with great prosperitie and on the other side objecting the crosse and manifold persecutions which the professours of the Gospell are subject vnto as a reproach to their Religion But seeing so many sinnes are not onely committed but also tollerated yea defended and countenanced in that Church their immunitie from afflictions and punishments can bee no signe of Gods Loue but rather that in his heauie displeasure hee hath giuen them ouer as a desperate cure and because by no meanes they vvill bee reclaymed from their Superstitions Idolatryes Adulteries and other enormious crimes that therefore they are giuen vp to a reprobate sense and to their owne filthy lusts that so committing sinne with greedinesse they may treasure vp against themselues wrath against the day of wrath and of the declaration of the iust iudgement of God And the like vse also may secure Worldlings make of this Doctrine who blesse themselues in their sinnes because they are not crossed in their euill courses seeing nothing ought to bee a greater terrour vnto them then this that the Lord leaueth them to themselues and with-holdeth from them this wholesome meanes of their amendement Lastly it serueth for the comfort of Gods Children when as they are sharply afflicted for their sinnes seeing this is no signe of Gods hatred and of their rejection but rather of his Loue and Fatherly care ouer them which causeth him to lay vpon them these chastisements that hereby they may bee reclaymed from their sinnes and not suffered to runne on in their euill courses to their destruction The second doctrine which wee here learne is that if If we dishonor God he will dishonour vs. wee doe neglect our dutie to GOD hee will make those who owe vs dutie to neglect this dutie when we most expect it and if wee dishonour him by our sinnes hee will cause vs to bee dishonoured and disgraced not onely by our enimies and strangers but also by our nearest and most familiar friends So because the people of Israell who professed themselues the spouse and children of God did by forsaking the Lord their husband and father and adhae●ing vnto Idols grieuously dishonour his holy name the Lord layeth vpon them a proportionable punishment that their wiues and daughters should neglect to them all loue conjugall duties and filiall obedience whereby they should not onely inwardly bee vexed and grieued in their minds but also outwardly in their names be exposed to infamie and reproach The like example wee haue else where in the booke of God when Noah neglected the duty of temperance and sobriety towards God his wicked sonne C ham neglected the dutie of reuerence towards him When Elie was so indulgent towards his sonnes that hee would rather displease God by suffering them to dishonour his name then hee would displease his sonnes by giuing them due correction whereby they might haue beene reclaymed from their sinnes they neglected all dutie to their father contemned his holy admonitions and so brought shame and reproach vpon the whole familie For the Lord caused in one day not onely the glory to depart from Israell when the Arke was taken which chiefly redounded to the dishonour of Elie who then was the Iudge of Israell but also tooke away his sonnes which were to be the glory of his house and togeather with them the office of the Priesthood and so made him inglorious both in the Common-wealth Church and in his owne priuate familie The like may be sayd of Dauid who
nor cast yee your pearles before swine lest they treade them vnder their feet and turning againe all to rent you And secondly because there is much more danger that they will make vs worse then hope that we shall make them better For sooner will these incurable leapers taint vs with their leprosie of sinne then we shall cleanse them by our best approued medicines and being so deepely infected with the plague of wickednes that the markes and tokens of death and destruction appeare vpon them there is no shew of hope that we should restore them to their spirituall health but there is great cause of feare lest they infect vs with their contagion It is true indeed that though their pestilent vices were apt to taint vs yet if we were not as apt to be tainted there were no such great danger but here it is far otherwise for as their poisonous contagion is fit to infect vs so in respect of the grosse and corrupt humours of sinne which remaine euen in all those who are regenerate we are as apt to receiue the infection and therefore we haue small reason to thrust our selues into their companie when it euidentlie appeareth that their diseases are desperate and past our cure Againe if we haunt the companie of wicked men and entertaine The euils that redound to those who frequent euill companie neere familiaritie and friendship with them either we must be silent when we see their faults or else admonish and reproue them if we smother them in silence and can be content to heare and see God dishonored then do we shew our want of the loue of God and zeale of his glorie haue a manifest argument against our owne soules that wee are none of his children for what sonne hauing any naturall affection in him can heare his father slandered and abused and hold his peace yea and we shew our hatred also against the partie what shew of loue soeuer we pretend if we neglect seasonable admonitions and reproofes and become accessaries to his sins as the Lord plainly implieth Leuit. 19. 17. Leuit. 19. 17. Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy hart but thou shalt plainly rebuke thy neighbour and suffer him not to sinne On the other side if we reproue desperate sinners we shall not onely cast these holy things vnto dogs and pearles before swine who will treade them vnder their vncleane feete but we shal our selues bee endangered lest like furious bandogs they turne againe and all to rent vs either by rayling speeches and vnciuill taunts or by open violence and desperate furie If we like of their wicked courses wee are not much better then they if they be irkesome and grieuous vnto vs why do we by haunting their companie seeke our owne sorrow The vse of this doctrine serueth to teach vs that vnder no colour of excuse we frequent the company of such who are so far spent in the sicknesse of sinne that there is no probable hope of their recouerie for seeing they are strong in euill we weake in good they wholly corrupt we but in part regenerate they striuing with all the powers of their heart mind and soule to draw vs vnto their sinnes and we faintly opposing either to perswade them from their wickednesse or to stand in our owne vprightnesse in a word seeing wee labour against the streame in our course of righteousnesse and they haue both winde and tide in their course of sinne let not vs grapple with thē foolishly imagining that we can force them vpward seeing vpon so much aduantage as they haue against vs they are much more likely not only to hinder our progresse in godlinesse but to carrie vs with them downe the streame of vice and wickednesse ANd thus much concerning their sinnes of idolatrie against the first table In respect of the second they sinned two waies First against themselues by intemperance Secondly gainst their neighbours And these sinnes were either common to all the people to wit their whoredomes and vncleannesse or peculiar to their Magistrates namely their bribing and extortion Al which are comprised in these words Vers 18. Their drunkennesse stincketh they haue committed Vers 18 whoredome their Rulers loue to say with shame Bring ye Or thus Their drinke putrifieth and stincketh or as others reade Their drinke is refractarious rebellious they continually commit whoredome their Princes loue to say with shame Bring yee Which words are not in number so many as are The exposition the interpretations diuers which are by diuers Expositors giuen of them but I will propound only those which seeme most probable and insist in that which best agreeth with the drift of the Prophet and circumstances of the place Some expound these words allegorically vnderstāding by drinke or drunkennesse that they were made spiritually drunken with their vnbridled loue of superstition and being thus besotted they committed spirituall whoredome that is idolatrie without shame But as I take it allegories in expounding the Scriptures are like oathes in speech neuer good but when they are necessarie Besides he had spoken of their desperate loue towards their idols in the former verse comprehending vnder it the sinnes of the first table and therfore it is not likely that in this breuitie of speech he doth inculcate and reiterate the same thing but rather vseth a new argument to disswade the men of Iuda from frequenting their company namely because they were guiltie of the breaches of the second table also of which he giueth three instances to wit their drunkennesse adulterie and briberie vnder which he compriseth all the rest But let vs come to more particulars Their drunkennesse stincketh or their drinke putrifieth and stincketh as the word heere vsed signifieth Which words amongst many others haue these three interpretations Some reade thē thus Their Drusius in Hosea drinke is gone backe namely from his first quality and condition and so sowreth and corrupteth for in the proper and Sur. primary signification the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth to goe backe Whereby they vnderstand by a metonymie of the cause that they were gone backe and degenerate from their first state of integritie and had made a defection from God according to that Esay 1. 22. Thy siluer is become drosse thy wine is Esa 1. 22. mixt with water But as I take it this doth not so well agree with the scope of the Prophet nor fitly cohereth with the words following as after shall appeare Others reade them thus Their wine is refractarious or Iunius rebellious that is vnderstanding them by the same metonymie their excessiue drinking of wine and strong drinke maketh them refractarious and rebellious according to that Prou. 20. 1. Wine is a mocker and strong drinke is raging that Pro. 20. 1. is it maketh men to mocke and rage And this translation is very probable first because the word may well beare it for strong drinke maketh men refractary and to
common to those that are regenerate to slippe into the puddle of sinne but being defiled they are neuer at rest till they be washed and cleansed from their pollution with the blood of Christ applied vnto them by a true and renued faith but it is proper to the vnregenerate after they are fallen into this filthie sinck to wallow in it and to take their chiefe delight in their pollution It is incident to the faithfull to bee lead Rom. 7. 24. captiue of sinne howbeit being in captiuitie they are neuer quiet till they come out of this thraldome and obtaine desired libertie but it is peculiar to the wicked being made slaues to loue their bondage and being imprisoned as Satans vassals to delight in their prison and to be in loue with their greues setters and chaines of sinne wherewith they are held in his captiuitie The godly may do the euil they would not and neglect the good which they would do neuerthelesse they take no pleasure in their transgressions but they are delighted in the law of God in the inner man and it is as sweete vnto them as the honie or hony combe but to commit wickednes with the full swinge and consent of will to loath vertue and to be in loue with vice to offend God and to be well pleased when he is offended is the diuels badge whereby his seruants are knowne and distinguished from the seruants of God Lastly we here obserue that the Lord condemneth it as a great sin in the Rulers of Israel to take bribes and rewards in that not only thereby themselues were corrupted but also the whole state of gouernment disioynted and disordered because their bribing peruerted iustice and brought in impunitie and together with it all manner of sin and wickednesse But of this sinne my purpose is to speake more largely elsewhere and therefore I will heere passe it ouer ANd thus much concerning their sins Their punishmēt followeth Vers 19. The winde hath bound thē vp in her Vers 19 wings And they shall be ashamed of their sacrifices In which The exposition words he denounceth against them a double punishment the latter whereof is the effect of the former the first is captiuitie in these words The winde hath bound them vp in her wings the other is shame and confusion in the words following and they shall be ashamed of their sacrifices The former is expressed in a loftie allegorie wherein he resembleth the wrath of God pursuing the wicked Israelites to a swift winde or an vnresistable tempest and the people to dust or chaffe which thereby is caught vp and scattered ouer the face of the earth This similitude is here contracted but may be thus explicated As the wind catcheth vp the chaffe and carrieth it aloft with vnresistable swiftnes as though it were fast bound vnto his wings and hauing tossed it to and fro doth at last scatter it abroad vpon the earth so the anger of God stirred vp with the sinnes of the Israelites should seaze vpon them like a furious tempest and scatter them here and there in a miserable captiuitie amongst the Gentiles and nations who should be Lords ouer them The persons then thus to be scattered were the people of Israel signified by this word them which in the originall is expressed in the feminine gender and singular number ligauit eam hath bound her towit the nation of the Israelites or the tribe of Ephraim of which the former words are to be vnderstood The meanes whereby they should be thus scattered was the winde of Gods furie and fierce displeasure prouoked by their sinnes The like allegorie is vsed Iob 21. 18. Psal 1. 4. where it is Job 21. 18. Psalm 1. 4. Ezech. 5. 3. said that the wicked are as chaffe which the winde driueth away Ezech. 5. 3. Now the cause why he vseth this similitude was not only because these darke speeches were fit for a prophecie which is as a booke sealed vp vntill it be opened and expounded by the euent but also because in these few words being rightly vnderstood those heauie iudgements which were inflicted vpon the Israelites were most fully and fitly signified For first hereby is implied the suddennesse of this iudgement which should befall them when they least expected it for as a foule storme suddenly followeth a faire calme and the winde which commeth we know not from whence rusheth vpon vs with vnexpected speed so the Lord surprizeth the Israelites at vnawares with his heauie punishment of a miserable captiuitie and whilest they pampered themselues with the fleshly pleasures of drunkennesse and vncleannesse and hoarded vp the riches of iniquitie by bribing and extortion as though they were assured that they should neuer be dispossessed of them euen then suddenly the wrath of God attached them and brought vpon them the Assyrians who spoiled the land and led them into cruel bondage Secondly hereby is implied the swiftnesse of this iudgement which is here compared to the swiftnes of the winde and that whē it goeth on Gods message with posting speed for as though the swiftnes of the winde were not quicke enough to expresse the speedines of Gods vengeance he giueth wings vnto it to double as it were his hast And thus this similitude is commonly vsed to signifie the hastie speedinesse of an action So when Dauid would in liuely manner expresse the speedie swiftnes which the Lord vseth in assisting his seruants and destroying his enemies he saith that He rode vpon the Cherub and did flie and he came flying vpon the wings of the winde Psal 18. 10. 2. Sam. 22. 11. and Psalm Psalm 18. 10. 104 3. 2. Sam. 22. 11. 104. 3. He maketh the clouds his chariot and goeth vpon the wings of the winde And in the same sense this similitude is vsed with prophane writers So Virgil Et ventis fulmi●●s ocyor alis swifter then the winde or lightning Thirdly hereby is implied that this iudgement should come vpon them with such vnresistable furie that they should not be able by any meanes to withstand it and this is signified whereas it is said that the winde should binde them in his wings that is as they who are bound hand and foote are vtterly vnable to make resistance so they should bee so ouermatched and hampered by the Assyrians that it should be but folly to striue against their strēgth seeing they should be debarred of all meanes whereby they might either defend themselues or offend the enemie And thus the vnresistable power of the Chaldeans is at large described Ioel. 1. 6. 7. 2. 2. 3. c. Joel 1. 6. 2. 2. 3. Fourthly hereby is signified the nature of their captiuitie namely that being led away by their enemies they should not haue any set place wherein they might rest and assemble themselues together for the performance of ciuill and diuine duties but that they should be tossed to and fro from post to pillar and be scattered and
to aspire vnto it God therefore did not chuse vs for his subiects because first we made choice of him to be our King and head but as the Apostle saith of his loue wee loued him because he loued vs first 1. Iohn 4. 19. so may we speake of the 1. Iohn 4. 19. fruits of his loue we come vnto him because first he called vs we chuse him for our King and head because first he chuseth vs for his subiects and members we submit our selues to his gouernment because first he ruleth and ouer-ruleth vs by his spirit with the inward working thereof inclining vs to holy obedience who naturally are stubburne and rebellious so that all our works and duties towards God are but the effects of his gratious working in vs and nothing but inferiour motions of that first mouer and as it were but reflections of those heauenly beames of Gods grace and goodnesse which shine vpon vs. The second thing which we are to obserue is that as That as soone as God hath chosen vs into his Church we chuse him soone as we are gathered into the Church and chosen by Christ to be his subiects and members then presently doe we chuse him to be our King and head submitting our selues to be ruled and gouerned by the scepter of his word and holy Spirit For God doth not worke vpon vs as vpon stockes and stones but as vpon reasonable creatures who being first set a worke by his holy Spirit doe worke together with him Whereby we may learne whether God hath chosen vs and effectually called vs to this high dignity of being the members of Christ not by entring into Gods secret counsels but by descending into our selues searching and examining our owne hearts whether we haue made choyce of Christ to be our head and gouernour for if we haue so done then assuredly he hath called and chosen vs seeing our chusing of him to be our head is but an effect of his chusing of vs to be his members Now further wee may know whether in deede and truth we haue chosen Christ to be our head by examining our owne hearts whether we haue submitted our selues to be guided and directed by his holy Spirit Which if we haue not done then certainely whatsoeuer we professe we haue not chosen Christ to be our head and consequently we can haue no assurance that we are chosen by Christ to be the members of his body Thirdly we are to obserue that the Church doth not onely after a generall manner set ouer them Christ to be their Euery true member of Christ applieth him vnto himselfe by his own faith head but euery member thereof doth particularly make choice of him to himselfe whereby we learne that neither the faith of the Church nor the faith of our parents is sufficient to make vs true members of Christs body vnlesse we particularly appropriate him vnto our selues by our owne faith for as no man is rich wife or learned by the riches wisedome or learning of another man but by his owne so is no man faithfull by anothers faith vnlesse himselfe beleeue The consideration whereof should make vs not to content our selues to be reckoned outward members of a faithfull congregation or to be the children of most faithfull and religious parents seeing euery man is vnited vnto Christ iustified and saued by his owne faith and not another mans and therefore euery one is earnestly to labour by all meanes to attaine vnto this gift of God that he may not only say generally with the Church we beleeue but particularly I beleeue as in the Creed also we professe Fourthly as euery one is to choose a head vnto himselfe so but one onely head Iesus Christ seeing a body with two or many heads is of all esteemed monstrous And therefore That the Pope is to be renounced wee are to renounce the Pope from being our head and to keepe vs to our onely head Iesus Christ submitting our selues wholly and onely to be guided and directed by his word and holy Spirit Lastly we are to obserue what kind of head our Sauiour Christ is our head in the highest degree of all perfection Christ is vnto vs not an idle head or in title onely but such a one as in deed and truth hath in him the nature and disposition of a head in the highest degree of all perfection For he is such a head as intirely loueth vs as being the members of his owne body he is an almighty and most powerfull head who is able to protect and defend vs from all dangers and malice of enemies he is a most vigilant and prouident head who obserueth all our wants and by his al-ruling prouidence prouideth for vs and finally he is a most wise head to gouerne and guide vs in all our waies not onely illuminating vs and giuing vs sight to discerne which is the best course but also deriuing vnto vs strength and motion whereby we are inabled to walke in it And therefore seeing wee haue a head so absolute and perfect in the highest degree of all excellency let vs take heede that we make not choice of any other nor of our selues to be our head but renouncing all other keepe vs wholly and onely vnto him And seing he is a most louing head let vs reioyce in his loue and returne loue vnto him againe and as the arme offereth it selfe to be cut off rather then the head should be wounded so let vs who are the members of Christs body be ready to indure blowes wounds yea death it selfe rather then any wound of dishonour should be inflicted on our head Christ And seeing he is an almighty head let vs trust wholy in his power resting and relying vpon him alone for deliuerance out of the middest of all dangers and from the raging violence of all enemies and seeing he is our carefull and most prouident head let vs not rest so much vpon our owne prouision industry and labour which will often faile vs as vpon his al-sufficient al-seeing and al-ruling prouidence who knoweth all our wants better then we our selues and neuer faileth either in will or power to supplie them And lastly seeing hee is such a head as is infinite in wisedome and all knowledge let vs submit our selues wholly and onely to be instructed gouerned and guided by him not following others directions and traditions nor our owne inuentions For hee is the light of the world and he that followeth him shall not walke in darkenesse but shall haue the light of life Ioh. 8. 12. Which Iohn 8. 12. 12. 35. light being taken away there remaineth nothing but palpable darkenesse Ioh. 12. 35. He is his fathers dearely beloued son whom we must heare Mat. 17. 5. He is our onlie master and teacher of whom we must be instructed Matth. 23. 8. 10. In a word he is our only head and therefore as the members Math. 17. 5. 23. 8. 10. doe not
