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A71123 A learned and very usefull commentary upon the whole prophesie of Malachy by ... Mr. Richard Stock ... ; whereunto is added, An exercitation upon the same prophesie of Malachy, by Samuel Torshell. Stock, Richard, 1569?-1626.; Torshell, Samuel, 1604-1650. Exercitation vpon the prophecy of Malachy. 1641 (1641) Wing T1939; ESTC R7598 653,949 676

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particular see then that unreverent and contemptuous servants expect you to receive from the Lord some fearefull thing and let it be a restraint in you of such irreverence in the things spoken of or the like But of this sin Masters are often the causes of it and they that bring it upon themselves First because they have beene such servants to their Masters and so have lived in it ever since without repentance even then when God recompenceth them home yet they will not remember their owne sinne but are still brawling with their servants and so it is Gods just retribution whereas if they would repent of that they should better reforme this Eccles 7.21 22. Take no heed to all words that are spoken lest thou heare thy servant curse thee for oft-times also thy owne heart knoweth that thou thy selfe hast also cursed others It may be applyed to this though it carry somewhat more That a Master when his servant revileth him or useth him irreverently should remember even this sentence to make him penitent and moderate Secondly because they have remitted of that ancient severity in their government which we heare men that can remember times that are past speake of not having those strait eyes nor hard hands over them as they ought not so sharply correcting them as the offence and nature of a servant requireth so that they little reverence them for they feare them not because they forget that of Prov. 29.19 A servant will not be corrected by words for though he understand he will not answer Thirdly because they bring them up too liberally for diet and apparrell and so when the belly is full and the back fine the Master is not so regarded A servant is like in this thing to a Horse full fed and pampered he will cast his rider like to Bucephalus Alexanders Horse while he was bare-backt he would carry any man but if once he had his trappings and furniture none or hardly Alexander himselfe It is the complaint of many that servants are thus insolent to themselves and others many though not all are the causes of it themselves somewhat there is in the nature of a servant and other things for they bring them up so delicately as Prov. 29.21 He that delicately bringeth up his servant from a child shall have him become his sonne at the length Whatsoever their fare is their apparrell is farre exceeding a servant going better than a man of his Masters place and wealth did some few yeares agoe And though they will not allow it themselves yet they can be content their friends or themselves if their fortune be allotted unto them should provide it for themselves And if when they are thus gay without they use them as Hagar did her Mistris when she was bigge with child is it not just with them A great cause of this is taking of Apprentices with great portions and so as Mulier cum dote is imperiosa so they and their friends The cause you must have such portions with them more than in former times is this because they must thus be maintained more than in former times But better it were that you had lesse and kept them more meanely better for you you should have more reverence and respect better for them for thus you bring sin upon them for the present and in future time just contempt as they have contemned you Vse 2 To perswade servants to use their Masters with all reverence and good respect that may be they must feare them and reverence them Nature it selfe hath taught it and heathen servants have performed it as in Naamans servants how much more should religious Christian servants and the more Christian or religious the more they ought to performe this duty not onely not to contemne and despise but to reverence them with all the reverent carriage and speech that may be and that not outward onely but inward for God requires more than Nature his Law is spirituall and he will have all inward and outward respect the heart as well as the tongue and the outward will not be or not continue or if so yet not accepted of God yea he that wants this it can never be expected the other of obedience c. and let him who lookes and hopes to be one day a Master and to have his servants such as he would be now such a servant as he should Ephe. 6.8 knowing that whatsoever good any man doth the same shall he receive of the Lord whether he be bond or free The second duty of servants is obedience for whom men feare them they obey Doctrine Servants must give unto their Masters and governours all obedience hence it followes because they must feare and whom men feare them they obey when they command this proved Ephe. 6.5 Col. 3.26 Titus 2.9 And this obedience if it be such as Christians ought to performe it must neytheir be clipt nor counterfeit not in some things onely nor in shew to the eye for the first Col. 3.21 in all things that is in all lawfull things whether they be liking and tasting unto him or otherwise though never so disliking for he must pleasure his master Titus 2. q. for the 2 Ephe. 6.5 6. Col. 3 22. singlenesse of heart is required and eye service forbidden Reas 1 Because they are bound either by Indenture or condition c. then they must obey Reas 2 Because they are maintained by them and learne and get that under them they may live by hereafter Reas 3 Because if in onely things they like they obey themselves not masters as in obedience of children Reas 4 Because in this obedience they serve God and Christ Ephe. 6.5 6 7. who lookes in the heart and singlenesse of it And though outward and eye service may be for thy master and may bleare his eyes yet not the Lord who as he cannot endure hypocrisie or imperfect serving immediately so not in that which is mediate to man Vse 1 To let servants see their sinnes past or present not obeying and doing the things their masters command but onely such things as they please and when they please and when they doe they clip their service and performe it by halves and doe it in hypocrisie and to the eye and so go no further then nature who teacheth a man onely to save himselfe as neere as he can from any harme that may ensue when his master is displeased or to seek to get somewhat if he have hope of ought by seeking of his favor and so seeming willing to doe any service unto him but they must know that as Barnard si in hoc obedimus non autem in illo fractus est nummus This obedience is like clipt coyne and will not passe for good payment before God though thy master let it passe and be content to put it up yet God will call thee one day to an account for it and though thou canst keepe it close from the one yet thou canst