their beauty to the eye then disgrace the deformity of their mindes to any sober iudgement that they doe not hereby grace and adorne but rather disgrace and deforme themselues for whereas by their creation they are Gods beautifull and excellent workmanship by their painting and dawbing they make themselues but like walking pictures and talking images that if beauty be a good it is such an one as is not bettered by communicating that they are not hereby liked and praised of the good and vertuous but of those if of any who like themselues are vaine and wanton Yea but they thus set forth themselues that they may bee liked and loued of their husbands vnto whom they cannot make themselues too amiable I answere that no wise husband would haue his wife set out to sale if he would reserue her to his owne proper vse that this is but a false pretence to excuse a false beauty For as the Satyrist saith moechis foliata parantur Juuenal sat 6. they vse these wanton arts not to please their husbands but to inflame the adulterer that the habit and behauiour of an harlot cannot bee pleasing and amiable vnto any husband that desireth to haue an honest and chaste wife that they must not so labour to please men as that in the meane time they displease God for their wanton behauiour and habit is offensiue and at least euill in appearance and therefore to bee forborne of Christians they derogate from Gods wisedome by altering and adding to his workemanshippe which kind of iniury an ordinary artificer cannot patience brooke and therefore seeing they are new creatures of their own making quite altered from their first creation it is not likely that the Lord wil owne or acknowledge them for his worke In a word they breake and transgresse the seuenth Commaundement both by shewing the signes of wantō vncleannes vsing the means to kindle inflame lust both in themselues others The last thing to be obserued is that as all kinds of idolatrie Sinnes openly professed and defended most odious in Gods sight and of all other sinnes are odious and loathsome vnto the Lord so especially those which are of the face and breast that is such as are openly professed and impudently defended Whilest sinne lurketh in the secret corners of the heart not daring to shew it selfe in the face and outward actions it maketh the sinner but like a poore fugitiue who hauing offended his Prince through selfe guiltinesse shunneth his presence but when it growes so presumptuous that it dare shew it selfe in the face words or externall actions and not onely so but also vaunt it selfe to the publike view daring Gods iustice and prouoking him as it were to his face then the sinner becommeth a proud rebell who regardeth not his Princes presence and contemneth his authoritie or like vnto an impudent adulteresse who not contenting her selfe with her secret whoredomes doth prostitute her selfe to her louers in the sight of her husband and like Absalon pitcheth a pauilion euen at noone day vpon the toppe of the house that hee may bee seene of all men This is the height of sinne when as men doe not onely consent vnto it but also act it not in a corner but in the face of the world not as blushing and being ashamed at it but impudently defending it boasting and glorying in their wickednesse And as it is the height of sinne so it shall bee plagued with the height of punishment euen with the diuorce and separation from God and therefore let all that would bee Gods spouse aboue all other sinnes flee these and though they fall through infirmitie humanie frailtie into sin yet at least let them take it away from their face and from betweene their breasts that is let them not defend it and much lesse vaunt and glorie in their wickednesse ANd so much concerning the first end of the denunciation of the diuorce namelie the repentance of the people Now concerning the second end which is a consequent of the former that is to say their freedom from punishment vpon their vnfained repentance and this either respecteth the whole Church or the particular members thereof The first is expressed vers 3. Lest I strip her naked and set her as Vers 3 in the day that she was borne and make her as a wildernesse and leaue her like a drie land and slay her for thirst In the former verse the Prophet shewed that the Lord The exposition had diuorced the Church of Israel but howsoeuer he had inflicted on her this iudgement yet such was his infinite goodnesse that in wrath he remembred mercie for although hee might iustly as husbands vsed to doe in such cases when he diuorced her haue stripped her of all his gifts and benefits yet in mercie he did not thus farre proceed in punishing of her but though he had put her away hee suffered her still to enioy the good things which he had bestowed vpon her at least in some measure and that to this end that they might remaine with her as pledges of his loue not altogether as yet extinguished and as vndoubted arguments to assure her that as he had not diuorced her for any hatred of her person but for her sinnes so if shee would repent of them hee would bee ready to receiue her againe into his former loue and fauour But because she abused the mercie of God and continued in her impenitencie therefore he threatneth that vnlesse she would seriously repent of her sinnes he would not only diuorce her but also strippe and spoyle her of all those his gifts and benefits which he had bestowed vpon her and which as yet she inioyed Wherein the Lord alludeth to the behauiour of kind husbands who hauing put away their wiues for their whoredomes doe notwithstanding allow vnto them liberall maintenance with which benefits when they are not restrained from their sinne and brought to amendment but rather abuse their gifts as meanes to further them in Ezech. 16. 16. 17 their vncleannesse and by bestowing them on their louers they threaten to strip and spoile them of all those benefits which they inioy and to leaue them destitute of all maintenance As though he should haue said Although vpon your diuorce iustly caused by your whoredomes I might also haue depriued you of all my benefits which I haue bestowed vpon you yet such hath been my mercie that I haue spared you hitherto and suffered you to inioy them in hope of your amendment but doe not continue to abuse my patience and mercie for vnlesse you repent and take away your fornications and adulteries which with such audacious impudencie you commit I will strippe you of all my benefits which as yet you inioy and leaue you as naked and beggarlie as you were when I first tooke you in mariage Now the benefits which the Lord threatneth to spoile the people of Israel of were either temporall and corporall or else spirituall
also alludeth to the state of the Israelites in the wildernesse who had no water but what the Lord brought out of a rocke in a miraculous manner Neither doth he onely aime at this bodilie thirst for want of water but also at the thirst of the soule for want of the water which floweth from the sanctuarie the word of God of which Amos speaketh Chap. 8. 11. 13. And of the Amos 8. 11. 13. water of life of which whosoeuer drinketh shall neuer more thirst euen the Spirit of God of which our Sauiour speaketh Ioh. 4. 14. 7. 38. 39. Ioh. 4. 14 7. 38. 39. The scope of the Prophet And so much for the meaning of the words wherein the Prophet aimeth at these foure things principally first hee setteth forth the admirable and infinite patience loue clemencie and bountie of God who when his spouse the Church of Israel had often and impudently plaied the harlot and for her whoredomes was diuorced from him yet he did not according to the iust custome of husbands in like cases take his gifts and rich benefits from her which he had bestowed on her but suffered her to inioy them still and this he implieth when as hee willeth her to repent lest he should spoile her noting thereby that as yet hee had not done it Secondly in these words he intimateth that if she would repent he was readie to forgiue her and to suffer her still to inioy his benefits for he had not as yet spoiled and stripped her as he iustly might and was loath to go about it and therfore he exhorteth her to turne from her sinnes that he might not be vrged to doe it in his iust displeasure Thirdly he laboureth to worke in her true repentance by forewarning her of an increase of punishment namelie that if that great punishment of diuorce and separation from God would not mooue them to turne from their sinnes hee was readie to inflict other punishments vpon them which though they were not so great as the former in their owne nature yet perhaps they were farre more grieuous in their opinion and apprehension For where hee willeth her to take away her sinnes lest hee spoiled her hee implieth that vnlesse she repented he would not content himselfe with that punishment of her diuorce but would most certainely spoile her of all the ornaments gifts and benefits which he had bestowed on her Fourthly because pride and true repentance will not stand together therefore he seeketh to humble her both by putting her in minde of her miserable and base estate wherein she was before hee aduanced her and by assuring her that if she did not humble herselfe forsake her sinnes and turne vnto him from her idols he would leaue her as hee found her depriue her of all his gifts and ourwhelme her with an vnsupportable load of woe and misery And these are the maine things at which the Prophet aimeth The Do ∣ ctrines in these words The doctrines which from hence are to be obserued are these First we may obserue what is the God denounceth his iudgments that we may repent cause why the Lord denounceth his iudgements against his people to wit that they may repent of their sinnes and that repenting they may escape punishment which his iustice vrgeth him to inflict vpon them continuing in their sins So he causeth the diuorce to be proclaimed that they may take away their adulteries and that repenting of them they might not be stripped of all the gifts and benefits which as yet they inioyed So that the end of Gods threatnings is that we may repent and of our repentance that wee may escape punishment and the end of one punishment is that making good vse of it we may escape an other Whence we may obserue that God euen in wrath remembreth mercy for hee threatneth that he may not punish and punisheth that he may not destroy he punisheth vnwillingly after a sort and therefore before hand he giueth warning that wee may escape it and hauing inflicted it he laboureth to apply it to our senselesse hearts that by our obstinacy wee doe not vrge his iustice to proceede in punishing And therefore let vs not by our stubburnnesse and impenitency make Gods end frustrate and turne mercy into iustice but when he threatneth let vs repent that we may escape punishment or at least let vs turne vnto him when he punisheth that we doe not moue him to deale more seuerely with vs. The second thing to be obserued is that after the Lord God doth not alwaies strip a people of al his benefits after he hath reiected them hath reiected a people hee doth not alwaies presently vpon the diuorce withdraw his gifts and benefits from them but leaueth them with them for a time to bee inioyed that this his loue patience and bounty may moue them to forsake their sinnes that so they may bee receiued into his former loue and fauour Whereby as wee haue occasion to admire and praise the indefatigable patience and infinite bountie of our gratious God so may we hereby be admonished not to iudge of Gods loue and fauour nor of our owne happinesse by outward benefits whether they be ciuill or spiritutuall as namely peace plenty a flourishing estate the word Sacraments c. seeing after the diuorce he vouchsafeth to the diuorced such benefits for a time as appeareth in this place The like example we haue in Caine who being banished Gods presence flourished in the world and in Saul who though hee were reiected yet the Lord suffered him a long time to inioy the Kingdome and in Ahab whose destruction was long determined before it was effected Thirdly we may obserue that because the Church of Israel did not repent vpon the hearing of the diuorce proclamed If one iudgement will not reclaime vs God will send another therefore the Lord threatneth an other punishment namely that he would strip and spoile them of all his gifts So that although in his loue and patience he doth not presently after he had diuorced them depriue them of his benefits but giueth them a time to make vse of his former punishment yet his iustice will not euer suffer him to winke at their sinnes but if his first iudgement will not reclaime them he will goe forward to a second which vsually is more grieuous then the first Notwithstanding in this he first denounceth the diuorce which is the greater punishment and after the withdrawing of his gifts which is the lesse for separation from God is infinitely a more heauy iudgement then to be depriued of all other happinesse And this hee doth because howsoeuer these things are in their owne nature yet to worldly men and prophane hypocrites the losse of God is more lightly esteemed then the losse of his gifts for so they may inioy their worldly glory riches and delights they can bee content to liue depriued of Gods fauour and to be diuorced from him And therefore the Lord
confidence and carnall affiance whereby we trust and rest vpon rather the creature then vpon him our Creator and withall doth beate vs from those worldly hopes that we might flee vnto him for succour and rest vpon his promises and prouidence for our deliuerance And these are the doctrines which arise out of the former God doth not suffer his to remaine alwaies in their sinne and idolatrie part of this verse containing the first effect of the peoples afflictions Now out of the latter part wherein is shewed the second effect namely their forsaking their Idols and turning vnto the Lord these instructiōs are further to be obserued First we learne that howsoeuer those that belong to Gods election may for a time leaue Gods pure worship and follow Idols yea and be so blinded in their superstitions that when they are afflicted for their sinne they doe with more earnestnes embrace idolatrie yet the Lord will not so leaue them but at length he will open their eyes that they shal see their sinnes and sensiblie discerne that they are the causes of their punishments though for a time in their ignorance and superstition they preferre idolatrie before his true worship yet at last he illuminateth their iudgemēts so as they may see how much better it is to follow him then to follow idols to embrace his true religion reuealed in his word then to follow their owne inuention Examples hereof we haue in Abraham in the Israelites comming out of Egypt and in the time of the Iudges and in many at this day who haue forsaken the idolatries of the whore of Babylon and haue embraced Gods true religion Secondly we may obserue that as soone as they spie their As soone as the faithfull see their errors and sins they reforme and forsake them errors they do not go on further in them but they returne into the way of truth as soone as they see their sins they forsake them as being the causes of their miserie when they see the vainenes of their idols then they returne vnto the Lord their true husband neitheir is it enough to see our sins if wee continue in them nay rather this will redouble our punishment it is not sufficient to know truth and error vnlesse we Luk. 12. 47. embrace the one and forsake the other it will not profit vs to see our former grossenesse in following idols vnlesse Matth. 11. 21. hereby we be moued not only to forsake them but also to returne vnto our husband the Lord our God worshipping him according to his will So that here we learne what is the practise of true repentance it consisteth not in the knowledge only or acknowledgment of our sins for thus far did Pharaoh and Saul proceed thus did Iudas and thus do many worldlings repent but we must so see our sinnes as that with the sight of them wee bee exceedingly displeased with our selues we must so acknowledge them as that withall we vnfainedly bewaile them we must when we behold them also hate and detest them and not only forsake our sins but also returne vnto the Lord with full purpose of heart resoluing and endeuouring to serue and please him in holinesse and newnes of life Thirdly we may obserue the profit of afflictions when as The profit of afflictions they are sanctified vnto vs by Gods Spirit for whereas prosperitie maketh vs blind through pride self-selfe-loue and securitie so as we can neither see our sinnes nor Gods approaching iudgements aduersitie openeth our eyes and rectifieth the iudgement so as then we not only see our sins but are readie also to condemne our selues iustly to haue deserued those euils which we suffer yea and far greater if the Lord should enter into iudgement with vs for when as the light of nature our owne conscience and the written Word of God teach and conuict vs of this that God is the chiefe goodnes most gratious most mercifull and in his owne nature not apt and readie to hurt and punish any of his creatures but rather to extend his bountie multiply his benefits vpō all when we fall into miseries and calamities we must needs iustifie God in his iudgements and condemne our selues whō Lam. 3. 22. we know to be full of all corruption and wickednes An example whereof we haue in Iosephes brethren Gen. 42. 21. in Gen. 42. 21. the Israelites vnder the Iudges in Dauid Psal 51. 4. yea in Psal 51. 4. Exod. 10. 16. 17 Pharaoh himselfe Exod. 10. 16. 17. Where as prosperitie maketh vs dissolute and licentious in our waies affliction serueth in stead of a thornie hedge to stay vs from running on in the course of sinne to our perdition Whereas prosperitie maketh vs negligent in performing the duties of Gods worship and seruice miserie and affliction maketh men zealous forward and deuout according to that Esa 26. 16. O Lord in Esa 26. 16. trouble they haue visited thee they powred out a prayer when thy chastening was vpon them And because men at such times are most fit and readie to performe such duties therefore then the Lord especially requires them Psal 50. 15. Lastly whereas Psal 50. 15. prosperitie makes vs to forget God and to flee away from him affliction maketh vs to remember him and by true repentance to turne vnto him An example wee haue in this 2. Chron 33. 12. 13. place in the Israelites in the time of the Iudges in Manasses and the prodigall sonne Luke 15. Lastly wee may obserue the motiues perswading the The motiues which perswade the Church to turne vnto God Church to returne vnto God the first whereof is contained in the word husband for therein she gathereth vnto her selfe some assurance of his loue for although for her sinnes she was diuorced yet vpon her true repentance she might gather certaine hope that she should be pardoned and receiued into former grace seeing she had not to deale with an enemie or stranger and an ordinarie friend but with a most louing and gratious husband who was as readie to forgiue as she to aske forgiuenes Ierem. 3. 1. 12. 22. The second motiue Iere. 3 1. 12. 22 is the assurance of the bettering of her estate for she could speake by experience that her estate whilest she serued the Lord was much better then when she followed Idols and by the assurance of faith and hope she was assertained that repenting she should be receiued to grace and restored to her former state condition The like example we haue in the prodigall sonne who returned vnto God because hee knew him to be his gratious father and was assured that being reconciled vnto him hee should be deliuered out of his present miserie into a state of happinesse Where we may learne that true faith is the cause of vnfained repentance for vntill we haue some assurance of Gods loue and mercie in Christ wee flee from him as from a seuere Iudge but when