not doe without But he may doe it unlawfully when he hath no such occasion yet thou must doe it and may so he imploy thee not about servile workes on that day and in that time The reason is because the Lords day may be sanctified privately and publique exercises are not of absolute necessity in the sanctifying of it for then prisoners and sicke persons and such as lye lame should not be able to sanctifie it They onely are of necessity when they can be had without apparent breach of some other commandements and yet maist thou make this unlawfull to thee when if thou be left at home thy Master and Mistris are gone to Church but thou art with a child in thy armes or without gazing at the dore or gadding abroad or having thy companions comming to thee and spendest thy time prophanely when thou oughtest so much as may be to spend it in reading the word meditating on that thou hast heard in the forenoon or former time or such like And in this thou must take heed how thou setst God and thy master one against another another instance thy master commands that is unlawfull for him to bid not for the thing but his affection thou must obey having first wisely and humbly sought to turne thy master from such a sinne As betwixt David and Joabs numbring of the people 2 Sam. 24.2 3. But the thing he commands is unlawfull as well as his affection I meane not simply but by circumstance or consequent yet thou mayst obey as being an Officers Clerke to receive more fees then is due being extortion or a Noble mans bailiffe his extreame racke rents providing that in humility thou shew thy dislike of it seeke to reforme it or doe it with sorrow and griefe while thou art bound to it and get thy self rid of such a service so soone as thou may But if he command thee any thing simply that is sinne as to sweare for his gaine to lye for his commodity to deceive to steale or any such things thou mayst not obey and yet not rebell but suffer Quest 2 If the Magistrate and my Master command divers thing whether must I obey Answ The Magistrate ut supra and for the reasons there besides if it carry not any excuse neither is it any plea in law my Master bids me doe it It must needs follow that the Magistrate must be obeyed It would not excuse Absolons servants their Master bade them kill Amnon for which he was glad to flee for the power of the master is but subordinate to the Magistrate thy obedience then to thy Master hath this restraint because it cannot be lawfull But say the Magistrate commands me that which doth marvellously redound to the hurt of my master whose good I am bound to procure If it be very profitable to the Common-wealth a publique good must be preferred if not prejudiciall to it so there be no contempt of the Magistrate and his authority he being content to beare the penalty if it be executed and exacted from him I see not but he may preferre his master before as in the case of Children and instance of Ester Quest 3 My Master and my Father are opposites whether must I obey Answ I answer as before in Children there is somewhat besides in those who are borne servants Exod. 21.4 Quest 4 My Master and my Husband as the case may fall out in the meaner sort who are to be instructed as others or my state requires this of me wife and children but my Master another Answ I answer his Master the Master is to be obeyed because he ought Psal 15.4 not to change though he swore to his hurt The equity of it stands for any covenant that must be preferred before his profit and if before his owne then his wives or husbands for the man see an example in Jacob who would not labour for his owne family but obey his Master Gen. 30.30 For the woman if she be a servant borne and given in marriage as the manner was still she was to obey her Master Exod. 21.4 If she be a servant by covenant and consent of her Husband during the time of her covenant she is to obey and keepe the conditions of the covenant for he for the time hath remitted his authority The third duty of servants is submission that is to their reproofe and corrections for those men whom they feare they will suffer both at their hands Doctr. Servants must submit themselves unto their Masters to be controuled and corrected by them whether they doe it justly or unjustly whether deservedly or not they must feare them and therefore suffer from them When God allows the Master to reprove and correct his servant as he doth Prov. 29.19 then it must imply that his servant must suffer it 1 Pet. 2.19 for this is thank-worthy if a man for conscience toward God endure griefe suffering wrongfully Tit. 2.9 not giving crosse words one for another Hence is that Gen. 16.9 And the Angell of the Lord said unto her Returne to thy Mistris and submit thy selfe under her hands The example of Abrahams servants is commendable Gen. 17.23 his servants submitted to Circumcision and by proportion the example serves for this purpose Reas 1 Because if it be for well doing in conscience it is thanke-worthy and if it be borne with meeknesse the Lord shall give a man the more reward 1 Pet. 2.19 20. Reas 2 Because they are called to this 1 Pet. 2.21 this is the Crosse that Christ hath called them to take up and beare after him this is the Crosse that God hath annexed to their calling as every calling hath some crosse or other and for the wrong that is offered them God as St. Paul saith Coloss 3.25 will right and revenge them c. Vse 1 To reprove many and most servants amongst us who goe not so farre as nature it selfe would teach them few so farre as Religion doth teach them for some cannot so farre subdue their crooked natures to submit themselves to their masters so farre as they can doe no otherwise because it is in vaine to struggle with the yoke when a man cannot slip it nor shift it off But if some come to this yet can they hardly suffer with patience hard measure though they suffer deservedly when as naturall equity condemneth him that doth otherwise And be it that some can thus subdue themselves yet is it no more than the Heathens and Publicanes will doe it is but Canina patientia a dog-like enduring saith Bernard such as God will not accept when either he dare not whine or hath done some foule fact and deserved it But if they have not or thinke they have not deserved it how ready are their answers how soone will they turne upon their Masters and take the rod by the end and if they be rebuked they murmure if they be corrected they either will resist or clamorously complaine or wickedly seeke revenge Let these know and
see their sin and looke for a recompence from the Lord for saith St. Peter they have lost their thankes it is not thankes worthy if they had suffered for evill what when they will not undoubtedly let them looke from God which rewardeth every man they shall have their recompence from him if they repent not it may be in this life with the like if not in the life to come with wicked and lewd servants But of this sinne if we may enquire the causes of it we shall find in many to come from the Parents and friends either in their education bringing them up cockeringly never using them to reproofes to the rod and to the yoke but as my young Masters and such as never should come to serve so that when they must to it by no meanes they can apply themselves unto it but in it endure and suffer nothing not so much as sharpe words but no blowes deserved or not But this is not all their fault for it is seconded with as bad when they are in service and find some hardnesse and as they onely thinke sharpnesse they remembring the fondnesse of their affection complaine to them who doe not as they should correct them soundly and send them home againe but goe to their Masters and expostulate the matter for them extenuate the fact aggravate the Masters hard dealing upbraid him with what he gave him with his friend or child and so animate them that they will be in nothing sufferers after or never without grudging and repining Another cause is in the master either because he was such and is such because he hath not repented and so it is Gods retribution ut ante or because he hath beene too remisse to let faults many and little escape without reproofe and correction that when he would for greater he cannot subdue them or passed by some greater faults in some other of his servants for some sinister respect as because he would not be accounted cruell and severe which in the justice of God and the cankred nature of another servant is payed him home because he never feared to be accounted cruell of God and such an one as hates his servant for that will hold in servants Prov. 13.24 He that spareth his rod hateth his sonne but he that loveth him chasteneth him betimes and so being ashamed in a licentious and corrupt age to be accounted hard and strait he hath shame laid upon him by a rebellious servant as we may apply Prov. 29.15 The rod and reproofe giveth wisedome but a Child left to himselfe bringeth his mother to shame A third cause is in the Magistrate to whom the master complains as he may and must in a desperate cause who by the servants friends or meanes he makes to him will either reprove and checke the master which he ought not to doe though there be some small cause nor if great cause yet not before the friends or face of the servant and little or not at all reprove or not severely correct that servant by which not onely he is made more bold against his master but even other servants are animated against theirs and the masters utterly discouraged to seeke any helpe from them To admonish all servants to subject and submit themselves unto their masters to be reproved or corrected by them as well unjusty as justly not answering crosly or rejecting their stripes If they suffer justly it is not thank-worthy for a Christian when a naturall man will doe the same for nature teacheth that it is no hard dealing when they suffer evill that have done evill before Then as Christ except your righteousnesse exceed c. so except your subjection exceed that which a naturall man will performe you shall have no thanke from God no reward How then must you exceed it if not onely this but even when you are wrongfully afflicted reproved and chastised in truth or in your apprehension of things if for conscience sake towards God you endure griefe 1 Pet. 2.19 * Insipida insulsa omnis tum obedientia tum patientia nisi omnium quae agimus vel patimur ipse sit causa Bernard Obedience and patience are unsavoury unlesse God be the cause and it be for conscience But how farre must we suffer I answer So long as he kils not or dismembers not but if wrongfully he be corrected he may expostulate and defend himselfe in humility and meeknes his master giving him leave as Job 31.13 The fourth duty of servants is faithfulnesse for those whom men feare to them are they faithfull if they trust them with any thing Doctr. Servants must performe all faithfulnesse to their masters that is they must not themselves diminish or hinder their estate neither suffer it so much as possibly they can withstand to be hindred by other but by all meanes uphold maintaine and increase it to the utmost of their power This is manifest Titus 2.10 not purloyning but shewing all good fidelity that they may adorne the Doctrine of God our Saviour in all things Where as faithfulnesse is expresly required so the contrary is forbidden and manifested wherein that doth consist by the contrary in maintaining and not diminishing his masters state and condition This Christ teacheth by the faithfull and evill servant Math. 24 45.48 c. As also in the parable of the worldly wise but wicked steward Luke 16.2 Thus Jacob played a good servant Gen. 37 38 39. In this he was a good servant though faulty otherwise 1 Sam. 25.14 15 17. Joab also Chron. 21.3 Reas 1 Because the commandement requires it of every man one to another in common justice Thou shall not steale not diminish another mans substance nay maintaine and increase it in the affirmative then much more a servant Reas 2 Because the masters family is as a little common wealth as that is a great family Now as all subjects are members and ought to labour for the common good and be faithfull to the Prince so every servant is a member and must bee faithfull unto the whole body Reas 3 Because they are put in trust often with part or his whol state where there is trust treachery is intolerable Reas 4 Because by this meanes they shall adorn the doctrine of Christ which they professe Titus 2.10 Vse 2 To let servants see their sinnes that they have not been faithfull but unfaithfull to their Masters unfaithfull first by hindring his profit and diminishing his state either spending his Masters goods riotously at home with his fellow servants as he Mat. 24. or abroad as the prodigall sonne upon harlots and wicked persons playing and dancing drinking and dycing and such like The former of servants accounted no sinne the latter but a small sinne and yet neither of them inferiour to robbery by the high-way and in divers circumstances greater And such a sinne without recompence to his master and repentance in the sight of God shall have his just recompence from God and shall
never be forgiven him Many for the sicknes times have in Gods Rols long Records against them yea great inditments they must plead guilty to for which some of their fellows have answered already for if he that deceives another or defrauds and oppresseth him shall not escape he lesse that deales so with his master But say he spends it not but convert it to his owne use and inrich himself by it he is more bound to make restitution or let him suspect that of Augustine shall be true * Non remittitur peccatū nisi restituitur ablatum August The sinne is not pardoned unlesse the theft be restored and as long as he keeps it he keeps Gods curse with it prosper he never so well for a while and if he leave it to his that it will be a sparke to burne up his house and substance in his sight he shall leave the curse of God with it to his wife and children when he is burning in Hell for it and other sins yet if many be free from this kind of unfaithfulnes yet how few can wash their hands from the other not upholding encreasing their masters state and condition the Apostle forbad not only stealing and pilfering but commands all good faithfulnesse that they by all meanes possible should encrease it by all their diligence skill and speech when as they have beene sloathfull and negligent when they have by their carelesnesse lost their master somewhat which might honestly have been had or not prevented some losse by their wisdome and forecast if they saw it comming yea when they have murmured to breake their sleeps or mend their pace to beare the heat in the day and the frost in the night for their Masters speciall advantage and honest gaine they have not performed this faithfulnesse in all these things looke upon your reckonings your guilty consciences and know you that if God will recompence your wrong to your master Col. 3.25 he will much more recompence you for them if you repent not Now the cause of this unfaithfulnesse to say nothing of Gods retribution and servants corrupt hearts is to be found in some because they doe not take strait accounts of their servants but do it negligently or seldome by which he is imboldened to spend or inabled to shift when his account is to be given Secondly in others because they passe over apparent unfaithfulnes in some of their servants without due correction and punishment and so other of their fellows themseves are heartned to the like when they have no feare of God nor feel nothing from their Masters after their deserts Thirdly from parents that allowed them to spend and brought them up idly before ever they bound them from many a master who would be content his eldest servant should keep good fellowship and company and spend of his owne to bring them customers by which the rest have their teeth set on edge in their corruptions and Gods hand is against them to punish them by others when