their calling to deliuer their embassage and seeing in resisting them they rebell against God himselfe neither is it possible that any should be obedient vnto God who maligne his messengers for his message sake And secondly when Gods iudgements are denounced out of his Word against them for their sinnes they are not to neglect them but to lay them to heart that therby they may be moued to vnfained repentance notwithstanding they see no appearance of danger or any likely meanes wherby such punishments may bee deriued vnto them seeing the Lord whose Word it is which we heare is able to effect it though to vs it seeme impossible ANd so much concerning the first part of this Chapter containing in it legall threatnings denounced against the people of Israel for their sinnes Now we are to speake of the second part containing in it Gods gratious promises of diuers excellent benefits which hee would bestow vpon his Church and people the true Israel of God in the time of the Gospell The first whereof is their effectuall calling and conuersion vnto God wherby they are freed out of the spirituall captiuitie of Satan chosen out of the world and made Gods Church and peculiar people The second is true consolation wrought in their hearts by the glad tidings of the Gospell made effectuall by the inward working of his holy Spirit Both which are contained Vers 14. in these words Vers 14 Therefore behold I will allure her and bring her into the wildernesse and speake friendly or confortablie vnto her Where the The exposition Lord sheweth that howsoeuer being prouoked vnto wrath by their sinnes he would execute vpon them all those punishments before threatned yet he would not retaine his anger for euer but in the end when he had laid vpon them such afflictions as were sufficient measuring their proportion by the rule of his fatherly loue and not according to the hainousnes of their sins he would turne all their chastisements to their good and gathering them into his Church multiplie his mercies vpon them But let vs come to the words themselues wherein we are to consider first the context and secondly the benefits promised the context in these words Therefore behold This may seeme a strange kind of consequence for in the former verse he had set downe their obstinacie in their grosse idolatrie and that they were so wholly deuoted to their Idols that they had quite forgotten the true God and now hee presently inferreth hereupon that therefore he would allure her and speake comfortablie vnto her But howsoeuer this may seeme but a bad inference if we regard their sinnes vpon the recitall whereof it should rather haue followed that therefore they should haue such punishments inflicted vpon them as their sinnes had deserued yet it hath good dependance if we respect Gods infinite mercie and his eternall purpose whereby he hath of his free grace and vndeserued goodnes ordained to call them who belong to his election out of their sinnes that being conuerted they may also bee saued As though he should haue said Seeing they follow their idols with delightfull obstinacie and haue altogether forgotten me and seeing their hearts are so blind and obdurate that all my punishments will not reclaime them and finally seeing it is not my purpose to giue them ouer to destruction and to suffer them to run headlong to condemnation therefore I will not let them go forward in their owne courses nor be ruled by their owne obstinate wils for then they would neuer returne vnto me but I wil work vpon their hard harts by my Word and Spirit alluring and perswading them to leaue their idols and false worship and to returne vnto me that they may worship me according to my reuealed will and submit themselues vnto me in all holy obedience And because this is a wonderfull mercie of God farre aboue all humane conceite and therfore not lightly and negligently to be passed ouer hence it is that the note of attention is added Therefore behold that we might more carefully obserue and obseruing praise and magnifie this vnspeakable goodnes of God who by our sinnes is moued rather to pitie then to punish vs. And so much for the context The first benefit here promised is their effectuall calling whereby working vpon their hearts with his Word and Spirit hee would allure and perswade them to forsake their idolatrie and to come out of the seruice of sin and Satan that they might become true members of his Church and liue in holy obedience vnto his will as his true subiects and seruants All which is contained in these words I wil allure her and bring her into the wildernesse where he alludeth to their first deliuerie out of the captiuitie and from the blind idolatrie of Egypt when as first he allured and perswaded them by his seruants Moses and Aaron to desire earnestly to come out of that bondage that they Exod. 4. 30. 31. might become his seruants and people and hauing so inclined their hearts hee brought them out with a strong arme and led them into the wildernesse where he made his couenant with them and afterwards brought them into the land of promise where he multiplied vpon them his manifold benefits as it followeth in the next verse So the Lord by his seruants and Ministers doth worke in the ignorant minds and stubborne hearts of those that belong to his election a desire to come out of the thraldome of the spirituall Pharaoh Satan and hauing thus inclined and allured them by his powerfull Spirit applying vnto them the benefits of Christs death and obedience hee deliuereth them out of this miserable bondage notwithstanding hee doth not presently bring them from Egypt to the heauenly Canaan but causeth thē to passe first thorow the wildernesse of this wicked world where howsoeuer hee prouideth for them and causeth their safetie by his almightie protection so that they are now in far better estate then whilest they liued in the spirituall captiuitie of sinne and Satan yet they are there afflicted with many miseries hunger thirst heate cold sicknesse and diseases with inward mutinies and sedition amongst themselues and with the outward malice and violence of the spirituall Cananites their worldly and wicked enemies with which hauing a while exercised and humbled them and withall wrought in their hearts an earnest desire to come into their heauenly countrey in the end he bringeth them into the spirituall and new Ierusalem The like allusion the Prophet Esay hath speaking of this spirituall deliuerance through Christ Esa 11. 15. 16. Esa 11. 15. 16. Whereas then hee saith I will allure her the meaning is that by his word and holy Spirit he will bring them to true repentance effectually perswading them to leaue the bondage of sinne and Satan and to adioyne themselues to his Church and familie and more specially that he will incline them and change their obstinate resolution in following their idols and make
world that hated our head Christ will also hate vs which are his members as our Sauiour hath told vs Ioh. 16. 18. 19. Satan continually assayleth Ioh. 16. 18. 19. vs labouring to regaine vs into his thraldome and though we had no outward molestation yet our inbred enemie the flesh will not let vs want combersome trouble and vexation And therefore let vs not look for a paradise in this world which was appointed for our pilgrimage nor expect victorie and triumph before wee haue vndertaken and finished our warfare neither let vs imagine that we shall be conformable vnto Christ in glorie before we haue been conformable vnto him in his afflictions or that we shall raigne with Rom. 8. 17. 18. him before we haue suffered with him or finally that wee can passe into the kingdome of heauen but by many afflictions and tribulations Examples hereof we haue in Adam Act. 14. 22. Abel Abraham Isaac Iacob Dauid and in the Apostles yea in our Sauiour Christ himselfe who first suffered and so entred into glory And this is that which our Sauiour hath forewarned Luk. 24. 26. vs of in many places Mat. 10. 17. 26. 38. 16. 24. 24. 9. Iohn 15. 20. 16. 20. 1. Thess 3. 3. 4. 2. Tim. 3. 12. And therefore before we giue our names vnto Christ and make profession of his Gospell but let vs as he counselleth vs sit downe and with the wise builder count the cost lest hauing begun this great worke and not being able or willing to finish it we expose our selues to derision Let vs with Luk. 14. 28. 2. Cor. 6. 8. the Apostle resolue to go forward in our Christian course by honor and dishonor euill report and good report and make full account if we will be followers of Christ to waite vpon him with our crosse on our backes otherwise if we embrace Christ and his Gospell for worldly respects we will be ready to forsake him when we see our hopes frustrate with Iudas Simon Magus and Demas And though for a time we heare the Word with gladnes and bring forth the blade of a glorious profession yet when the sunne of affliction ariseth it will wither and in the time of temptation we shall fall away Luk. 8. 13. Luk. 8. 13. And these are the doctrines which we are to obserue out The Lord is the sole author of all true comfort and only giueth it to the conuerted 2. Cor. 1. 3. 4. 7 6. Rom. 15. 5. of the first benefit promised in the former part of the verse Now out of the second benefit namely the comfort and consolation of the Church promised in the latter part of this verse these things are to be obserued First we here learne that the Lord is the author of all true comfort which hee imparteth onely vnto those whom hee hath first allured and perswaded that is effectually called for where there is no peace with God nor peace of conscience there is no sound comfort but there is no such peace till we be conuerted and reconciled vnto God according to that Esa 57. 21. Howsoeuer therfore worldlings may laugh Esay 57. 21. from the teeth outward yet they haue no sound comfort till the Lord conuert them and speake comfortablie vnto their hearts their mirth being continually checked with the pangs of an euil conscience which continually summoneth them to appeare before Gods iudgement seate No Traitour being condemned can hartely reioyce till he haue his pardon c. The vse which we are to make hereof is that wee doe not seek for ioy consolation in worldly vanities in the meane time being destitute of the comfort of Gods Spirit but first let vs labour for assurance of our true conuersion and then being at peace with God wee shall be replenished with the ioy of the holy Ghost And secondly seeing there is no true comfort till God the author of consolation speake vnto our hearts let vs not seeke it elsewhere but with the Apostle beg it at Gods hand by prayer 2. Thess 2. 16. 17. 2. Thess 2. 16. 17. God afflicteth his but doth not ouerwhelme them with miseries Secondly wee heere learne that howsoeuer the people of God after their conuersion are lead into the wildernesse of affliction yet they are not left desolate to be ouerwhelmed with their miseries for though all other helps faile the Lord himselfe will speake comfortably vnto them and keep them from fainting or sinking vnder the heauiest waight of affliction Neither in truth is there any miserie so intolerable but it may be borne with patience and ioyfulnesse of them vnto whom the Lord hath spoken by his word and Spirit assuring them that they are reconciled vnto him and in his loue and fauour that they haue their sinnes pardoned and haue escaped condemnation that all things shall worke together for the best and that these momentanie and light afflictions 2. Cor. 4. 17. shall cause vnto them a superexcellent and eternall weight of glorie Examples hereof we haue in Abraham Iacob Dauid Elias in the Apostles Act. 5. 11. in the Thessalonians Act. 5. 11. 1. Thess 1. 6. who receiued the word with much affliction and with ioy of the holy Ghost 1. Thess 1. 6. And finally in all the faithfull who being iustified through faith and being at peace with God doe not onely reioyce vnder the hope of the glorie of God but also in tribulation Rom. 5. 1. 2. 3. Rom. 5. 1. 2. 3. And therefore when we heare of or feele sharpe affliction for the profession of the Gospell let vs not bee daunted or discouraged for the Lord when he hath brought vs into this wildernesse will speake comfortably vnto vs he will not suffer vs to be tempted aboue our power but will giue a good issue to all our trials and will so arme vs with inward comfort 1. Cor. 10. 13. that we shall easily indure all outward afflictions So that when we are brought into the wildernesse of affliction so far are we to be from doubting of Gods loue and fauour and of the comfort of his Spirit that then aboue all other times wee are surely to expect them Thirdly we are to obserue the meanes whereby this comfort The meanes whereby God comforteth vs. is deriued vnto vs namely by Gods speaking vnto vs the which speech is twofold the outward speech of the Gospell containing the glad tidings of our reconciliation with God and all the gratious promises of life and saluation in Christ and the inward speech of the Spirit crying in our hearts Abba Father and testifying vnto our spirits that we are Rom. 8. 15. 16. the sonnes of God And hence it is that the Spirit is called the Comforter Ioh. 16. 7. and our spirituall comfort the consolation Ioh. 16. 7. of the Spirit Act. 9. 31. If then we would haue this inward Act. 9. 31. ioy and comfort let vs with al diligence and attention
vnto which wee are preferred so behaue our selues as beseemeth our high place and calling A Prince will not seruilely drudge for day wages nor sell his honor for a small trifle nor set his minde vpon base obiects no more should we who by vertue of this royall mariage are called to higher honour then the whole world affoordeth spend our sweate and labour to obtaine vncertaine richer and filthie pleasures wee should not dimme our glorie and impeach our honour by behauing our selues like the slaues of sinne and Satan nor affect with the highest pitch of our desires worldly toyes and base trifles seeing things of farre greater excellencie are reserued for vs. Lastly as hereby wee may be put in minde of our honour We must performe coniugall duties vnto Christ and dignitie so also of our dutie namely that being married vnto Christ wee labour to performe vnto him all duties required of a good wife seeing he is wanting in nothing which belongeth vnto a most gratious and kinde husband that is let vs loue him aboue all the world and shew our loue by our readinesse to lay downe our liues for his sake who is our louing husband seeing he hath laid down his for vs euen whilest wee were his enemies Let vs yeeld vnto him voluntarie and absolute obedience and submit our selues to bee ruled and guided by his word and Spirit Let vs keepe our coniugall fidelitie reseruing our selues pure and vndefiled as from all other sinnes so especially from idolatrie and superstition Let vs who haue communion both in Christ and all his benefits not grudge to giue our selues and the best things we haue vnto him for the aduancement of his glorie and the furthering of his worship and seruice especially let vs giue vnto him our hearts which he so much desireth Let vs reuerence him as our heauenly husband fearing his displeasure as the greatest euill and mourning for no losse so much as for the losse of his fauour Let vs rest wholly relie on his prouidence for the supplie of all our wants and for protection from all dangers In a word let vs labour to performe all duties which belong to such a husband and to deck our selues with all graces which may make vs appeare amiable in his sight and so wee shall confirme our selues in this assurance that we are espoused vnto Christ and shal be made partakers not only of himselfe but also of all his benefits And these are the doctrines which are to be obserued out Nothing can frustrate the couenant betweene God and vs. of the contract it selfe Now follow those which arise out of the adiuncts and properties of this mariage and first out of the perpetuitie thereof Where first wee may obserue to our singular comfort that it is impossible for any thing whatsoeuer to breake off the couenant betweene God and vs or to make a separation after hee hath once contracted vs to himselfe in this holy mariage nor all our spirituall enemies Satan the world the flesh nor all the power of hell ioyned together no nor yet our owne sinnes past present or to come for the Lord hath here promised that he will espouse vs vnto himselfe for euer Who therefore would not labour with his whole endeuour to attaine vnto this most honourable estate accompanied with such inestimable benefits seeing they are infinitely more excellent in their owne nature then all the glorie and riches of the world and besides they are eternall and neuer to be taken from vs. He that is in honour to day may be in disgrace to morrow he that is now rich may within a while be brought to extreame pouertie but who so is aduanced to this spirituall honour of being espoused vnto God shall neuer be depriued of it neither in this life nor in the life to come Secondly seeing the vnion betweene Christ and vs is perpetuall seeing the bonds of this vnion is the Spirit of God and a true and liuely faith hence we learne that Gods Spirit and this faith after we are married vnto Christ shall neuer be taken from vs for then the mariage bonds being broken the mariage also should bee dissolued which is contrarie to the promise of God in this place And these are the things to be obserued out of the perpetuitie Whosoeuer are married vnto Christ are made righteous of this mariage Out of the properties and conditions thereof we may further note these instructions First whereas the Lord promiseth that hee will espouse the Church in righteousnes hence we learne that whosoeuer are maried vnto Christ they are also made righteous that is they are not only clothed with the wedding garment of Christs righteousnesse imputed vnto them by which they are iustified in Gods sight but also are made righteous by the sanctification of his Spirit dwelling in them the which their righteousnes consisteth in the integritie and vprightnes of their hearts and in their earnest and sincere desire and endeauour to performe obedience vnto Gods Commandements the which their obedience is in this life mingled with manifold infirmities and imperfections but shal become perfect in the life to come Secondly we learne that though this righteousnesse bee Our righteousnesse constant and perpetuall weake and imperfect yet shall it be perpetuall euen as our mariage with Christ is perpetuall and eternall And therefore although wee must worke out our saluation with feare and trembling and labour earnestly to haue this our righteousnes more and more strengthned and increased yet when we feele our slow progresse in the pathes of righteousnes and finde it mingled with our great corruptions and imperfections like a few graines of corne in a heape of chaffe let vs not be vtterly discouraged as fearing lest this little sparke of righteousnes will be altogether quenched with the floud of our corruptions seeing the Lord hath promised that as this his couenant of mariage with vs shall bee perpetuall so also that it shall for euer continue in righteousnes c. Thirdly whereas the Lord promiseth that he will marrie Our righteousnesse is not the cause of our vnion with Christ his Church in righteousnes not by chusing her being righteous but by making her righteous being chosen hence we learne that our owne righteousnes is not the cause of this holy and happie vnion but that this vnion is the cause of our righteousnes for after we are vnited vnto Christ by the Spirit of God then this Spirit dwelling in vs doth applie vnto vs the vertue of Christs death which purgeth vs from not only the guilt and punishment of sin but also from the corruption power and dominion thereof and the vertue of his resurrection whereby wee also are raised from the death of sinne to holines and newnes of life And this notablie appeareth Ezech. 16. 8. 9. 10. 11. c. Ezech. 16. 8. 9. Secondly whereas the Lord saith that he will marrie his Church in iudgement hence we learne that whosoeuer
had their eyes and mindes alwayes fixed vpon them Secondly he saith that they loued the wine bottles whereby wee may eyther generally vnderstand that besides their sinne of Idolatry they were also addicted to all manner of vnlawfull pleasures and luxurious excesse as surfetting and drunkennesse lasciuiousnesse and wantonnesse for with the corruption of Religion is vsually ioyned corruption of manners Pietie and Honesty being such twins as both liue and die together And if we take the words in this sence then we are to vnderstand them Synecdochecally dunkennesse being put for voluptuousnesse and all corruption of manners of which he maketh speciall choyse that he may persist in the former Allegory seeing Adultery Drunkennes are commonly ioyned together and are mutuall causes one of another Or els we may take them more specially and properly for that drunkennesse and those voluptuous delights which they vsed in their Idolatrous feasts for with their Idolatry they vsually ioyned feasting and reuelling as may appeare Exod. Exod. 32. 6. 32. 6. Iudg. 9. 27. vnto which custome the Prophet Amos alludeth Iudg. 9. 27. Chap. 2. 8. They drinck the wine of the condemned in Amos. 2. 8. the house of their God The which custome lasted vnto the Apostles time as appeareth 1. Cor. 10. 21. and this as I take 1. Cor. 10. 21. it is the more naturall and proper sence of this place namely that the people of Israell did not onely commit Idolatry but also by their drinking feasting and reuelling shewed the exceeding great delight which they tooke in their sinne And this is the meaning of these words The doctrines Our pronenesse to fall into desperation or presumption which arise out of them are diuers First we may obserue out of the generall scope of this Chapter our exceeding pronenesse to run into two extreams secure presumption abiect desperation in respect of our diuers estate and condition when we are in prosperity we are deafe to all reprehension admonion threatnings we flatteringly perswade our selues that this Sunne of Gods fauour will euer shine vpon vs notwithstanding that our sinnes continually ascend and as a thick cloud interpose themselues betweene vs the beams of Gods loue and when we heare Gods curses we blesse our selues in our hearts saying I shall haue peace although I walk Deut. 29. 19. according to the stubbernenesse of mine owne heart adding drunkennesse vnto thirst as it is Deut. 29 19. Yea when the Lord beginneth to punish we are ready in the securitie of our hearts to promise vnto our selues immunitie and to say with those wicked men Esay 28. 15. We haue made a couenant with Esay 28. 15. death and with hell we are at agreement though ascourge run ouer and passe through it shall not come at vs c. And on the other side when God withdraweth from vs his gracious countenance and taking away our prosperitie in stead thereof layeth vpon vs affliction and aduersitie then we are as ready to fall into the contrary extreame concluding that God hath vtterly reiected vs and cast vs off for euer foolishly imagining that when our Sunne of comfort is once set and the night of sorrow and aduersitie hath ouershadowed vs that it will neuer arise againe and replenish our hearts with ioy and consolation An example hereof we haue in the Israelites in this place and in Dauid Psal 30. 6. 8. The consideration whereof should moue all Gods Ministers according to the practise of the Prophet in this place wisely to intermixe comminations with consolations iudgement with mercy threatnings with promises and the Law with the Gospell that they may keep men in an euen course and in the golden meane neither presumptuously going forward in sin in regard of Gods mercies and benefits nor desperately sincking vnder the waight of sinne and punishment when they are ouertaken of Gods iudgements Secondly whereas the Lord commandeth the Prophet That Gods ministers must often inculcate their instructions and admonitions yet againe to put the people in minde of his mercyes and their owne sinnes and vnworthinesse hence we obserue that it is not sufficient for Gods Ministers once alone to stand vpon these points but considering how forgetfull men are of Gods benefits and how obdurate and obstinate in their wicked courses they must repeate beate vpon these things againe and againe neuer thinking any duety sufficiently taught which is not also sufficiently learned Neyther must they seeke to please the itching eares of phantasticall hearers who are impatient in hearing the same things twise deliuered nor seeke to delight such surfetted and cloyed appetites as cannot indure oftner then once to tast of the same food no nor yet take pleasure though varietie of food be offered vnto them if it be brought in the same dish desiring onely varietie and to heare continually new matter out of a new Text but they must like good Surgeons apply the same salues to the same sores till they be perfectly cured they must speake againe and againe of the same mercyes of God till they bee remembred teach the same doctrines till they be learned exhort to the same dueties till they be practised and reproue the same sinnes till they be amended And like good house-holders as they are to auoid the glutting of the family by the continuall vse of the same meate so also they must oftner then once set before them that spirituall food which they know is good and wholesome and think it no disgrace and disparagement to their plenty and hospitalitie if they feed twise of the same dish Thirdly we may obserue that the Lord propoundeth his The vse of Parables mercyes and the peoples sinnes by way of Parable that so he might in a liuely manner and as it were with reall words represent these things to their vnderstanding as it were in a plaine picture that so he might hereby more effectually approue his owne vndeserued goodnesse and conuince them of their vnworthines and this forme as it is alwayes delightfull so is it sometimes most profitable as when Gods Ministers are to deale with Magistrates or with obstinate and impudent sinners who wil not know nor condemne sinne vnlesse it be in another mans person See Chap. 1. Ver. 2. Fourthly wee may obserue that the Lord intending to The assurance of gods loue our chiefe comfort in afflictions arme his children with such patience as might inable them to beare those grieuous afflictions which he purposed to lay vpon them doth in the first place assure them of his loue notwithstanding he seuerely corrected them for their sinnes yea that he therefore did chastice them because he loued them and would not suffer them to goe on in their sinnes to their destruction whence we learne that to attain patience in afflictions and aduersitie the best way is earnestly to labour that we may discerne with the eye of faith the beames of gods loue and fauour through the cloud of our
in the end their patient abiding shall be gladnesse as it is Pro. 10. 28. Pro. 10. 28. The second thing to be obserued is that the Lord will not presently be reconciled with his people and shew vnto God trieth our Repentance by afflictions before he restoreth vs to fauour them the wonted signes of his fauour till he hath taken tryall of their repentance by manifold afflictions and this he doth not so much to approue their vnfayned repentance to himselfe for hee searcheth the heart and raignes and therefore needeth not these outward signes but first that by these signes their owne faith may be assured that they are truely conuerted seeing they endure the tryall with patience because they haue sinned Secondly that he may shew his detestation of sinne in that he will not easily be reconciled euen with those whom hee dearely loueth when they haue grieuously offended Thirdly that by these corrections he may make them carefull for the time to come that they doe not againe by their sinnes prouoke his displeasure for hee that with a wounded conscience and broken spirit hath long sought and sued for mercie and hath spent many a bitter sigh and grieuous grone before hee could attaine vnto the assurance of gods fauour hauing obtained it will not easily be allured againe by his sinnes to hazard and loose it Fourthly that hereby he may glorifie his name by approuing his iustice and righteous iudgements euen to those that are with out when as they see that he will not winke at sinne no not in his dearest children who otherwise would take occasion vpon their sinne and impunitie to blaspheme 2 Sam. 12. 14. 2 Sam. 12. 14. Lastly that hee may hereby teach the wicked what they are to expect for if the Lord so correcteth those sinnes in his children which of infirmitie they haue committed how will hee punish the sinnes of wicked men which they commit with full consent of will If he be displeased with the faithfull and will not presently assure them of his fauour after they haue repented then what can they looke for that continue in their sinnes without repentance but that he will poure vpon them the full viols of his wrath If he so seuerely chastiseth sinne in his sonnes and friends how grieuously will he punish it in slaues and enimies examples hereof we haue in Adam Dauid Ezechias the people of Israell and Christ himselfe The vse hereof is that we carefully take heede that wee doe not wound our Consciences by committing against our knowledge grieuous sinnes seeing we are assured if wee belong vnto God that hee will sharply chastise vs for it and will not suffer the beames of his loue comfortably to shine vpon vs till wee haue approued our repentance by many tryals and haue indured much more griefe and sorrow through our crosses and the restraint of his loue then our pleasure and delight was in the committing of our sinnes and therefore let vs not to please the flesh wound the spirit nor purchase a dram of carnall delight with a pound of sorrow Secondly this may serue to comfort and refresh vs when as we are ready to sincke vnder the waight of sinne and heauie burthen of affliction and in regard hereof are readie to conclude that we are cast out of Gods fauour for then wee are to remember that the Lord oftentimes restrayneth the signes of his fauour and continueth the afflictions of those whom notwithstanding he dearely loueth for the causes aboue said c. Thirdly whereas the Lord saith that shee shall stay for God afflicteth vs for sin that we may learne to hate it him in her afflicted estate and shall not play the harlot c. hence we learne that the reason why the Lord continueth to restraine his fauour and to afflict his people is not because he hateth them but that hereby they may bee moued more seriously to repent and to flye from their sinnes with greater detestation when they see these miserable effects that follow them If our heauenly father when wee grieuously offend should cocker vs and shew no signe of his displeasure or being somewhat offended should presently be reconciled vs we finding no bitternesse neyther of Gods anger nor of affliction which might cause vs to distast the sweet pleasures of sin would neuer soundly and seriously repent of them but when we apprehend his heauie displeasure and cannot with much entreaty be assured of reconciliation when wee feele the smart of sharp afflictions and can by no meanes find ease then we call our sinnes to remembrance and are grieued at the heart that we haue committed them then we hate and detest them as being the fountaine from which doe flow these waters of bitternes and then we resolue with our selues that if our heauenly father will but this once forgiue and be reconciled vnto vs if he will but cause the wonted beames of his fauour to shine vpon vs and ease vs of the heauie burthen of our afflictions we will neuer againe be perswaded so by our sins to prouoke his displeasure though all the profit pleasures and preferment of the world were offred vnto vs. The vse which we are to make hereof is that when the Lord doth exercise vs with afflictions we exercise our selues in repentance and make the day of tribulation the day of humiliation for this is the maine end why the Lord afflicteth vs which when he hath attained hee will put an end to our afflictions and therefore the way to ease our selues of the burthen of punishment is to cast away the burthen of our transgressions the best meanes to lighten our soules with sauing comfort is to loade them with bitter sorrow for sinne if we would haue God well pleased with vs we must be displeased with our selues and if euer we meane to come vnto the pallace of ioy wee must trauaile vnto it by the path of mourning For blessed are they that mourne for they shall bee Mat. 5. 4. Luke 6. 21. comforted Blessed are they that weepe for they shall laugh Fourthly whereas the Lord saith Thou shalt not play the God onely restraineth vs frō running headlong into sinne Harlot not so much by way of prohibition teaching them what he would not haue them doe as by actuall restraint shewing what he would cause and inable them to refraine notwithstanding their pronenesse thereunto through their naturall corruption hence we learne what is the chiefe cause whereby we are with-held from running headlong into all manner of sinne namely Gods powerfull word which as it saith Thou shalt not sinne so it enableth vs through the secret operation of his spirit to yeeld obedience For in our owne naturall disposition we are ready to draw sinne vnto vs as with Cart-ropes and to drincke iniquitie like water Esay 5. 18. our thoughts are onely euill and that continually Gen. 6. 5 Gen. 6. 5. We are not able so much as to will that which is
good Phil. Phil. 2. 13. 2. 13. And instead of being restrained by Gods Law from sinne it taketh occasion by the commaundement to worke in vs all manner of concupiscence Rom. 7. 8. But it is onely Rom. 7. 8. Gods Euangelicall and spirituall word whereby we are restrained from sin and enabled to performe obedience when as the spirit giueth life and power to the dead and weake letter by the secret operation thereof maketh it effectuall for the working of that grace in vs which it requireth and to the stirring of vs vp to performe that duty which it enjoyneth Iohn 6. 63. Iohn 6. 63. The vse which we are to make hereof is first that wee yeeld vnto the Lord the whole praise of our obedience and of restrayning vs from committing those sinnes into which we see others f●l for he alone maketh the difference between vs and them Secondly that we doe not presumptuously trust in our owne strength thinking that wee are able to stand when others fall but let vs worke out our saluation with feare and trembling and whilest we think we stand let vs take heede of a fall As the Apostle exhorteth Phil. 2. 12. 1 Cor. 10. 12. And wholy distrusting in our owne strength let vs solye rest vpon the Lord and the power of his might Eph. 6. 10. And Ephe. 6. 10. to this end let vs remember the example of Peter Mat. 26 Mat. 66. 33. 74. 33. 74. And thinke with our selues that if this rock were shaken with the tempest of tentation that we who in comparison are but reedes cannot stand steady in our owne strength Lastly considering that Gods powerfull word and spirit vpholdeth vs from falling into sinne we learne continually to craue the Lords assistance and to make that praier which Christ hath taught vs O Lord lead vs not into temptation but deliuer vs from euill and then shall we finde the Lord true of his promise 1. Cor. 10. 13. For he knoweth how 1 Cor. 10. 13. to deliuer the godly out of tentation c. 2. Pet. 2. 9. 2 Pet. 2. 9. Fiftly wee may obserue how the Lord mingleth Mercy with Iudgement and euen in his corrections sheweth his God mingleth Mercie with Iudgement fatherly loue and compassion he will not presently receiue them to mercy but yet he doth not exclude them from it for euer hee correcteth them for a time but least they should faint he promiseth an end to their afflictions hee restraines his fauour and as it were banisheth them his presence not that hee intendeth vtterly to reject them but that they may be moued hereby more soundly and seriously to repent hee diuorceth them from him but in the meane while he reserueth himselfe for them and waiteth for their repentance that hee may restore them into his former fauour How infinite therefore are Gods mercies seeing his judgements are so full of compassion how sweet and comfortable is his loue bountie and goodnesse seeing the actions of his anger and justice are not without the mixture of such comfortable sweetnesse and if he be so gracious when he punisheth how gracious will he appeare when he rewardeth Many examples hereof wee haue in the booke of God when hee cast Adam out of Paradise he giueth him hope to inherite heauen Gen. 3. and when he threatneth him with labour and sorrow he promiseth him a Sauiour in whom he should haue joy and eternall rest When he threatneth captiuitie to the posterity of Abraham he limiteth the time which being expired he Gen. 15. 13. 14 promiseth deliueraunce Hee denounceth against Dauid 2 Sam. 12. temporall punishments but first he pardoneth his sinne and releaseth him of those eternall torments which he deserued Hee layeth vpon Leui a curse that hee should be scattered amongst his people as though he were not a Tribe and had no portion amongst his brethren Gen. 49. 7. but in this Gen. 49. 7. curse was included a blessing for he therefore scattered them that he might gather them vnto himselfe and depriued them of other portions that hee himselfe might be their portion and reward Deut. 10. 8 9. He caused Manasses to be led Deut. 10. 8. 9. captiue and to be bound in chaines but his captiuity was to bee preferred before his libertie his dungeon before his stately pallaces and his chaines of iron were better vnto him then his chaines of gold and most rich ornaments for 2 Chro. 33. God vsed his Captiuitie as a meanes to free him out of the captiuitie of sinne and Sathan his chaines to preserue him from the chaines of darknesse and his dungeon to keepe him from running head-long into the dungeon of hell The vse hereof serueth to comfort vs in afflictions when as we consider that they not onely proceede from loue but also are so tempred with mercy and compassion that they cannot hurt vs they are bitter indeed and vnpleasant vnto the tast but yet they are not poysons to kill vs but wholesome potions which our heauenly Physition hath wisely tempered to cure vs of the diseases of sinne and to purge away our corruptions and howsoeuer they may make vs sicke whilest they are in operation yet this sicknesse tendeth to the recouery of continuall health and to the attaining of eternall life ANd so much concerning the Widdow-hood of the Church of Israell Typically propounded Now wee are to speake of it as it is plainely expounded Verse 4. For the children of Israell shall remaine many dayes without a Verse 4 King and without a Prince and without an Offering and without an Image and without an Ephod and without a Teraphim Where he sheweth first who shall remaine in this estate of a mournfull widdow namely the children of Israell by which we are to vnderstand the ten Tribes who in the land of their Captiuitie were without Priest or Magistrate and not the people of Iuda who had both neyther yet is it to be vnderstood of the whole body of the people but onely of the elect Israelites for they onely remayned for a time without Ciuill or Ecclesiasticall gouernement and without publike meanes of worshipping eyther the true God or Idols for these they would not worship nor communicate with the Gentiles in their Idolatries and God they could not worship after that publike manner prescribed in his word seeing they were exiled from the Temple vntill Christ came who was their King Priest and Prophet which tooke away the difference of places and restored vnto the conuerted Israelites the publike meanes of seruing God whereas the reprobate Israelites euer remained without the true worship of God and not onely vnto a certaine time and were not without Images and Idols seeing they communicated with the heathen in their Idolatryes Secondly he setteth downe the time wherein they should remaine in their widdowes estate namely for the space of many dayes that is euen to the comming of their Messias Iesus Christ which from the sixt