they had no care of the former Fourthly because they had no care to take such servants as are religious and towardly and such as know how to be faithfull nor yet to teach them any religion when they have them that they might learne to be faithfull of conscience and not for other sinister respect and so when they have no care with Abraham to teach their servants to be faithfull with God no marvell though they be unfaithfull to them in their states bodies children and in all things Vse 2 This may instruct and perswade servants to perform faithfulnesse to their masters for the time to come and to repent make them recompence for that is past if they see their sinne if in mis-spending their masters goods at home or abroad if by negligence losing him commodity or by hindring of it or for want of diligence not advancing it sorrow and mourne for that is past as it is a sin against God and man and make thy master amends by a double care and diligence in thy service else make account that thy sinne stands upon the score against thee for a judgement to come And if thy unfaithfulnes hath been so great that thou hast appropriated his goods unto thy selfe looke whether thou be in his service or out that thou make him recompence and give him his owne againe make him restitution or else all shall not be accepted of God while thou hast his goods in thy hand looke how many pence or pounds so many witnesses against thee yea so many as call for a curse upon the rest of thy substance thou either hast or may have And for other servants let if not conscience restrain them yet this that thou must make restitution or never have remission before God besides the guilt and gall of thy conscience if thou go not asleepe to hell finally let servants in all things shew all good faithfulnesse specially such as have any taste of religion that you may adorn the doctrine of Christ that you make not the wicked scoffe at your profession and the good justly tax you of hypocrisie Chrysost Hom. 16. in Tim. hath these words If not otherwise yet as servants obey and respect their masters so let us the Lord. They expose their lives for their ease it is their work and study to care for their masters the things of their masters they care for all the day but a little part for their owne would God we could this exhort upon as good ground true sure it is so it should be and thus faithfull should every one be and if you be look for Gods blessing by like servants and a reward hereafter with the good servants if you be such of conscience and for the Lord. His Master As we have seen the duty and feare so we must see the parties to whom it is due to be performed To their Master whatsoever he may be so he be their Master it skils not to him must they performe it Doctrine Servants must give this feare and performe all these duties to him that is their Master be he what he may be or let them be what they can be yet while they are servants and they Masters they must performe it say he be in birth in parts in graces in religion inferiour to them say he be cruell and churlish a very Nabal say he be prophane and irreligious an Atheist or Hereticke yet they must feare and in feare performe these duties to them this is that the Apostle speaketh 1 Pet. 2.18 and 1 Tim. 6.1 To what servants speaketh the Apostle to such as did beleeve and were come to the knowledge of the truth of what masters such as yet were enemies to God and his truth loved not knew not had not tasted of the truth Laban was an Idolater yet did Jacob give him faithfull service and all duty yea a churlish and deceitfull unconscionable Master Potiphar was an heathen yet Joseph feared him and served
benefits past the servile for evill to come See the difference plainely Jer. 5.22 23 24. Feare ye not me saith the Lord or will ye not be afraid at my presence which have placed the sand for the bounds of the Sea by the perpetuall decree that it cannot passe it and though the waves thereof rage yet can they not prevaile though they roare yet can they not passe over it But this people hath an unfaithfull and rebellious heart they are departed and gone For they say not in their heart Let us now feare the Lord our God that giveth raine both early and late in due season he reserveth unto us the appointed weekes of the harvest If you will not have this filiall feare yet at least shake not off this servile dread if not feare in regard of good I have yet of evill I may doe them By these two for the present may every one examine himselfe whether he hath a servile or a filiall feare If thou fearest as a Childe thou hatest sinne as sinne because it is sinne thou art like a man that loaths a meate and therefore would not eate of it If only a servile feare thou loathest sinne for the punishment not for it selfe indeed but the sequel like a man that hath a minde to eate of something that the Phisitian hath forbidden him and is hurtfull and abstaines only because he dares not touch it for feare of further inconvenience If thou hast the childe-like feare Ista sagitta timor qui configit interficit carnis desideria Ber. It is not the outward worke that dislikes thee and externall act of sinne only but even the desires motions and affections for it is pure That dart is feare which pierces and kills the very desires of the flesh If the servile onely then the outward worke onely and practice of sinne is feared if a filiall feare then it will grieve thee to offend nay to be provoked to offend so good and gracious so mercifull and loving a father who hath beene ever so gracious and good unto thee But if but the servile feare then onely when thou feelest his hand or fearest an imminent danger or hast the fresh remembrance of a judgment which is but new taken from him for which a Child of God must and ought to feare but then are not these the principall causes of feare in him for these he feares and flies sin but principally for the other If a filiall feare thou art afraid to offend in lieu of thankfulnesse for thy being and preservation and all thy manifold blessings received already If a servile onely for feare of evills or hope of that which is to come It is the whip the scourge and the rod that causeth the hypocrite as an Asse a foole and a slave to forbeare and leave sinne but it is love conscience and obedience that maketh Gods Children willingly to abhorre it Nazianz. if thou bee'st a slave and a servant stand in feare of the whip or the scourge if an hireling worke for thy wages expect thy reward but if over and above all these thou beest a sonne doe good because it is thy duty to please and observe thy father from whom thou hast received so much good before The third difference of these two feares is this the one is a loving feare and the other is a hatefull feare the first is joyned with love such as good subjects beare to good Princes and ordinarily children beare to their fathers The second is joyned with hatred such as servants beare to their hard and cruell Masters the one would if they could withdraw themselves out of Gods government and get out of his sight as Adam Gen. 3. as a fugitive servant as Hagar Gen. 16. the other would not willingly away from God but submitteth himselfe unto him and seeketh as he can to presse neerer and neerer as farre as he dare with due reverence of his Majesty like the Prodigall sonne who came home to his father and yeelded himselfe willingly into his hands And therefore it is a true saying that after sinne the wicked are troubled they cannot get themselves farre enongh from God and the godly are troubled they cannot come neere enough home to him the one is afraid of the losing of God the other is afraid of Gods finding of him of that saith Augustine in 1 John 4. it is called castus timor a chaste feare T is one thing to feare God Aliud est timere Deum ne te mittat in Gehennam aliud ne ipse à te recedat ille non est castus qui non venit ab amore Dei sed ex timore poenae iste castus est quia venit ex amore Dei quem amplecteris August in 1 Joh. 4 lest he send thee to Hell another lest himselfe depart from thee that feare is not chast because it comes not from the love of God but from the feare of punishment but this is chast because it comes from the love of God whom thou delightest in So that this filiall feare agreeth with the love of Gods Majesty yea it riseth out of love a man is afrayd to offend one that he loveth but the servile fear is joyned with the deadly hatred of God And so as it is said whom they feare they hate and they desire he may perish whom they hate Quem metuunt oderunt quem oderunt periisse cupiunt So it may be said of this that by it he is not homicida a manslayer but Deicida a Godslayer wishing there were never a God to punish him The fourth difference of these two feares is in their continuance which is manifest First If we consider them in divers subjects for the one is but for a bront like lightning that giveth a flash and is gone and comes in an instant never ceizeth upon the soule nor dwelleth in the heart For instance we may take Pharoah Exod. Chap. 27 28 29 30. so Ahab when Eliah had summoned him hee feares 1 King 21.27 but soone after he goes fearelesse to Ramoth Gilead 1 King 22.26 27. The filiall feare is permanent and constant as the causes of it are Isa 11.2 Prov. 28.14 For it is no naturall worke but a supernaturall habit Secondly if we consider them in one subject the one outlasteth and overlives the other 1 Joh. 4.18 perfect love casteth out feare that is servile feare but Psal 19.9 The feare of the Lord is cleane enduring for ever that is filiall feare when it comes it casts out that because it brings with it assurance of God favour It remaines still having the lesse paine and trouble with it the longer it lasteth and the more forward it commeth to perfection And this feare is so lasting that it remaines after this life not that the blessed shall fear either lest they should offend for they are then without danger of falling but in regard of Gods power and his incomparable and his incomprehensible graces there shall be
as hainous and displeasing unto God so as more hainous those which are against the main end of his calling wherein God hath placed him As the Minister must labour against ignorance idlenesse suffering his gifts to decay not increasing his talent and he must endeavour to search and beat out the simple and sincere sence of Gods word and will and impart it unto the people to bring them to life eternall for it is a hainous sin for him to be ignorant or to handle the word deceitfully or corruptly as Saint Paul speaks or to wrest the sense of it as Saint Peter speaks to their purposes And so as it is Isaiah the 3.12 They that lead thee cause thee to erre So the lawyer must not use unfaithfulnesse or cunning dealing he must search out the proper grounds of the law to direct his client to proceed warrantably to see his wrongs redressed or recover his right for for him to spend his time in devising quirks and distinctions which may serve to obscure the truth and make contentions and suits rather then end any or to delay his clients cause when he may well haste it and bring it to an issue and as many doe use their cunning to this purpose it is the greater sinne in them so a Physitian and a Surgion must imploy all his skill to cure for him to deferre and somtimes to help forwards and then pull backwards againe to make gaine of his patient and empty his purse and hurt his body is very hainous both of them worse then theeves by the high-way making Gods ordinance a cover for their theft not so punishable by humane laws but as culpable before God and shall as severely be punished So if a sonne omit the honour due to his father or a servant the feare due to his master is a greater sinne for others to doe it to the same men is not so hainous so t is the duty of a wife to be a helper that she must indeavour in all things For for her to be as Eve who was given as comfort to make Adams life more joyous for her to be a broker to bring death she that was taken from him as part to be shot at him as a dart to the wounding and murthering of his soule as Basill speaketh or for her who was taken out of his side to guard and hemme in his heart to be a ladder to the Devill to scale the heart of her husband as Gregory speaketh of Jobs wife was more hainous then when the Serpent and Devill did it who were professed enemyes and so now being directly against the end of her creation and calling and so of all they are thus to thinke of their sinnes and thus to avoyd them That despise my name The sinne they are accused of is contempt of his worship not the omitting of it or the nor doing of it at all but the doing of it corruptly carelessely and contemptuously The name of God signifies First himselfe Secondly his properties Thirdly his commands or his authority Fourthly his workes Fifthly his word and worship which is here meant and which they not only omitted which might be through ignorance or some forcible temptation but contemned or despised for many could not pretend ignorance and at this time there was no persecution to compell them to dishonour God but many did it out of a base conceit they had of Gods majesty thinking any kinde of service would serve the turne the word signifies to trample under feet as we doe vile things Math. 5.13 2 Kings 9.33 but did the Preists doe thus Ribera answereth things are oft said to be done which are intended to be done because nothing is wanting in them why it should not be done who have a will to have it done Doctrine Contempt of Gods name that is when men doe indeed the works of Gods worship and service but doe them negligently carelesly and contemptuously thinking if the deed be done it is enough but how for the manner it matters not greatly it is a grievous sinne Manifest that it is here made the grand sinne of this people and these Priests for which the burthen is threatned in the beginning and many particulary judgements afterwards This people did the work of the Lord brought their Sacrifices but they did it carelesly and contemptuously brought any thing as thinking it good enough This was one difference betwixt Abel and Cain though faith was the main yet how carefull the one was that thought the best was bad enough the other the worst would serve for he brought a Sacrifice Gen. 4.3 4. Hence are the qualities of the sacrifices described in the Law God requiring not only Sacrifices but such as were perfect without blemish Levit. 22.20 21 22 23. Deuter. 17.1 But why this but to shew how he requires the manner of doing aswell as the deed and that he cannot endure corruption here Hence Saul laboured to lessen the fault because they saved the chiefest for the Lord. 1 Sam. 15.15 Hence is that Malach. 