mind times of old wherein the Lord gaue vs sure testimonies of his loue and so from the immutabilitie of his loue mercy and goodnesse wee may receiue comfort So Dauid Psal 77. 11. Psal 77. 11. Secondly we may obserue how the Church behaueth her selfe when shee seemeth left and forsaken of God namely she sits downe like a desolate widdow and spendeth her time That we must not be carelesse and sencelesse in the time of affliction in mourning and lamentation whence we learne not to make light of this heauie affliction nor to walk vnder this waighty burthen with stiffe and stretched out necks but when God in the time of affliction seemeth to estrange and absent himselfe we must humble our soules with mourning and lamentation watch and waite for his returne and continually cry and call vpon him by hearty prayer desiring nothing in the world so much as that hee will hasten his comming and re-assure vs of his fauour And if we thus behaue our selues then shall we finde Gods promise verified Esa 54. 8. For a Esay 54. 8. little while haue I forsaken thee but with great compassion will I gather thee And by this meanes also shall we gather vnto our selues assurance that we are indeed espoused vnto God when as the Lord our husband hauing absented himselfe in some displeasure we doe not like strumpets rejoyce in his absence or if there be any little griefe seeke to put it off by haunting the company of vaine persons and by passing the time in sports and pastimes but like loyall and louing wiues bewayle his absence and displeasure taking delight in nothing till wee enjoy his loue againe in whom our soule delighteth Here therefore two extreames are to be auoyded for as we must not sincke and fall downe flat vnder the burthen of Gods displeasure so we must not stand vpright with stiffe and stretched out necks casting it aside without care or sorrow but we must take the middle course that is we must stoupe and buckle vnder our burthen as being weary of bearing it we must sit downe and mourne like a widdow forsaken and desolate delighting in nothing till wee feele and finde that God deligheth in vs and is reconciled vnto vs. An example hereof we haue in the Church Psal 137. 2. 3. Psal 237. 2. 3. Thirdly we are to obserue Gods wise mixture of Mercy and Iudgement that the Church might neyther be secure Gods wise mixture of Mercy and Iudgement and carelesse nor yet comfortlesse and without hope for whereas he saith that she shall sit mourning for many dayes herein is implyed that her afflictions should neyther bee very short nor very long First hee sheweth that they should not be very short for they should last for many dayes and then that they should not be very long for they should not last for many ages or many yeares but onely for many dayes He doth not reckon the time by minutes or houres for then they would haue beene secure and wretchlesse and so taking no care to arme themselues with patience they would haue beene altogether vnprepared when contrary to their hope their afflictions were tediously continued nor yet by yeares or ages least whilest he sought to arme them with patience he should disarme them of hope vvhich is our chiefe stay to keepe vs from sincking vnder affliction The vse which we are to make hereof is that vvhen vvee are in affliction vve doe neither expect present deliuerance nor yet imagine that God will forsake vs for euer For if our hopes be frustrate vve shall grow impatient and if vve haue no hope at all we shall grow desperate Fourthly vve may obserue that he saith the Israelits should That our afflictions are momentanie howsoeuer they seeme tedious to the flesh continue in their afflicted estate many dayes vvhereas in truth they continued diuers ages euen sixe hundred fourescore yeeres So hee saith that the Church of the Smirnians should haue tribulation for ten dayes Apoc. 2. 10. And that the Church should be fed in the vvildernesse of affliction a thousand two hundred and threescore dayes Chap. 11. 6. By vvhich computation hee teacheth vs how vve are to accompt of the time of affliction namely howsoeuer to the flesh it seeme long and tedious yet it is to be judged short momentanie in comparison of that eternall glory vvhich attendeth for vs after vve haue finished the short skirmish of afflictions When as therefore our troubles and crosses seeme so tedious as though they would neuer end let vs comfort our selues with this consideration that they are in truth but light short and momentanie in respect of that superexcellent and eternall waight of glorie which is reserued for vs. 2 Cor. 4. 17. 2 Cor. 4. 17. Fiftly whereas the Lord describing the widdowhood of the Church of Israell and the seperation betweene him and her doth after-wards expound himselfe and sheweth that it consisteth in the taking away of their King Magistrates The Magistracie and Ministerie signes of gods presence ciuill gouernment and the meanes of his publicke worship and seruice hence wee learne that Princes wisely ruling in the common wealth and godly and faithfull Ministers publickly executing their functions which concerne gods pure and sincere worship in the Church are notable signes representing vnto vs Gods owne presence So that where the Lord hath established a lawfull and vvise Magistracie and a godly learned and faithful Ministerie there himselfe is present ioyned in a neere communion with that church common-wealth where these are wanting from thence the Lord may be said to haue withdrawne himselfe and to haue made a seperation leauing such a people in the estate of an afflicted vviddow And this appeareth not onely in this but also in diuers other places of scripture For first for Kings and Magistrates they are said to be breathing and mortall gods and the children of the most high vvho in their gouernment after a more peculiar manner resemble their heauenly father Psal 82. 6. 7. In vvhose assemblies God standeth and Psal 82. 6. 7. judgeth righteous judgement ver 1. God standeth in the assemblie of gods he iudgeth among gods And for the ministery and publicke seruice of God vvee haue Christs promise That where two or three are gathered together in his name there is hee in the middest of them Mat. 18. 20. And howsoeuer Mat. 18. 20. being infinite he filleth heauen and earth vvith his presence yet after a more peculiar manner he walketh in the middest of the seauen golden candlestickes Apoc. 1. 13. that is he is present in his Church to rule defend and preserue it And hence it is that vvhen Dauid vvas banished from the Temple and debarred of the publike meanes of Gods worship hee complayneth that he vvas banished from Gods presence and cast Psal 42. 2. and 84. 1. 2. out of his sight Psal 42. 2. and 84. 1. 2. The vse hereof is first
word of the Lord ye Children of Israell Secondly the cause hereof which is a controuersie betweene the Lord of heauen and earth who is the party offended and both the plaintiffe and the judge and the Israelites who are the delinquents and parties offending For the Lord hath a controuersie with the inhabitants of the Land Thirdly the crimes whereof they are accused and conuicted which are the causes mouing the Lord to pursue them with his justice because there is no truth c. In the handling of which points I will obserue this order First I will expound the wordes Secondly obserue out of The order obserued in handling these verses them such instructions as they naturally offer vnto vs. Thirdly I will apply them to our owne times Concerning the First we are first to note the context and so come to shew the meaning of the words themselues In The context the former chapter the Lord vnder certaine types and Parables comforted those Israelits which were to be afflicted in a grieuous and tedious captiuitie by assuring them of his loue and that their miseries were but the chastisements of a louing father for their good and conuersion and not the punishments of an enemie for their hurt and destruction Now lest the secure Israelits of his owne times should take encouragement vnto them by the former doctrine of consolation to be moued thereby to continue in their impaenitencie hee sheweth that howsoeuer the Lord was purposed to be gracious vnto his elect Israelits in after ages yet he would in the meane time punish seuerely those haynous enormious sinnes as raigned amongst them vnlesse they preuented his judgements by their vnfained repentance And this is the context now let vs come to the meaning The peoples summons of the words Heare the word of the Lord ye children of Israell Wherein the Prophet summoneth the people to appeare before the Lord to answere vnto such things as should bee The exposition objected and laid to their charge For as judges before they suffer any to be accused or condemned doe cause their clarke or cryer to summon and call forth the partie to see what hee can answere for himselfe so doth the Lord take the same iudiciall course with sinners for the approouing of his righteous judgements that is hee citeth them before he accuseth them and accuseth them before hee condemneth them The which summons hee pronounceth sometimes immediately by himselfe as when he cited Adam to appeare before him Gen. 3. 9. in Paradise Gen. 3. 9. And thus hee summoneth men when as he speaketh vnto their harts consciences by his judgements and punishments And sometimes by his Ministers and that either men or Angels by men as by his Prophets ambassadors an example whereof we haue in this place the like whereof we haue Esa 1. 18. Ier. 2. 4. 5. Mich. 1. 2. Esay 1. 18. Iere. 2. 4. 5. Mich. 1. 2. and 6. 1. 2. 3. and 6. 1. 2. 3. c. By Angels either in this life when he maketh them his instruments and ministers of his afflictions judgements and punishments or at the end of the world when as the arch-Angell with the sound of his trumpet shall summon all men to appeare before the tribunall seate of Gods iudgement of which we may read Math. 24. 31. Mat. 24. 31. 1. Cor. 15 52. 1. Thes 4. 16. The drift of the summons 1 Cor. 15. 52. 1 Thes 4. 16. Now the maine drift of these summons is to moue the people to heare with greater reuerence care and conscience the reprehensions and comminations which after follow for howsoeuer they might haue some reason to neglect and contemne them if they regarded the Prophets person and the meanesse of his qualitie condition yet there was great cause why they should heare them not onely with reuerence but also with feare and trembling if they considered that he was but a cryer who summoned them in the name and at the appointment of the supreame judge of heauen earth and but a meane ambassador who deliuered vnto them not his owne words but the ambassage of his glorious and most mighty king from whom he is sent But let vs more specially consider of those arguments The arguments here vsed to moue attention which are contained in these summons proclaimed by the Lords Cryer whereby he moueth them to receiue his message with attention feare and reuerence The first is taken from the manner of his speach which is vsed when matters of great waight and importance follow and therefore is not to be hearkened vnto negligently or lightly to be regarded The second is taken from the person of him from whom this message is deliuered namely because it is Iehouah that speaketh vnto them who created them and continually preserued them who is al-sufficient to reward those who harken vnto him and almighty to punish those who neglect his word who had giuen vnto them many testimonies of his loue and multiplyed vpon them all his benefits aboue all other nations of the earth who did not reprehend and punish them for mallice to their persons or other sinister respects but that he might preserue them from vtter destruction if they would repent and forsake their sinnes or glorifie his justice in their punishments if by no meanes they would be reclaimed but obstinately persist in their sins after they had so often warning The third reason to moue them to heare and obey the voyce of the Lord summoning them by his Prophet is taken from their owne persons to whom the message is deliuered in that they were the people of Isel descended of the holy Patriarkes chosen amongst all other nations to be Gods peculiar Church and people with whom God had made a couenant and had on his part most absolutely performed it preseruing them from their enimies and multiplying vpon them all his benefits And this is the peoples summons where by they who had The controuersie between the Lord and the people of Israell a long time neglected the word of the Lord in the mouth of his Prophets were now cited to answere their contempt before the Tribunall seat of Gods Iudgement Now followeth the cause of this summons which is for the tryall of a controuersie betweene the Lord and the people of Israell For the Lord hath a Controuersie with the Inhabitants of the Land Where first we are to consider the nature of this controuersie and secondly the parties betweene whom it is controuerted Gods controuersies with a people are eyther verball or reall Verball when as by his word eyther immediately pronounced by himselfe as we may see in the example of Cain or by his Ministers he reproueth conuinceth and condemneth a people for their sinnes and threatneth his Iudgements due vnto them Reall when as a people notwithstanding Gods reprehensions and threatnings continuing in their impenitencie haue deserued punishments inflicted vpon them Of both which kindes of controuersies
one who is the sonne of perdition for Lyers haue their childes-part in the Lake which burneth with fire and Apoc. 21. 8. brimstone Fourthly because by Lying men loose their credit so as no man will beleeue them when they speake the truth Fiftly because it taketh away the true vse of speach which Lying ouerthrovveth the vse of speach is to expresse the meaning of the heart and ouerturneth all humaine societie contracts and commercements betweene man and man c. Lastly it maketh the Lord to proclaime a controuersie with vs and to contend with vs by his heauie Iudgements For a false witnesse shall not be vnpunished and he that speaketh Lyes shall not escape Prou. 19. 5. But he shall perish Verse 9. Prou. 19. 5. 9. Psal 5. 6. And be destroyed Psal 5. 6. As appeareth in the example of Ananias and Saphira Act. 5. And after this life he shall Act. 5. be shut out of Gods kingdome Apoc. 22. 15. And be cast into Apoc. 22. 15. and 21. 8. hell fire Apoc. 21. 8. The third sinne whereof they are conuicted and condemned Of Killing is killing whereby wee are not onely to vnderstand the taking away of the life of man which is murther in the highest degree but also all hurts wrongs and injuries offred against the person of their neighbour for as in the former verse by the want of mercy was vnderstood the want of loue compassion and all christian beneficence so by this sinne of commission opposed thereunto we are to vnderstand the contrary vices cruelties injuries and oppression committed against the person and life of our brother Againe it seemeth that it was the Prophets purpose in setting downe this short Epitome of the peoples sinnes to bring them to an examatition of themselues by the Law of God that so the obstinate might bee conuinced of their manifold transgressions as though he should say if you who vpon euery occasion are ready to justifie your selues would examine your hearts and consciences your liues and conuersations according to Gods Law you should finde that you haue broken all and euery part therof as namely by swearing lying killing stealing c. Seeing then the Prophet in this place hath relation vnto the Law of God violated by them it followeth that as these sinnes are condemned in the Law so also here But in the Law is condemned not onely the capitall sinne which is specified but all other of the same kinde with the meanes and occasions thereof and therefore whereas the Prophet doth accuse them of Killing hee doth vnder this one word include all other their sinnes of this kinde and nature As first the killing and murther of the heart to which is to be referred all vnjust anger inueterate malice repining enuie purpose of taking priuate reuenge disdaine rejoycing at other mens harmes crueltie discord and such like Secondly the murther of the tongue to which is referred chiding railing cursing scoffing backbiting and slaundering Thirdly the murther of the hands vnder which is comprised all manner of violence against the person of our neighbour as quarrelling fighting wounding and killing eyther of his body or soule The fourth sinne is Stealing whereby as in the former Of Stealing we are not onely to vnderstand Theft in the grosest kind as that open and violent Theft which is called Rapina Latrocinium Rapine and Robberie or that secret and deceitfull Theft which we call Furtum that is pilfering and stealing but also all manner of vnlawfull meanes whereby our neighbour is defrauded and depriued of his goods whether they be condemned by humaine Lawes or allowed and tolle rated And this is a Tree which sendeth forth many branches The diuers kindes of theft For eyther this theft is committed out of contract or in contract to the first we are to referre all violent and forcible courses taken for the spoyling our neighbour of his goods As first oppression wherby those who excel others in power Oppression authoritie and riches are ready to deuoure swallow vp the poore to grinde their faces feed vpon their sweat and euen drink their bloud of such we read Esay 3. 14. 15. Micah 3. Esay 3. 14. 15. 2. 3. And in this respect those oppressors are called roaring Micah 3. 2. 3. Lyons and deuouring Wolues Zeph. 3. 3. And this oppression Zeph. 3. 3. is committed eyther through meere violence and without coulour of Law which is the vsuall Theft of Tyrants and cruell Land-lords or else when some shew of Law is pretended which is called extortion and is the sinne eyther of Magistrates who make Lawes for the oppression of the common wealth who take bribes to betray the cause of the innocent who presse the extreamitie of the Law and strictly stand vpon the outward letter though in respect of circumstances it be without all equitie Or else of officers who inhaunce their fees grate vpon the poore delaying the dispach of his businesse vnlesse for expedition their dueties be doubled and trebled Or else of Lawyers who taking vpon them to bee the patrons of poore mens causes become latrones of their goods robbing and spoyling whole common wealths vnder coulour of righting the wronged and maintaining equitie and Iustice Or else of Ministers who fleece the sheepe eate the milk and cloth themselues with the wool but doe not feede the flock being eyther vtterly vnfurnished of sufficient gifts or being sufficient neglect their duety through idlenesse or for ambition Or else this theft is committed by the people who receiuing spirituall things from their Ministers will not communicate vnto them their carnall things but by fraudulent or violent courses with-hold from them that necessary and sufficient maintenance which both by the lawes of God man is allotted and allowed vnto them The which howsoeuer it is esteemed a small fault or none at all yet it is not onely theft but Sacriledge in Gods sight as appeareth Mal. 3. 8. Mal. 3. 8. The second kinde of theft is cloaked and disguised vnder the habite of lawfull contracts vnto which we may referre all manner of deceipt and fraud vsed in buying and selling vsurie selling time vnder shew of giuing credit and such like All which kindes of theft are grieuous sinnes in Gods sight forbidden and condemned in gods Law Exod. 20. 25. Exod. 20. 25. And punished in this life with gods curse Zach. 5. 3. 4. and in the life to come with banishment out of gods kingdome Zach. 5. 3. 4. 1. Cor. 6. 10. 1. Cor. 6. 10. The last sinne whereof they are accused and conuicted Of whoredom and the diuerse kinds of vncleannesse is whoring by which wee are to vnderstand all manner of vncleannes eyther internall in the minde or externall in the body the internall are the vncleane lusts of the flesh which are eyther suddainely intertayned condemned by Christ Math. 5. 28. or nourished and retained which the Apostle calleth burning 1.