1.14 which we shall see hereafter Reas 1 Because this argues a great contempt of God and as we may speake of his person for when any man is respected either for love or feare there the offices and duties that are performed about him are done neither negligently nor carelesly but with all diligence The Wife that loves her Husband the Child that honours his Father the servant that feares his Master doe their duties with all diligence and care Where the duties are done of course and coldly there is not the respect of the person that should be so it is in our carriage towards God Reas 2 Because it is grosse hypocrisie when men doe thus performe the act and yet their hearts and affections are farre remote and so are no living sacrifices but onely dead carkasses such as must needs stinke in the nosthrils of God yea and thus honouring him they doe dishonour him Isaiah 29.13 St. Salvian speaking of such as worship God corruptly saith Non tam inanis criminis fuisset ad Templum Domini non venire quàm sic venire quia Christianus qui ad Ecclesiam non venit negligentiae reus est qui autem venit sacrilegii minoris enim piaculi reus est si honor Deo non deferatur quam si irrogetur injuria ac per hoc quicunque ista fecerunt non dederunt honorem Deo sed derogaverunt De gubern Dei lib. 8. Vse 2 This being such a sinne argues the age we live in guilty of a great deale of sinne before the Almighty his worship is performed but yet contemned marvellously amongst us As they brought the sacrifices so doe we the workes but so corruptly and carelesly that he speaks to us Ministers and people Ye despise my Name The Word is preached and heard prayers are made Sacraments are delivered and received but alas so carelesly cursarily and customably that it is but the contempt of them and the contempt of God in
dignity of the flesh so to heare their prayers and to accept their service is he not moved by any dignity of person any vertue of place or office nor by outward priviledge if faith and holinesse of life be wanting here it is apparent in these Priests not accepted for all the dignity of their office Cain was the first borne and had that priviledge yet for all that God received not his offering but Abels Gen. 4. so betwixt the Pharise and publicane Luke 18.10 c. as betwixt the rich men and the widdow Marke 12.41 42 43. Reas 1 Because he is no accepter of persons Acts 10. that is for any outward thing for he accepts for inward It is borrowed from Judges who being corrupt are swayed not with the uprightnesse of the cause but with the person his place his honor his riches and such like which being denyed in God shewes why he accepts not the wicked Reas 2 Because he looks not as man looks upon outward things Vse 1 This will serve to check a corruption in our times and not in ours onely but that which hath ever beene in all ages great men nobles and Princes wealthy and worshipfull personages perswade themselves so are soothed up by their flatterers that a little thing from them is greatly accepted of God a few cold prayers a little devotion a carlesse hearing shall be accepted from them though they never trouble themselves for the true feare of God and to worke righteousnesse whereas first in reason there is more due to God where he hath given more But why should he accept lesse from them because they are great as if he were an accepter of persons or as if they were or could be great in respect of him Vse 2 Let no estate hinder a man from this service for the best excuseth not the meanest makes us no lesse acceptable VERSE X. Who is there even among you that would shut the doores and kindle not fire on mine Altar in vaine I have no pleasure in you saith the Lord of Hosts neither will I accept an offering at your hand WHo is there among you Here is the rejecting of them and their sacrifices threatened which is the maine point in the verse but in the former part as divers of the learned doe so take it he returnes unto his former expostulation reproving the priests for their ingratitude and corruption of his worship And then it will be read who is there among you that will shut the doores or doe you kindle fire on my Altar for nothing And some expound it that the Priests would not so much as shut the doores till they had their wages payed others that they did nothing in Gods service but they were rewarded for God arguing their unthankfulnesse to him by his bounty to them But others take the words as they are here read both more agreeable to the originall as also more squaring to the present matter to shew how he rejected them and their sacrifice when he wisheth that some body would shut the doores of the Temple or that they would offer none at all and so keepe out the Priests that they could not come to sacrifice any thing upon his Altar which he did so distaste and dislike and so it is I would rather you should not offer at all then as you doe For the particular words And kindle not fire upon mine Altar q.d. that yee might not come to offer upon mine altar kindle not my altar so in the originall a Metonymia In vaine id est to no end the word signifieth freely Job 1.9 for nothing so unjustly without cause Psal 69.5 so scotfree without punishment Prov. 1.11 to no end or purpose Job 2.3 Pro. 1.17 so here I have no pleasure in you The former is a wish this is the reason of the wish All is in vaine and to no end because I like not you and will none your sacrifices he shews that he esteemed not these offerings not from the nature but from the minde of him who did offer them If he were indued with piety and holinesse God would accept his offerings and service If otherwise God would take no delight in them for all their offerings Neither will I accept an offering at your hands These offerings he simply refuseth not being things he had commanded but because they were offered by them qd I am so farre from accepting at your hands these corrupt and imperfect sacrifices that if they were never so perfect and agreeing to the lawes of men prescribed yet I would not accept you please me not your gifts and offerings cannot be accepted of me here is first a wish and the reason of it he wished that they would offer no sacrifices to him at all rather doe him no service then doe it as they did Doctrine The Lord had rather have no service done unto him of the sonnes of Men then to have it done carelessely and negligently corruptly and not as he hath commanded it So is it manifest from this place as from that Isaiah 1.11 12 13 and 58.1 2 and 66.3 Math. 7.22 and 6.1 5 16. Reas 1 Because this argues contempt of God and as we may speak of his person yea often times more contempt then not to doe the works of his service at all for where any man is duly respected either for love or feare there the duties and offices to bee performed unto him are done neither negligently nor carelesly as the child that honours his father the servant that feares his master doe with all diligence and care their dutyes Where they are done coldly or cursarily there is not the respect of the person that should be Againe dutyes may be omitted without contempt as of ignorance not knowing what a man ought to doe of infirmity or an erronious conscience because hee thinks he may not doe that which he can not doe in all perfection But to doe them carelesly and that wittingly with corruption can have no such excuse and so more contempt Reas 2 Because the Lord hath no need of the sacrifice and service of men a man cannot be profitable to him as hee may be to his neighbour It is nothing to him that thou art righteous that thou prayest or performest any other service unto him Job 22.2 May a man be profitable unto God as he that is wise may be profitable to himselfe therefore he as a rich King values not the gift but the mind of the giver he looks more to the manner of doing than the deed he respects more the heart than the hand the inward affection than the outward action No marvell then if he had rather have nothing than carelesly and corruptly done And this made him esteeme more of the Widows two farthings and mytes than of the rich mens treasure * Deus puram magis conscientiam exaudit quàm preces August contr lit Petil. Donat. lib. 2. cap. 53. God rather heares a pure conscience than prayers Object Phil.