are once spoyled weakned maymed vvounded especially Gods spirit which by their presumptuous sinnes they haue grieued being departed from them The second thing to be obserued is that he comprehendeth All impietie comprised vnder vnlavvfull swearing all impietie and the whole breach of the first table vnder this one sin of vnlawfull swearing and as in the former Verse he had comprised all the sinnes of omission vnder the want of knowledge as being the fountaine of all the rest and the internall root from which they spring so here he comprehendeth all sinnes of commission vnder this one of abusing Gods holy name which is an external sin of the tongue First because it is an vndoubted signe an inseperable companion of all manner of wickednesse for hee that maketh no conscience of blaspeming Gods holy name by eyther false or vaine and idle oathes he maketh conscience of no sinne but would if he might with as little disgrace and danger doe it commit all manner of impietie hee that will not be restrained by Gods feare loue mercy goodnesse and the manifold benefits which he hath receiued of him from vaine swearing whereby he receiueth no profit but losse euen the losse of Gods fauour the assurance of saluation of a good conscience and of reputation amongst those that feare God nor any pleasure vnlesse he take like the Diuell himselfe a hellish pleasure in acting sinne and despiting God nor hath thereby any credit but rather is branded with the black marke of a prophane person hee that will contemptuously trample vnder feete the precious body and bloud of Jesus Christ which he spared not to giue for our redemption and so irreligiously scorne the greatest benefit that euer the Lord bestowed vpon vs it is not to be doubted but that this man what shew soeuer hee maketh is a prophane person who when hee is allured by the baites of the world riches honours and pleasures will not stick to commit any manner of wickednesse seeing he is ready to commit this horrible sinne of blaspheming gods name being induced therunto without any respect of the least good Secondly he implyeth vnder this one sinne of swearing all the sinnes commited against the first table because all these sinnes are linked together and so inseperably ioyned one with the other that whosoeuer is held in bondage vnder one of them he is subiect to the rest according to that Iam. 2. 10. Whosoeuer shall keepe the whole law and yet faileth in Iam. 2. 10. 11. one point he is guiltie of all The reason is because hee that wilfully neglecteth any part of Gods Law he doth not performe any one dutie as he ought in obedience to gods commandement and for the aduancement of his glory but for sinister respects for if out of a good conscience and the true feare of God he performed any duety then the same causes would moue him to performe all seeing God injoyneth one commandement as well as another as the Apostle there reasoneth Verse 11. The vse hereof is that we make conscience not onely of one but of all Gods Commandements and that we carefully auoyde not onely this or that sin as Herod did but all kinds and degrees of sin especially false or vaine swearing for this alone includeth or necessarily inferreth all manner of impietie and therefore let blasphemous swearers make at some times what shew of religion they will yet vve may safely and surely conclude with the Apostle as in the generall so especially of this sinne of blaspheming Gods Name that if any amongest you seemeth Religious and refraineth not his Iames. 1. 26. Tongne from customable swearing and vaine Oathes hee but deceiueth his owne heart and his Religion is in vaine Iames. 1. 26. The third thing to bee obserned is that the Lord conuinceth Why God condemneth all sinnes vnder the names of those which are greatest in that kinde and condemneth the Israelits of all their transgressions vnder the names of the greatest sins of that kinde as cruelty and oppression vnder the name of murther all manner of deceipt vnder the name of theft all kinds of vncleannesse vnder the name of whoring and adulterie And this he doth Reason The First First to giue vs to vnderstand that howsoeuer wee make small accompt of these sinnes yet in his sight vnjust anger is no better then murther deceipt though neuer so cunningly cloaked no better then theft and vnlawfull lusts are reputed in his estimate adulterie as our Sauiour also expoundeth the law Mat. 5. Mat. 5. Reason The Second Secondly that hereby hee might moue vs to a hatred and detestation euen of all sinne whatsoeuer and to make conscience of committing the least transgression Naturally wee minse sinne and extenuate it with vaine excuses this is but a small sinne and I would no body did worse I am content to leaue all grosse sinnes and therefore in this small trifle I hope the Lord will be mercifull vnto mee wee cannot here be Saints and to bee too scrupulous is to bee more precisethen wise But vnto such as thus extenuate their sins the Lord aggrauats them plainely affirming that their couetousnesse is theft their rash anger murther their inward lusts and vnchast speaches adulterie in his sight Reason The third Thirdly as the Lord by this meanes restraineth vs from committing the smallest sinnes so if wee haue fallen into them hee doth hereby humble vs and bring vs to serious repentance when as wee consider that those sinnes which wee haue innumerable times committed making no reckoning of them are reputed haynous in the Lords sight who is to bee our iudge so that hereby wee may be moued to lay our hands vpon our mouthes to desire with the Prophet that the Lord would not enter into judgement with vs to disclaime our owne righteousnesse and to hunger after the righteousnes of Christ to cease boasting with the Pharisee I am no extorcioner murtherer adulterer c. and to change the Pharisees brag into the poore Publicans humble praier God be mercifull vnto mee a sinner Fourthly whereas he saith they breake out like vnruly beasts Sinne if it bee not quicklie suppressed growes violent who would be held in by no sence like swelling streames which breake downe their banks and ouer-flow the whole country here againe wee may obserue the nature of sinne which if it be not quickly suppressed wil grow so violent contagious that nothing will restraine nor containe it with in any bounds The violence thereof if once it hath taken full possession of vs is such that neither Gods loue mercie and manifold benefits nor yet his law fearefull curse feirce wrath nor terrible judgements will restraine vs from runing head-long into it yea rather sinne will take occasion by the commaundement to worke in vs all manner of concupisence as appeareth Rom. 7. 8. And such is the contagious infection thereof that it will not be contained in the Rom. 7. 8. persons who are
these benefits belonging to the Priest-hood and so expose them to shame reproach As though he should haue said because you haue vngratefully abused all those benefits and prerogatiues which I haue endowed you with aboue all the rest of my people and in stead of the fruits of loue thankfulnesse and obedience haue taken occasion by my benefits the more to dishonour me and to prouoke my displeasure by multiplying your sinnes against me therefore I will strip you vtterly of all my blessings in which your chiefe glory consisteth and so expose you to be scorned and despised of all who haue seene your passed glory and now behold your present misery And this punishment was accordingly inflicted First when as the Lord exposed these ignorant Priests to the contempt of the people but principally when as they were led into captiuitie at what time not only the glory of the Priest-hood but the Priest-hood it selfe ceased and so they who were Captaines and leaders became as common souldiers yea as miserable captiues vnder their enimies who had no respect of their place and calling And so much for the meaning of the wordes the The priuiledges of the Ministerie doctrines are these First wee may obserue that the Lord aduanceth his Priesthood Ministerie and endoweth them with many singular prerogatiues and priuiledges aboue the rest of the people as he noteth in this place the which may further appeare if wee consider their function and calling for they are chosen of God to stand in his stead to represent his owne person and to performe his owne worke which himself performed vnto his Church in the dayes of the Patriarks vntil Moses time For then the Lord taught them with his owne mouth vntill the Israelites being terrified with his feareful voyce earnestly desired that they might be informed in Gods will by the Ministerie of men Deut. 18. 18. So Deut. 18. 18. our Sauiour performed this office and function whilest he remayned on the earth but when he ascended into heauen he appointed his Ministers to supply his place to instruct his Church Mat. 28. 19. So that now they are in his stead Mat. 28. 19. and as his ambassadours doe deliuer the word of reconciliation vnto the people 2 Cor. 5. 20. Whose voyce if the people 2. Cor. 5. 20. here and obey the Lord acknowledgeth that obedience as done to himselfe whom if they dispise he accounteth the contempt offered against his owne person Luk. 10. 16. Luk. 10. 16. But their dignitie and the greatnesse of their priuiledges God Ministers are his mouth to the people will better appeare if wee consider their office and Ministerie and the titles wherewith in the Scriptures the holie ghost hath honoured them For First in the Ministerie of the word they are the mouth of God to the people and his ambassadours who performe his owne worke as it is 1. 1. Cor. 16. 10. Cor. 16. 10. euen the worke of reconciliation justification sanctification and saluation And therefore the Lord vouchsafeth them this dignitie to be called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Fellow 1. Cor. 3. 9. labourers with God vnto whose most glorious and infinite Maiestie it is an aduancement aboue the worthynesse of the most excellent creature to be acknowledged his meanest seruant So in prayer they are the mouth of the people vnto God The mouth of the people to God and as it were the ambassadours generall of the earth by whom they make their suits knowne vnto God intreat a supply of their wants and returne thanksgiuing vnto the Lord for all his benefits In like manner the Lord hath committed vnto them the administration of the Sacraments which are the seales of his They are the keepers of Gods seales the Sacarments couenant whereby all his gracious promises are ratified confirmed vnto vs so that as in respect of the rich treasure of Gods word committed to their disposing they are the Lords treasurers so in respect of the Sacraments they are the keepers of his great seales Now if these offices be great vnder mortall Princes in corruptible thinges how are these officers aduanced who are vnder in these places the King of Kings who dispence not transitorie trifles but heauenly treasures nor seale assurances of earthly patrimonies but of an eternall inheritance and a most glorious kingdome But come we from their office to their titles and we shall The titles giuen to the Ministerie find that they are much aduanced aboue others For the rest of Gods people are called his seruants these his stewards Luk. 12 42. who haue the custodie of his keyes committed Luk. 12. 42. vnto them that they may releeue those of the familie who are obedient out of their store and shut the stubborne and rebellious out of the doores Mat. 16. 19. They are called the Mat. 16. 19. Lords sheepe these the shepheards Ezech. 34. 2. They the Ezech. 34. 2. Lords corne and haruest these his husbandmen Mat. 9. 37. Mat. 9. 37. They the Lords Plants in his garden Cant. 4. 13. these his Cant. 4. 13. gardeners who plant water them 1 Cor. 3. 6. They liuing stones in the temple of God these maister builders 1 Cor. 3. 1. Cor. 3. 6. and 3. 9. 9. who finish this worke and bring it to perfection Ephe. 4. 12. 13. They children in Gods familie these spirituall fathers Ephe. 4. 12. 13. who by the seede of the word beget them vnto God 1 Cor. 4. 15. 1. Cor. 4. 15. And these were the spirituall prerogatiues with which The temporall priuiledges of the Ministerie the Lord hath endowed his Priesthood and Ministerie besides which hee allotted vnto them many temporall priuiledges as for example the double honour of reuerence and maintenance for in respect of the first none were in greater honour account among the people next vnder the King then the Lords Priests and for the other none more plentifully maintayned then they who had not onely the tithes but the first fruits oblations and daily sacrifices all which they had not at the peoples deuotions but chalenged them in Gods right as being his portion which when he gaue vnto them the land he reserued for himselfe Neither is the Lords liberalitie shortened towards his Ministers in the time of the Gospell for he hath commanded the people to giue vnto them double honour the honour of reuerence and the honour of maintenance as appeareth 1 Tim. 5. 17. 18. For if 1. Tim. 5. 17. 18. the Lords care were such both for the honour and maintenance of the legall Ministrie and Priesthood which was the Ministerie of the letter which killeth the Ministrie of death and condemnation how much more that the Miinsterie of the new couenant which is the Ministerie of the spirit that giueth life and the Ministerie of righteousnesse that is whereby we of sinners are made righteous should excell in glorie as the Apostle
innumerable benefits serued but as so many arguments to aggrauate their sinnes to bring vpon them more fearefull punishments and to make their condemnation more horrible and grieuous as may plainely appeare by these places Math. 11. 21. Luke 13. 34. 35. Mat. 11. 21. Luk. 13. 34. Rom. 2. 4. 5. Rom. 2. 4. 5. By all which it appeareth that Gods benefits are not blessings Gods blessings abused doe aggrauate our sinnes vnto vs if we doe abuse them as motiues vnto sinne but rather they make our sinnes out of measure sinfull and our punishments more intollerable And of this the reason is most apparant for as it excuseth the neglect of dutie when the partie to whom it is to be performed is but a meere stranger and extenuateth the fault when as it is committed against an enimie so it doth much aggrauate it if he be a familiar acquaintance or neere friend vnto whom we are deepely indebted for many benefits if the wife do misdemeane her selfe towards a crabbed and perverse husband though it doth not altogether excuse her yet it extenuateth her fault but if she thus behaue her selfe towards a husband who is most kinde and louing and omitteth no good duty which can be required of him the world is ready to crie shame against such misbehauior If the seruant neglecteth his duty to such a maister as performeth no duty vnto him but defraudeth him of his wages and daily oppresseth him with new injuries although it will not justifie his doings yet it will lessen his faults but if this neglect be towards such a one as is louing and liberall it deserueth justly a sharper censure and more seuere punishment So if the Lord were vnto vs as a stranger or enimie a bitter husband or cruell maister we might haue som-what to say for the neglect of our duty but seeing he is most bountifull and benigne requiting euery dramme of loue with a pound of kindnesse and rewarding euery penny-worth of seruice with a talent of wages yea seeing he preuenteth vs with his free grace and beginneth and continueth and multiplyeth his benefits without any manner of our deserts if after all this we neglect our duties to such a God so gracious and infinite in mercy yea and contrariwise abuse his owne gifts to his dishonour and take occasion by his benefits the more to prouoke his wrath by our sinnes what judgements are too heauy what punishments too grieuous for such vnthankfull wretches The vse hereof serueth to teach vs not to content ous selues We must not content our selues with the priuiledges of Christians vnlesse we liue their liues with the priuileges of Christians vnlesse we liue the liues of Christians not to rest in Gods temporall benefits as being sufficient arguments of his loue or vndoubted pledges of our saluation vnlesse we haue also the grace giuen vs to imploy them to the aduancement of Gods glorie and to vse them to those good and holy ends for which God hath bestowed them For it will nothing avayle vs that we are chosen out of the rest of the world to be Gods peculiar people vnlesse as it becommeth the inheritance of God we be purged from our iniquities and be zealous of good workes it will Tit. 2. 14. not profit vs to be intertayned into Gods owne familie if we doe not behaue our selues as it becommeth his children and seruants nor to haue the couenant and the seales thereof the glorious Gospell of Iesus Christ and the Sacraments of Baptisme and the Lords supper vnlesse this couenant be as well written in our harts as in our bookes and be as fruitfully practized as it is faithfully deliuered In a word wee shall be neuer the better for the abundance of temporall benefits as peace plenty health libertie and the rest vnlesse as wee surpasse others in these priuiledges and pledges of Gods loue so also we doe excell them in loue towards God zeale thankfulnesse and holy obedience yea contrariwise if God haue sowen amongst vs the seeds of his mercies with a liberall hand expecting a fruitfull haruest of holynesse righteousnesse and we in stead hereof returne vnto him the ta●es and cockle of sinne and wickednesse we shall bee but the nearer vnto a curse and his great bounty and innumerable benefits shall serue as so many arguments to aggrauate our sinnes and multiply our punishments That the Papists in vaine boast of the priuiledges of their Church Secondly it serueth to beate downe the glorious braggs of the Papists and sinagogue of Rome who boast themselues as being the peculiar people and Church of God vpon whom the Lord hath multiplyed manifold benefits spiritual temporal and in whose custody still remaine the treasure of Gods word and his seales the Sacraments but though it should be graunted vnto them that their Church in former times hath had these priuiledges and that yet there remaine some steps and prints of them this doth not any whit commend them or make their state the better yea rather it serueth to aggrauate their fearfull Apostasie their haynous rebellion and abhominable idolatrie in which they liue and perseuere notwithstanding the Lord hath formerly dealt so gratiously with them and presently doth not take that just vengeance of their sinnes which they long agoe deserued For howsoeuer the Lord hath caused the light of the Gospell to shine vnto them whereby he hath discouered the sottish grosenes of their idolatrie and superstitions yet they will not forsake their idols and turne to the liuing God Acts. 14. 15. who hath made heauen and earth but like vnto the Israelites here spoken of they worship their images of wood stone and daily commit more then heathenish idolatrie they consult with their idols in all their difficulties and dangers going on pilgrimage vnto them for their counsaile and direction they make vowes vnto them offer them oblations in euery high place that is in the innumerable temples which they haue erected for this purpose and they are so wholy seduced by the spirit of fornications that if any man gaine say them in these their wicked courses they are ready to pursue and persecute him with sword fire and fagot In a word they haue wholy corrupted Gods worship and seruice and are become more sottish in their superstitions and idolatrie then either the Turkes or Pagans So that if they will needes vaunt themselues of their titles that they are Gods people and Church and in their priuiledges which they haue aboue others they doe but glory in their shame seeing they are so many arguments to aggrauate their sinnes and vngratefull wickednesse in that they are worse then the Turkes and infidels in her idolatrie and superstition especially in this resspect that they haue had many singular meanes graunted them by God for their conversion and reformation which the other haue wanted and yet notwithstanding all Gods mercies persist in their apostacie and rebellion The second thing to be obserued is that