1.15 16 18. better Christ be preached any wayes than not at all Sol. It is better in regard of others who have the benefit of it and to whom by such leaden and stony conduits God conveyeth the water of life as a Gardener doth water to his plants but it is not better in regard of them who doe it for it maketh their condemnation more grievous Judas preached condemnation to himselfe and yet no doubt converted some as the rest did Noah was glad he could get some to build his Arke himselfe and his sonnes being no workmen fit for it but it profited them not a whit that built it as good never have done it Vse 1 This may teach us what to judge of our Church-Papists who for feare of law avoiding of losse for escaping of imprisonment doe resort to our congregations without conscience and care they are worse than those who doe refuse to come than open recusants for if to come to Church for a shew to prophane Gods worship and to doe it rashly for sinister respects and in hypocrisie be worse than not doing then they are greater offenders in comming than others in abstaining The Shechemites were greater sinners with Hamor and Shechem his sonne in taking the Sacrament of Circumcision for profit and satisfying their pleasure and to make a prey as they thought of Israel Gen. 34. than the other Gentiles who refused it So in this they come to Church for advantage or profit or saving of that they have then is it better they should not come at all Nay not so but it is lesse evill not more good The goodnesse is that they labour to be instructed in that they ought and to know how they ought and to endeavour to come with care and conscience as is required In the meane time hee that abstaines and comes not is lesse evill than he that doth come carelesly c. Object Why then should Magistrates compell men to the service of God when he shall make them sinne and sinne more than if they abstaine Answ The Magistrate may not compell any man to doe evill that is a thing simply forbidden of God but hee may compell a man to doe that which he may sinne in doing of it Things that men doe are of three sorts good and commanded evill and forbidden indifferent and neither commanded nor forbidden of God In this last the Magistrate ought to have a speciall and tender respect to the conscience of his subject though it be erronious specially when they are things of no moment the doing of them little profits the Church or Common-wealth and the omitting of them doth prejudice it nothing at all For the other Ad fidem nullus est cogendus invitus sed per severitatem inio per misericordiam Dei tribulationum flagellis perfidia castigari August contr lit Peril lib. 2. cap. 38. And againe Si quae igitur adversus vos leges constitutae sunt non bene facere cogimini sed malè facere prohibemini Ibid. he is not to respect the erronious consciences of men as not to suffer them unpunished for evill doing though they should pretend conscience in it so is hee not to abstaine from compelling them to that which is good for that evill is adjoyned to it it is not his fact that commandeth but comes from their infidelity and corruption who are commanded of which he cannot be accused when he hath carefully endeavoured that they be duely and rightly instructed and informed for when he may say the things I require are commanded in the Scriptures I have done my best endeavour that you may know the truth and not perish and I will not cease for hereafter to perswade and exhort and command you doe you need the Scriptures conferre with the Ministers pray God to open your eyes he hath then done his part Vse 2 This teacheth the fearefull condition of such as onely doe and performe the service of God but marvellous carelesly and corruptly they heare the Word they make prayers they receive the Sacrament but they are no more acceptable unto God than if they did them not at all God saith unto them as a Father to his Child and a Master to his servant seeing them scambling over their duties and businesse without care and respect I had as leefe you did them not at all Now what would we think of him that should never pray never heare the Word never receive the Sacrament would not every one thinke hee is an odious man to God verily such and more odious if it may be is every one that doth these but without care of course without conscience they heare the Word but without profit God had rather have them away than come to Church to deride his Word to sleepe or talke there to prophane his worship So they pray but not with their hearts but with their lips their hearts are taken away with their pleasures profits and delights As Hosea 4.11 he esteemes of them as well when they pray not they receive the Sacrament but without preparation without understanding what they doe most unworthily they intrude themselves to the Table of the Lord God had as liefe have them away their roome were as acceptable to him as their thronging as his without the wedding-garment at the feast of the King Matth. 22. This is their fearefull condition he that heares is as though he heard not he that prayes as though he prayed not he that receiveth the Sacrament as though he did not and so of all the service of God he is as acceptable to God in not doing them as he is in doing and è contra as odious Object Then a man had as good not doe at all and so while you reprove one thing you open the gap to another from carelessenesse to prophanenesse Answ If any man doe gather so it is his collection not my assertion he like a Spider or Toad gathered venome and poyson from sweet flowers and wholesome herbs If a Master should tell his servant doing his businesse negligently that he had as lieve he did it not will he reply then he will not if he doe shall he not for such contempt be beaten with more stripes Nay a servant that would avoid that and receive any wages and reward will seeke to correct his errour and reforme his corruption so in this Vse 3 This ought to instruct us that have any desire to be accepted in our service of God and not to be rejected as if we did neglect it altogether to doe it with all care and diligence and in the best manner that may be doe we must And then not to lose our labour and have no respect nor reward we must endeavour to doe them as they ought to be done heare with an honest heart to profit pray with a fervent spirit to prevaile use the Sacraments in knowledge and due preparation for them these and all other parts of his service as he requireth else we are in a
not conceale it from the other and as we see in mony that is clipped or a piece of gold that wants a little of its waight makes it refused in paiment so the want of obedience in any one thing unlesse thou repent thee in regard of God and make amends to thy master for it shall make God to refuse and not to regard the rest of thy obedience because he requires it to be whole and entire I but say thou doest all yet it is in the eye in presence or sight murmuring when he is gone or regarding not then sayth Bernard falsus est nummus ejus plumbum habet non argentum dolosè agit sed in Dei conspectu This obedience is counterfeit in stead of silver it is lead he dealeth deceitfully with his master but he doth it in Gods sight whose eyes no man can bleare or beguile such servants let them know though they may have their masters favour because he can finde no fault with them and can see no further then their outward and open behaviour yet they shall never have but Gods displeasure that regardeth the heart more then the hand the affection more then the action and the manner of doing of it more then the deed So that they when they have received their masters wages or his yeerely allowance or what other matter of no great moment for the most part he shall thinke good to bestow on them they have as Christ said of the Pharisees who did all their workes only to be seene of men they have received all their reward they have all they desired and all they deserved they can looke for nothing at Gods hands for their labour And yet they shall have a reward from him without true repentance lege Talionis such servants who shall performe them such hollow hypocriticall and eye service if they ever come to be able to keepe any or if this feare them not because they thinke they can hamper their servants well enough and being privy to their own corruptions they will provide for them yet let them see what follows they shall have their portion with Hypocrites as Christ said of the bad servant who played revels in his masters absence Math. 24.51 Vse 2 This may perswade and instruct servants to obey their masters and to obey as they ought in things though disliking though he do not over see or can come to knowledge of performe whole and sincere obedience to them knowing that to obey them is to obey the Lord and Nummus istae obedientiae ut Deo debitus ita Deo solvendus saith one As thy master constrayneth thee to obey him so thy God hath commanded thee and it must be payd and performed not according to thy masters power but according to Gods precept not so farre as thy master can urge thee but as farre as God requireth of thee and he is sapiens nummularius imò ipsa sapientia cui necesse habemus reddere hunc nummum obedientiae He can easily discerne if thy payment be any thing faulty or wanting Learne then to obey in all things thy masters will and command must be thy rule square of thy actions and not thy own