cause hereof is the corruption of mans nature which is exceedingly addicted to this idolatrie and superstition partly through grosenesse of vnderstanding affecting a palpable deitie and diuine worship which is subject to the senses and partly through pride preferring his owne inuentions and wil-worship before the will of God reuealed in his word The vse hereof is that we doe not onely flee from idolatrie We must flye the first beginnings of idolatrie in the grosest kinde but also that wee shunne the first beginnings thereof for if in the least degree we giue way vnto it we shall from one degree ascend vnto another till we come to the highest partly because we are naturally possessed with a spirit of fornications which carrieth vs headlong into this sin and partly because the Lord will giue vs vp to a reprobate sense and to be deluded with strong delusions if wee doe not imbrace and loue his truth but incline to wil-worship and Idolatry The third thing to be obserued is that our good intentions Good intentions hauing no sound ground no better then wil-worship in Gods seruice which haue no ground in his word are nothing else but wil-worship and superstition The Israelites made choyse to worship in the groues and vnder the greene trees because the shadow thereof was good that is because they thought these pleasant places and delightfull shade in the sweet and open ayre were most fit and conuenient for religious worship but because this their good intention was contrary to Gods word which restrayned publike seruice sacrifices vnto the Temple at Ierusalem their good meaning could not priuiledge them from the just censure of Idolatrie and Superstition So Aaron in a good intention made Exod. 32. 1. 5. a golden calfe Exod. 32. 1. 5. But it was condemned and punished as grose Idolatry Gedeon in a good intention made Iudg. 8. 27. an Ephod of the Midianitish pray but it was an occasion of Idolatry and the ruine of his house and Micahs mother in a good intention made a moulten Image Iudg. 17. 3. and Iudg. 17. 3. Micah himselfe consecrated one of his sonnes to be a priest vnto it Verse 5. and entertained a Leuite for the same purpose with the like good meaning and yet neuerthelesse all this was but grose superstition and Idolatry in Gods sight The vse hereof is that we be not deluded with this conceipt that the Lord will accept of any manner of seruice so it proceed from a good meaning intention for if it haue no warrant out of Gods Word but bee repugnant therevnto vvhatsoeuer our meaning and intention bee it is but vvil-worship superstition and Idolatry in Gods sight And therefore we must not examine what we intend but what God requireth not what we like as most fit and couenient but what is pleasing vnto God And this examination is to be made not according to our owne phantasies and carnall wisdome which as the Apostle saith is emnitie against God but Rom. 8. 7. according to the canon and rule of Gods word which that we may the rather doe let these reasons perswade vs first because the Lord hath straightly forbidden and condemned all manner of vvil-worship and in his seruice hath precisely restrayned vs to his word for our direction Deu. 5. 32. Take Deut. 5. 32. and 12. 8. 32. heed that you doe as the Lord your God hath commanded turne not aside to the right hand nor to the left And 12. 8. Yee shall not doe after all these things that we doe here this day that is euery man what seemeth him good in his owne eyes And Vers 32. Whatsoeuer I command you take heede you doe it thou shalt Num. 15. 39. Prou. 39. 5. 6. Ezech. 20. 18. Col. 2. 20. The causes why the Lord forbiddeth all wil-worship put nothing thereto nor take ought there from So Numb 15. 39 Pro. 30. 5. 6. Ezech. 20. 18. Col. 2. 20. Now the causes why the Lord doth so earnestly forbid all manner of vvil-worship are principally two first it doth exceedingly derogate from his wisedome when as men doe not think his lawes sufficient for their gouernment direction but labour to perfect them by their owne inventions as though they were wiser then God himselfe Now if it be an odious thing to an earthly prince that his subjects should take vpon them to alter or adde or detract from his Lawes or in stead of submitting themselues to be gouerned thereby should make their owne vvill a law though they should make neuer so faire a shew of their good meaning intentions then how odious and abhorninable a thing is it for vs thus to demeane our selues towards God who is infinite in wisedome and the supreame king of heauen and earth Secondly because where wil-worship and humane inventions Wil-worship banisheth the true seruice of God are intertayned there soone after the true worship of God is expelled and banished for such is the aversenesse of mans corrupt nature towards the true worship of God and proannesse vnto humane inventions and superstitions that when they are both together he nourisheth and maketh high esteeme of wil-worship as being the birth of his owne brain and vtterly neglecteth Gods pure and sincere seruice which in his word he hath prescribed as though it were the child of a stranger And this is a notable fruit of pride and selfe loue when as men preferre the wisedome of the flesh before the wisedome of God and their owne inventious before his commandements The which was the sinne of the Scribes and Pharisies who as our Sauiour charged them made the commandements of God of no authority whilest they established their owne traditions Mat. 15. 16. And vvhilest they vvere Mat. 15. 16. and 23. 23. ouer busie in tithing Mint Annis and Commin they were vvholy negligent in the vvaightie matters of Gods Law as Iudgement Mercy and Fidelitie as it is Mat. 23. 23. Secondly it behoueth vs to imbrace Gods pure and sincere Wil-worship is vaine and vnprofitable vvorship prescribed in his vvord and to auoide vvil-vvorship our owne superstitious deuotions because when vve haue spent our time and euen tyred our selues in these things all our labour will bee spent in vaine So the Lord himselfe saith Mat. 15. 9. In vaine they worship mee teaching Mat 15. 9. for doctrines mens precepts And the Apostle saith that humain inventions and traditions as touch not taste not handle not doe perish in the vsing Col. 2. 22. For if we would haue Col. 2. 22. any wages for our labour vve must doe the Lords vvorke vvhich himselfe hath commaunded otherwise hee vvill demaund of vs as hee did of the Israelits Esay 1 12. Who hath Esay 1. 12. required these things at your hands And vvill say vnto vs as he did to the Priests and people of Israell Zach. 7. 5. When yee Zach. 7. 5. fasted and mourned did ye fast vnto me
this fearefull punishment till they haue often neglected and dispised his fatherly corrections wherby they should haue beene reclaymed So long as there is any hope of amendement the Lord vseth his rod of chastisement but when they vvill not bee reformed but desperately sinne against God the Lord casteth his rod aside thrusteth them from vnder his discipline and gouernement and suffereth them to runne on in their owne vvicked courses The vse of the particular doctrine is that vvee imbrace Gods pure worship and seruice and do not defile our selues with Idolatry superstition and our owne vvil-worship for if we dishonour the Lord by our spirituall whoredome hee will dishonour vs by suffering those of our familie to disgrace and discredit vs by their corporall whoredome If we vexe and grieue our gracious husbands by prostituting our soules and bodyes to commit spirituall vncleannes with Idols he wil vexe grieue vs by suffering our wiues daughters to become harlots and by turning our houses into common stewes Lastly we may here obserue that the Lord neuer wanteth The Lord neuer wanteth meanes to execute his iudgements meanes to execute his judgements for to say nothing of his owne absolute power whereby he is able to destroy the sinner with a word of his mouth he hath whole armies of his creatures readie to be the instruments of his wrath So that when men prouoke his anger hee cannot onely raise their enimies against them to bring them to destruction but euen their familiar acquaintance yea euen the children of their owne body and their wiues who lye in their bosome are ready to be the executioners of Gods vengeance when he appointeth them When he meant to bring a judgement vpon the house of Ahab he could make the tutors and gouerners 2. Kings 10. of his children to become their executioners When he purposed to cut off proud Senacharib he could vse his owne sonnes Adramelech and Sharezer to take away his 2. King 19. 37. life and though Dauid had had no other enimie which might haue beene Gods scourge to correct his sinne his owne sonne Absalon will not be wanting to chastise him so farre forth as God permitteth yea if the sinner had neither friend nor enimie to execute Gods vengeance he can make them to become their owne executioners as wee may see in the example of Saul Achitophel Iudas Nero and many others The vse hereof is that we doe not by our sinnes prouoke God vnto anger seeing wee are not stronger then hee as the Apostle speaketh for besides his owne strength whereby he 1. Cor. 10. 22. is able to destroy vs euerie minute he hath the helpe of all his creatures yea he can vse our owne strength for our vtter ouerthrow and make our best patrons and protecters to become our murtherers Secondly it serueth to shew the extreame follie of those who labour to please men more then God and to hazard the The folly of those who labour to please men more then God losse of his loue by committing of sin against their knowledge and conscience rather then they will hazard the losse of the loue of some carnall friends seeing if they had done that which is vpright in Gods sight they should hereby haue some assurance of Gods loue who hath the harts of men in his hand and can make their enimies to become their friends whereas on the other side when they prouoke Gods wrath by their sinnes hee can easilie make those whom by euill meanes and wicked policies they haue made their friends to become their mortall foes and the instruments of his anger to take just vengeance on them for their sinnes AND thus much concerning the first degree of their punishment the second followeth Verse 14. I will Verse 14 not visite your daughters when they are harlots nor your spouses when they are whores for they themselues are separated or doe separate themselues with harlots and sacrifice with whores therefore the people that doth not vnderstand shall fall In which wordes are contayned their punishment and the cause thereof their punishment is particularly expressed in the first wordes I will not visite your daughters c. and then vpon the inferring of the cause it is in more generall sort repeated and ratified in the last wordes therefore the people that doth not vnderstand shall fall The cause of this punishment is expressed in these words for they seperate themselues with harlots and sacrifice with whores And these are the parts the exposition followeth Some The Expositiō Iunius Polanus of great learning and judgement doe reade these vvordes by way of interrogation thus should not I punish your daughters because they play the harlots c. as though hee should say I will most certainely punish them and I appeale to your owne consciences whether it be not just that they should be punished for their vncleannesse The which interpretation they imbrace because they thinke that it could Heb. 13. 4. not stand with Gods justice to suffer their adulteries to goe vnpunished But howsoeuer this exposition be agreeable with the analogie of faith and is not contrary to the circumstances of the place yet I preferre before it our owne translation first because it better agreeth with all antiquitie secondly because it more fitly accordeth with that vvhich vvent before and that which followeth For before hee sayd that hee vvould punish the spirituall whoredome of the Husbands and Fathers with the corporall Adulteries of the Wiues and Daughters and now hee further sheweth the meanes whereby hee would inflict this punishment not by infusing this wickednes into them or by inclining or vrging them to commit these sinnes but by not onely with-holding his grace vvhich should stay them and so leauing them to their owne naturall corruption which in it selfe was most prone to this vncleannesse but also by denying to chastice and correct them for their sinnes whereby they might haue beene restrayned or reclaimed from them the vvhich impunitie would bee an occasion through their corruption to make them more securely to goe forward in their wickednesse And because it might seeme hard that the God of justice should when sinne abounded make a non-sizes and tollerate such wickednesse hee sheweth in the next words the cause hereof namely that hee suffered their Wiues and Daughters to liue in whoredome and vncleannes that hereby hee might punish vvith reproachfull infamy and shamefull disgrace their Husbands and Fathers because they committed both carnall and spirituall vvhoredome against him Yea but howsoeuer it was just vvith God to punish the sinnes of the husband and fathers with the sins of the wiues and daughters yet how can this stand with his justice not to punish their sinnes also I answere that we are not to vnderstand these words generally and absolutely as though he would inflict vpon them no kinde of punishment or at no time visite them for their sinnes For it is said that whoremongers and
them to see their sinnes or bring them to repentance Where hee taketh away an objection vvhich might bee made by the hipocrites namely that it would not stand with the justice of God to deale so seuerely vvith the people for they had a good meaning in all their deuotions and if they fayled in the manner of vvorshipping God it was through ignorance and therefore to bee excused To which objection the Prophet seemeth to answere that they were ignorant indeede and by reason hereof they fell into all manner of sinne but their ignorance did not excuse their faults neyther was it selfe to bee excused seeing they contemned the meanes of knowledge and remayned ignorant because they would be ignorant and affected the darknesse of superstition more then the light of Gods truth The punishment denounced is that they shall fall that is because they are indocible and will not by any meanes bee informed in the right course therefore the Lord will giue them ouer to their owne blindnesse of minde that so they may goe on in their superstition and Idolatryes and remaine perplexed in their reprobate errours vntill at length they stumble and fall into the pit of vtter ruine and destruction And this is the meaning of the words The Doctrines The doctrines which arise out of them are these First we here learne that it is a fearefull judgement of God vpon eyther a Common wealth or familie when as hee suffereth sinne and wickednesse It is a fearefull judgement when God doth not restraine vs from sinne by his chastisements to abound and doth not restraine men by his punishments nor reclaime them by his corrections And contrariwise that it is a signe of Gods loue and fatherly care ouer those whom hee doth chastise with manifold afflictions for their sinnes that so hee may reclaime them from their euill wayes whereas if they should flourish in their wickednesse it would be a notable meanes to hearten them in their sinne and to make them securely to goe forward in their euill courses without euer calling themselues to a reckoning And this may appeare both by testimonies of Scripture by Examples and by Reason For the first the Apostle Paul sayeth that the Lord doth suffer with long patience Rom. 9. 22. the vessels of wrath prepared to destruction to shew his wrath and to make his power knowne that is hee suffereth them to goe on in their sinnes without punishment that when they abuse his patience and long suffering as incouragements in their wickednesse hee may haue just occasion to manifest his power and wrath in taking due vengeance on them So when the Israelites did goe on in their sinnes and would neyther bee reformed by his mercyes nor his judgements hee threatneth that hee will correct them no more Esay 1. 5. Wherevpon it would follow Esay 1. 5. that being left vnto themselues they would desperately and securely liue in sinne for when as God doth not visite men for their sinnes they goe forward in them as though they should neuer bee called to a reckoning as it appeareth Ecclesiast 8. 11. Because sentence against an euill worke is Eccles 8. 11. not executed speedely therefore the heart of the Children of men is fully set in them to doe euill So the Lord rendreth this reason why the people did not reuerence nor feare him nor remember him nor his word Esay 57. 11. Is it not saith Esay 57 11. hee because I hold my peace and that of long time therefore thou fearest not me But on the other side it is a notable signe of Gods mercy It is an notable signe of mercy when God correcteth vs for sinne and loue when as hee crosseth vs in our wicked courses and will not suffer vs to prosper in our sinnes that being by these afflictions discouraged in our euill wayes wee may returne backe and preuent his heauy judgements by true repentance To this purpose the Apostle sayth that when wee are iudged wee are chastened of the Lord that we should not be condemned with the world 1 Corinth 11. 32. And 1. Cor. 11. 32. therefore hee maketh it a signe of Gods loue and an argument of our adoption when as wee are chastened of the Apoc. 3. 21. Heb. 12. 6. 10. 11. Lord. Hebrew 12. 6. Whom the Lord loueth hee chasteneth and scourgeth euery sonne whom hee receiueth And on the other side concludeth that those who liue in sinne and are not chastised they are bastards and no sonnes For as impunitie causeth these to goe on in wickednesse to their destruction so affliction howsoeuer for the present it is not ioyous but grieuous yet it is profitable because it helpeth to mortifie our sinnes and bringeth forth the quiet fruit of righteousnesse vnto them which are thereby exercised as it is Hebrewes 12. verse 10. 11. This also appeareth by examples When the Sodomites The former doctrine confirmed by examples liued in their sinnes hee suffered them still to injoy their pleasures and abundance and neuer reclaymed them from their wickednesse by his chastisements but suffered them to continue in their sinnes till the cry of them ascended into heauen and called for that last and fearefull vengeance whereby they were vtterly destroyed So hee suffered the Cananites to possesse that pleasant land which flowed with Milke and Honie in great peace and securitie till the measure of their sinnes being full hee powred out vpon them the full Viols of his Wrath. So Diues liued in all pompous pleasures till Death brought him into hell torments And thus Iob doth at large describe the great prosperitie of the wicked euen to the time of their funerals Iob. 21. 7. to the 13. And Dauid often obserueth Iob. 21. 7. 8. how exceedingly the wicked flowrished in their wickednesse euen to their vtter destruction Psal 37. 35 and Psal 37. 35. 73. 3. 4. 5. 12. 73. 3. 4. 5. 12. c. But the case of Gods Children and Seruaunts is farre otherwise for vvhen they sinne the Lord doth chastise them for their amendment and will not suffer them to goe on in their sinnes to their destruction Wee read but of one sinne which Noah committed that is to say his sinne of drunkennesse and yet the Lord punished it by exposing him to the derision of his owne wicked sonne so wee read but of three crimes which holy Dauid fell into though hee were a King exposed to manifould tentations his adulterie murther and pride in numbring the people and yet the Lord suffered none of the three to goe vncorrected for hee punished his adulterie committed in secret with anothers mans wife by letting his sonne defile his concubines in the sight of all the people his murthering of his seruant with the death of his child and by not suffring the sword to depart from his house his numbring of the people by an exceeding plague and pestilence so that if Dauid a man according to Gods owne hart doe but step
runne backe as an vnrulie heifer when her master putteth on the yoke runneth backward and will not suffer the yoke to come vpon her necke And thus the same word is vsed Hosea 7. 14. Hos 7. 14. And they rebell against me Againe this well agreeth with the drift of the place for before hee had said that Israel was rebellious as an vnruly heifer and here he sheweth what was the cause of their vntulinesse namely their excessiue drinking of wine or strong drinke Lastly others reade them according to our translation R. D. Kimhi Comment in Hos in lib. radic Mercer in Hos their drunkennesse or their drinke corrupteth and stinketh In which sense the Prophet alludeth to the qualitie and condition of drunken men who gull downe such excessiue store of wine and strong drinke that their stomackes being not able to digest it it there putrifieth corrupteth and stinketh and so they annoy the standers by with their vnsauory breath filthy belchings and vomitings as the Prophet Esay also speaketh Esay 28. 8. And this interpretation I imbrace Esa 28. 8. aboue the rest first because the word may well beare it for then drinke is said to goe backe when it loseth it naturall vertue degenerateth sowreth and corrupteth Secondly because as I take it it best fitteth with the scope of the Prophet which is not so much to shew the effects of these sinnes as that drinke or drunkennesse maketh men vnruly and rebellious as to set forth these odious sinnes themselues namely that they were addicted to beastly drunkennesse whoredome and bribing and therefore not to be conuersed withall with any that made conscience of their waies And thus the two other sinnes are to be vnderstood in themselues not in their effects Lastly this interpretatiō is most familiar simple plaine without either trope or allegorie and therefore offreth lesse force to the words then the other The meaning then is that they were addicted to this sin of drunkennesse and that in such brutish manner that euen their very breath was noysome and all their whole carriage so beastly and shamelesly loathsome as that it might be an effectuall argument to weane from their company not onely those amongst the men of Iuda who were religious but euen all such as had in them any ciuilitie or humanitie The next sinne which here he laieth to their charge is that they committed whoredome which some also vnderstand of spirituall fornication idolatry but I rather vnderstand it of their carnall whoredome and adultery of which they were also guiltie as before appeareth verse 11. And so these sinnes of drunkennesse and whoredome are fitly ioyned together as the cause the effect for sine Cerere Libero friget venus drunkennesse is a preparatiue to vncleannesse and as it were the wood or oyle wherewith this fire of lust is kindled and nourished Now further he implieth that they were not in any moderate sort giuen to this sinne for hee redoubleth the word in the originall text whoring they whored that is they continually liued in this sinne without measure or shame And this also was an effectuall reason to withdraw the men of Iuda from their company seeing they liued in an infamous and odious sinne and also were likely to infect and corrupt them by their wicked example the sinne of vncleannesse being in it owne nature an infectious and spreading sinne apt to poison all who come neere them that are tainted and infected with it The third last sin is bribing extortion in these words Their rulers loue to say with shame or shamefully Bring ye In which words we are to cōsider the persons who committed this sin and the sin it selfe The persons were their rulers and magistrates The word signifieth their shields whereby is implied first the office and dutie of good magistrates namely to shield and defend their subiects from outward violence iniuries and oppressions and secondly the sinne of these rulers the miserable conditiō of the people is hereby shewed aggrauated both in that the magistrates whose chiefe care and studie should haue been to defend the people to right their wrongs to execute iudgement and repell outward iniuries did greedily bend their mindes to couetousnesse both forgetting their place neglecting their dutie gaped after bribes also in that hereby nothing could follow but horrible disorder in the state when as those who should haue been the correctors and punishers of vice and the rewarders of vertue sought onely their owne priuate gaine and spent all their time and whole indeuours in hunting after bribes and rewards as after a pray whereby all manner of licentious libertie was giuen vnto the people of running headlong into all manner of sinne seeing their gouernours regarded them not or though they should call them into question yet they could easilie blinde their eyes and stoppe their mouthes and tie their hands with rewards and bribes And these were the persons The sinne is both expressed and also exceedingly aggrauated Their sinne laid to their charge is their bribing and extortion which as it is in it selfe euill so it is of worse consequence for it vtterly peruerteth all iustice and righteous iudgement and maketh those who should be vnpartiall Iudges respecters of persons as appeareth Deut. 16. 19. The reward blindeth the eyes of the wise Deut. 16. 19. and peruerteth the words of the iust Now this their sinne is aggrauated by their manner of committing of it and that both in respect of their inward affection and also their outward cariage and demeanure For the former it is said not onely that they were content to receiue gifts when they were offered but also that they embraced this sinne in their heart and affection and were farre in loue with their vice for they loued to say Bring yee For their outward cariage of it it is said not only that they loued to receiue gifts when they were offered and thrust vpon them but that they were growne to such an height of impudencie and iniustice that they did not sticke openly to professe their bribing and by word of mouth to require rewards wringing and extorting from them gifts by direct speeches when either they would haue them winke at their faults or administer iudgement or dispatch their businesse Yea and this they did not in any modest or shamefast maner but shamefully The word here vsed may be referred either to the manner of their requiring rewards that shamelesly and with a brasen forehead they called for bribes and couenanted before hand to haue rewards for any businesse which they dispatched or it may be referred to the rewards which they required namely that they called for shamefull rewards either in respect of their quantitie that they required great rewards for small businesses or in respect of their qualitie that they were the rewards of vnrighteousnesse giuen and receiued for the betraying of iustice and truth for the vpholding of the
wicked and discountenancing of the iust for the cleering or acquitting of the faultie and for the condemning of the innocent And this is the meaning of the words The doctrines which wee learne out of them are these first that drunkennesse The do ∣ ctrines is an odious and loathsome vice which strinketh in the That drunkennesse is an odious sinne nostrels of God and men It is abominable to God as in many other respects so especially because the drunkard maketh his bellie his god vnfitteth himselfe for all duties of Gods worship and seruice and most grosly and vngratefully abuseth his good creatures to the furthering of him in wickednesse as I haue elsewhere more largely prooued So likewise it is loathsomely stinking before men for not only do they offend mens eyes in beholding their filthie cariage and behauiour and their eares by their foolish railing or ribald speeches but also their smell for their noisome sluttishnes euen infecteth the aire and their very breath is a strong argument to make this sin odious so that though there were no impietie in it yet wee were to abhorre it because it is so loathsome The vse hereof is the same which the holy Ghost maketh in this place namely that it serue for a strong disswasion to restraine vs from such companie as are addicted to this sinne of drunkennesse for not only are they to be auoided as wicked 1. Cor. 5. 11. men both in regard of this sinne it selfe and all other abominable wickednesse which is the vsuall fruite thereof lest accompanying them we be allured to ioyne with them in their sinne but wee are to auoid these liuing carrions because they infect the aire with their breath and annoy their companie with their loathsome slutrishnes The second thing which wee here learne is that wee are We must carefully auoid the companie of adulterers with like care to auoid the companie of such as are addicted to the sinne of whoredome though wee had no other reason to restraine vs. For this the Lord himselfe vseth as an effectuall reason in this place to disswade the men of Iuda from accompanying the Israelites because they continued in the sinne of whoredome wherewith they were likely to taint and infect those who entertained neere familiaritie with them The force of which reason will more cleerely appeare if we consider not onely that the euill example of vncleane persons both by their ribald words and vnchast behauiour is apt to corrupt and that in regard of our pronenesse and naturall inclination to this vice wee are as apt to be corrupted but also that adulterers haue many wiles to beguile vs many baites to allure vs and impudent foreheads in venturing to giue the assault to our chastitie as appeareth in the example of Iosephs Mistresse who hauing gotten the aduantage of his companie solicites him to this sinne in a plaine and shamelesse manner in Lots daughters who came to that height of impudencie that they shamed not to intice their owne father in the people of Israel inueigled with the Numb 25. 1. alluring charmes of the cursed nations in Ammon defiling his owne sister and in the shamelesse harlot described in the 2. Sam. 13. Prouerbs who hauing inticed a yong man to come into her companie vsed such an art of lust to abuse him and so many bewitching inticements to allure him that at last hee yeelds vnto her and followes her as an oxe to the slaughter and as a foole to the stockes as it is Prou. 7. 10. 11. 13. 21. 22. Prou. 7. 10. 11. The vse hereof is that if wee desire to preserue our chastitie we auoid the companie of adulterers and vncleane persons seeing in it self it is sufficient to corrupt vs and to make vs copartners with them in this sinne For as there needeth no bellowes to blow the fire when it toucheth gunpowder because the one is no more fit to fire then the other to be inflamed so there needeth no other helpe to inflame the heart with lust then the touch and familiar acquaintance of vnchast persons because as they are fit with the fire of their lust to inflame vs so wee carrie in our selues such combustible matter as is no lesse readie to take the fire to be inflamed Thirdly we here learne that it is one of the highest degrees That it is an high degree of wickednes to be in loue with sinne of sinne when as we doe not only fall into wickednesse but also grow into loue and liking with it for this is the sinne of the Princes of Israel in this place who did not only bribe but also tooke delight in bribing and not only said but loued to say Bring yee Which as it argued that they had brasen faces so also that their hearts were rotten and wholly corrupted with sinne So long as the sicknesse is seated in the outward parts only there is great hope of recouerie because whilest the heart is whole and sound it ministreth and conueigheth life spirits and strength to the exteriour members whereby they are inabled to incounter the disease and in the end to expell it and get victorie but if it haue once seazed vpon the heart and taken thorough possession of it there is no hope of any recouerie so whilest our spirituall diseases of sinne enter no further then the imaginations thoughts words or outward actions our hearts continuing sound in their integritie vprightnes there is assured hope that they ministring continually spirituall life and strength to all the rest of the regenerate parts they will in time expell the corrupt humours of sinne and obtaine a full conquest ouer these spirituall diseases but if sinne haue taken possession of the heart so that hauing committed it we like and loue and highly value it in our affections then remaineth no hope of recouering spirituall health or of escaping death and vtter destruction vnlesse the Lord cure vs by miracle and taking away the corrupted heart out of our bodies doe giue vnto vs new hearts which are sound and vpright It is the top of our perfection and the farthest progresse which we can make in Christianitie when we cleaue vnto the Lord with all our hearts louing him intirely and our neighbour for his sake and when being inflamed with the fire of this holy loue we labour to performe all good duties vnto them both and take our chiefe delight in this performance and so contrariwise it is one of the deepest degrees of sin when we set our hearts vpon it and loue it as our dearest darling and not only willingly transgresse Gods commandements but also delight in our transgression The first is an euident signe of the childe of God though hee haue neuer so many infirmities and imperfections the latter an apparent token of the childe of the diuell though hee be graced with neuer so good a nature neuer so many counterfeit morall vertues neuer so glorious a shew of honestie and ciuilitie It is
wee know that Christ our Mediatour hath satisfied for our sins and reconciled vs vnto his Father then doe we bewaile our sinnes because we haue by them dishonoured and displeased our gratious Father and hauing repented of them wee goe boldly vnto the throne of grace crauing mercie and forgiuenesse Heb. 4. 16. 10. 22. Heb. 4. 16. 10. 22. ANd thus much concerning the punishments which the Lord threatneth against the people for their idolatrie and the first kinde or degree of their vnthankfulnesse as also concerning the effects of these punishments Now followeth the second degree of their vnthankfulnesse together with the punishments denounced against them for it Their ingratitude is expressed Vers 8. And she did not know that I Vers 8 gaue her corne and wine and oyle and multiplied her siluer and gold which they bestowed vpon Baal In which words he accuseth The exposition her of double ingratitude first that she did not know or knowing did not acknowledge the Lord to be the author of all those benefits which she enioyed secondly in that she did not vse these benefits to the glorie of God but bestowed them vpon her Idols The first is expressed in these words And she did not know that I gaue her corne c. By this coniunction copulatiue he knitteth these words with the former and sheweth that God iustly punished them seeing to their other sinnes they added another kinde of grosse ingratitude as though he should say And moreouer besides the sinnes before spoken of she hath shewed her selfe grosly vngratefull both in not acknowledging God the author of the benefits which she enioyed and in abusing them to Gods dishonour in the seruice of her Idols and therefore it is iust with God to afflict her with the former and following punishments that she may learne to ascribe vnto God the praise of his owne gifts and may desist to abuse them by bestowing them vpon Baal And this is the coherence of this verse with the former Now let vs come to the words themselues in which is expressed the partie offending and the sinne committed the first in this word And she which hath an emphasis in it and serueth to aggrauate the sinne For though the Heathen nations should not haue knowne or acknowledged the Lord to haue been the giuer of the benefits which they enioyed it had been no such great wonder seeing they had onely the light of nature and the booke of the creatures to looke vpon but that the people of Israel should be ignorant hereof was more then blockish senselesnesse and blind ingratitude seeing they had the booke of God wherein it was reuealed vnto them that they had all the benefits which they enioyed from the meere blessing of God that the Lord gaue them this land flowing with milke and honey by his owne omnipotent power casting out their enemies before them that from him they had the first and latter raine whereby their land was made fruitfull and seeing that they were entred into possession of al these benefits whilest they serued the Lord alone before they worshipped their Idols so that they had no shew of reason to ascribe Gods gifts vnto them which they alreadie enioyed before they serued them and therefore the Lord might iustly take vp that complaint against them Esa 1. 2. 3. The first branch of their sinne was they did not know that Esa 1. 2. 3. God gaue vnto them their gifts which they had receiued whereby wee are not to imagine that the Israelites were so blinde and ignorant as to thinke that they had all these benefits from their Idols only and not from Iehouah the God of Israel for many of the Heathens though they worshipped Idols and pettie gods yet by the light of nature knew that there was a chiefe and superiour power who was the originall fountaine of all goodnesse and therefore the people of God could not be hereof ignorant but they are said not to know that God gaue them these gifts because they did not know and acknowledge him alone to be the author of them but ioyned Idols and pettie gods with him and so robbed him of part of his praise they did not know that they had receiued these gifts of Gods free grace and meere goodnesse but for their golden Calues and other Idols and for that new deuised worship which they offred vnto God in them which they thought was more acceptable vnto him then the seruice prescribed in his word So Iere. 44. 17. 18. the Iewes said Ier. ●● 17. 18. they would worship the Queene of Heauen that is the Sun because hereby they had plentie not that they were so brutish as to thinke that they had these benefits from the Sunne only but because they ascribed this power and vertue vnto the Sunne in it selfe rather then vnto Gods blessing and prouidence and so offered sacrifices and diuine worship vnto the Sunne as being a ioynt cause with God of these benefits whereas it is only his instrument which doth nothing of it selfe but by his appointment The second branch of their sinne was that they bestowed and spent the gifts which they had receiued of the Lord vpon their Idols expressed in these words which they bestowed vpon Baal For the vnderstanding whereof wee are to know that this word Baal is in the Scriptures either taken generally for all Idoll gods in respect of the generall signification thereof which is as much as a Lord or Patrone and in regard that in the Punicke tongue from whence it is taken it signifieth a god or else specially for a particular Idoll of the Sidonians which was called by that name whose originall was after this manner Ninus who first reigned in Asia and built that famous citie which was called Nineue after his owne name was the sonne of one Belus whom in his pride according to the practise of Heathen Tyrants he deified and built a Temple vnto him wherein hee appointed that hee should be worshipped And this Idol amongst the Sidonians was called Baal and with the Babylonians Bel and was worshipped amongst them as their god Now this Heathen god did Ahab worship and built a Temple and erected an altar vnto him in Samaria to gratifie hereby Ithobal or Eth-Baal his father in law who was King of the Tyrians and Sidonians 1. King 16. 31. Lib. 9. antiq cap. 6. as Iosephus recordeth of which also wee may reade 1. King 16. 31. And although this Idoll god Baal was one and the same yet sometime the word is vsed in the plurall number Baalim or Baals either when it is taken in the generall signification for all Idols or in respect of the diuers statues or images erected in the honor of this Idoll a● Baal-peor Numb 23. 2. King 4. 2. or Baal-phigor Baal-zebub In this place as I take it wee are to vnderstand it in the generall signification for all their pettie patrones and Idoll gods because we reade that Baal the Idoll
yeare of Ezechias wherein the Israelites were led captiue into Assiria by Salmanaser was 680. yeares Thirdly he implyeth the sorrow and mourning of the people by this phrase of sitting which vsually in the Scriptures is ascribed to those who are in griefe and heauinesse for not knowing which way to ease themselues nor hauing any appetite when they are oppressed with sorrow to go about any thing they sit down bewaile their miserie So it is said of Iobs friends that they sate downe to mourne with him when they could not help him Iob. 2. 13. Of Nehemiah that Iob. 2. 13. he sate downe and wept and mourned for certaine dayes Nehe. Nehe. 1. 4. 1. 4. Of Ierusalem that she sate solitarie like a widdow mourning and lamenting her afflictions Lamen 1. 1. 2. And Babilon Lamen 1. 1. 2. sayeth of her selfe that shee would not sit as a Widdow Esa 47. 8. Esay 47. 8. Fourthly hee sheweth wherein her widdow-hood consisteth namely in being depriued of the outward signes of her communion with God both in regard of Ciuill and Ecclesiasticall gouernement and of the meanes of Gods pure and publike worship as also in being restrained from worshipping and seruing Idols false Gods All which are expressed in these particulars Without a King and without a Prince that is without any Magistrate of their owne nation or any publike forme of gouernement whereby Gods presence is represented in the common wealth And without an Offring that is they should not offer Sacrifices and Oblations for neyther was it lawfull to erect an Altar or offer a Deut. 12. 13. 14. Sacrifice any where sauing at Ierusalem the place appointed for Gods publike worship And without an Image namely made to represent Gods presence such as were the Images erected by Ieroboam in Dan and Bethell 1 King 12. 28 29. 1 King 12. 28. and those spoken of 2 King 17. 10. And without an Ephod 2 King 17. 10. of which there were two kinds the one made of Gold blew Silke Purple Scarlet and twined Linnen in which were the two Onix stones wherein were graued the name of the twelue Tribes and the Vrim and the Thummin and this was proper to the high Priest of which we may read Exod. Exod. 28. 6. 28. 6. c. The other made of Linnen of which wee may read 1 Sam. 2. 18. 2 Sam. 6. 14. The meaning is that they 1 Sam. 2. 28. should bee without a Priest-hood which should instruct 2 Sam. 6. 14. them and aske counsell for them of the Lord. Lastly hee saith that they should be without a Teraphim that is they should haue nothing to doe with the Idoll Gods of the heathen for the Teraphims were Images which the Idolatrous Heathens worshipped of which kinde were those Teraphims or Images which Rachell stole from her Idolatrous father Laban Gen. 31. 19. and that Teraphim in Michaes Gen. 31. 19. house Iudg. 17. 5. Iudg. 17. 5. So that hereby it appeareth in what the widdow-hood of the Church of Israell consisted namely that she should haue no signe of Gods presence in the ciuell gouernment for she should haue no King nor Magistrate nor yet in the Church for she should haue no offring nor Ephod that is no Priesthood nor publike meanes of worshipping God according to his word Neither yet should shee follow her louers and commit Idolatrie with them for she should not worship the true God after a false manner as Ieroboam did in images nor the heathen idols for she should be without a Teraphim Now the Lords end in all this was that he might weane the elect Israelites from their vaine hopes by withdrawing from them all those things wherein they trusted that so hauing no other hope of being deliuered out of their miserie they might turne to the Lord by true repentance and so expect from him alone freedome from their afflictions For as long as they had any Kings and gouernment or any forme of a common wealth whilest they had any shew of Religion or any outward meanes of worshipping God though they were neuer so much depraued and corrupted they rested nay they boasted in it as though they were in good estate and therefore to beate them from this vaine conceipt the Lord threatneth to bring vpon them a confused anarchie to depriue them of all shew outward appearance of a Church that so being humbled in the sight and sense hereof they might be moued laying aside all other hopes to expect saluation in Iesus Christ and be the better fitted to receiue him when he was exhibited as their onely King Priest Prophet and Redeemer And this is the meaning of the words from whence we That the beames of Gods fauour are often clouded with afflictions may obserue these instructions First whereas he saith that the people of Israel shal sit waiting in heauines without any outward signes of gods comfortable presence hence we learn that euen Gods dearest children oftentimes haue the beames of Gods fauour so clouded from them in their afflictions that they seeme vnto themselues desolate and vtterly forsaken of God as appeareth in this place So Iob complayneth Chap. Iob. 13. 24. 13. 24. Wherefore hydest thou thy face and takest mee for thine enimie And Dauid Psal 13. 1. How long wilt thou forget mee O Lord for euer how long wilt thou hide thy face from me Psal 13. 1. And 88. 14. Lord why doest thou reiect my soule and hidest Psal 88. 14. and 46. 89. thy face from me 89. 46. So Esay complaineth in the name of the faithfull Chapter 45. 15. Verely thou O God hidest thy Esa 45. 15. selfe The Church likewise Lamen 5. 20. Wherefore doest Lamen 5. 20. thou forget vs for euer and forsake vs so long time Yea this was the complaint of the sonne of God himselfe when as he bore our iniquities Math. 27. 46. Not that indeede the Lord Math. 27. 46. doth euer forsake those whom he hath once chosen but onely for a time with-houldeth the outward signes and inward feeling of his comfortable presence that hee may moue them more seriously to sorrow for sinne more earnestly to beg and pray for the returne of his fauour and more preciously to esteeme of it being restored vnto them when they perceiue how barraine of all comfort and ioy their soules are as soone as the Sun-shine of Gods fauour is ecclipsed from them The vse hereof is that if euer the Lord seeme thus to withdraw himselfe from vs in our afflictions wee be so humbled hereby as that in the meane time we sincke not into desperation as though we were vtterly rejected and to this end let vs remember that this hath beene the lot of the dearest of Gods children and therefore let this comfort vs that the same afflictions haue beene accomplished in other of the faithfull 1 Cor. 10. 13. 1 Pet. 5. 9. Secondly let vs call to