fancy or pleasure Remember that of Paul they must labour to please them in all things Titus 2.9 Interest enim hoc saith Bernard Inter conjugium servitium that howsoever the wife is bound to obey the voyce of her husband Gen. 3.17 yet he is likewise to have regard of her pleasure therefore is that Gen. 21.12 And God said unto Abraham let it not be grievous in thy sight because of the lad and because of thy bondwoman In all that Sarah hath sayd unto thee hearken unto her voyce for in Isaac shall thy seed be called but in this service there is not this vicissitudo voluntatum required for that were to set master and man almost on equall termes the master is not bound to regard his servants minde but he to observe his masters pleasure and therefore though the master may be somewhat crosse and crooked in his commandement yet the servants obedience is not straight in Gods sight when it swarveth from that which he requireth he must then serve and obey in all things And as thus so not with eye service but as faithfully behinde his backe as if he were present That which Aristotle said should not onely be true Oculus Domini impinguat equum vestigium domini impinguat agrum the masters eye makes a fat horse and the masters footsteps a fertile field as contenting themselves with eye service sight obedience but Christians must learne that of Chrysostome God is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an overseer of thir workes and a rewarder of them and so performe them as lawfully exactly when none is by to take notice of it as to do them in the sight presence of others they that shall thus in conscience of Gods will serve them as if they served them in their persons though their masters reward them not yet will God and if they deale liberally with them Gods reward shall be never the lesse because they serve the Lord Jesus Ephe. 6.8 the servant shall have his reward as well as any other in their place of obedience Christ will make him his freeman 1 Cor. 7.14 God shall blesse him with good servants and obedient here and make him partaker with the good servant hereafter Math. 24.46 47. that is partaker of his kingdome But here may be moved the same doubts and questions which were in the obedience of Children First If God and my master command divers things whom must I obey God for the reasons before and that of Christ Math. 23.8 one is your master that is Christ that is chiefe and principall who must first and especially be served But yet thou that art a servant take heed thou make not an opposition when there is none yet at least not in thy obedience though there may be in his command only to shift off his service and to ease thy self or for other sinister respect for this know that thou mayst doe things at his command which happily he commands not lawfully and which thou couldst not doe lawfully without his command Instances will make the point more evident for thee to withdraw thy self on the Lords Sabboth from publique exercises is unlawfull But thy master commands thee to stay at home either whole or part of the day I see not but thou mayst doe it and without sinne The master may command it without sinne if he dwell farre from neighbours as in the Country for the preservation of the things God hath given him and if nigh unto neighbors yet for his children who either must be troublesome to the congregation as too many are and hinder many from hearing or must be kept at home which cannot be without danger if some one of discretion be not with them here he may lawfully command and thou lawfully obey which thou couldest
An evill man may be a good Citizen we may say Good men are evill Citizens Masters c. which blemisheth much their private graces in the sight of God and good men And upon many hath and doth and will bring particular and temporall judgements from their families and servants c. For this is a grand cause why good men fathers of families have such gracelesse children and corrupt servants Ministers such untoward flockes Magistrates such people Vse 2 This may admonish and instruct all that have the faith and feare of God to joyne with it this care of the duties of their place whatsoever it is that they must have because these duties though they be profitable for the common good yet are they not acceptable from him As he saith Cypriansec de zela livore that performeth holy things and is not a consecrated Priest doth things in respect of himselfe childish and unprofitable though they may be good to others So he that doth things without faith and the feare of God they are unprofitable yea wicked and damnable sinnes howsoever they may benefit others so may I say of these but yet this had will not beare out nor excuse the negligence and not doing the duties of his place It may make the infirmities of them passed over but not defend the omitting of them Therefore to be accepted of God men must also be carefull of that Masters c. The excuses that commonly are pretended will not goe for currant servants will not abide with me if I instruct correct and restraine them as duty and reason requireth First see whether thou art not the cause why they are so untractable either not seeking by prayer a blessing upon thy government or dealing hardly and passionately in thy government as if thou hated them rather then loved good things or thy servants see thee doe contrary to that thou directs them for if none of these God will perswade them to be tractable and bend their hearts or else know that he would have thee purge thy house of them as David said and did his of his said lewd servants lest us God prospers a bad houshold for a good servant so he curse a good houshold for a bad servant Ministers excuses of the untractablenesse and unwillingnesse of their people which may happily come from their former negligence or indiscretion or if God doe not blesse his labours to them his reward shall be never a whit the lesse nor he lesse acceptable so he doe his duty Magistrates and Officers that they shall be accounted busie officious and pragmaticall and it may be when they are out of their office they shall have actions against them for this and that usage they may happily be justly so accounted because they follow and doe things in humour not in conscience If they doe not they neede not doubt of Gods protection and of good successe and should rather feare an action from God then men besides the losse of the good they may have by doing it But to all I say as she said to the Heathen King doe me justice or else cease to be my King So let them either doe the duties of their places or else never take them or speedily give them over and leave to be masters c. Or else they must know that if God will not justifie he will condemne The law of truth was in his mouth He taught the truth and word of God and nothing but that and that wholly Doctrine The Minister of God must deliver to his people the law of truth and it onely onely the word of God and nothing else Rev. 2.7 heare what the spirit saith The law of truth was in his mouth He taught the truth and nothing else but the truth and the whole truth all the truth not keeping any thing from them Doctrine The Minister must deliver to his people the whole truth of God all his will and counsell whatsoever he hath commanded and revealed Levit. 10.11 Deut. 5.27 Mat. 28.20 Acts 10.33 and 20.27.35 Reason 1 Because else he cannot be free from the blood of his flocke that is the perishing or slaughtering of them sanguinis i. caedis saith Chrysostome upon Acts 20.26 For if Paul be free from their blood and from their murther because as he said Acts 20.26.27 I take you to record this day that I am pure from the blood of all men For I have kept nothing backe but have shewed you all the counsell of God Then will this by the contrary follow Reason 2 Because else they should not be faithfull neither to him that sent them nor to them over whom they are set for what fidelity can there be when for their owne pleasures or respects they shall not deliver the whole he commanded and might be profitable to them 1 Cor. 4.2 And as for the rest it is required of the disposers that every one be found faithfull Vse 1 This will crosse their opinion who affirme many things in the word are unfit to be delivered and taught to the people and are ready to scandall and stumble at it when at any time they are But if the Minister must deliver the whole truth If Rom. 15.4 Whatsoever things are written aforetime are written for our learning that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope If Deuter. 29.29 The secret things belong to the Lord our God but the things revealed belong unto us and to our children for ever that we may doe all the words of this law Why should they nor be taught It is certaine that many things ought to be spoken wisely discreetely in their fit and due times but yet all things must be delivered That which Hierom counselled Laeta for her daughter that the booke of Canticles she should read last of all the Scriptures when without danger she might lest in reading it in the first place she should be wounded when she was not able to discerne spirituall things and spirituall love under carnall words It may be a rule for all things of the like kind for as Hilar. Psa 134. As an unskilfull man comming into a field abounding with wholsome hearbs passes by all as of no more use then the grasse but a skilfull one otherwise So of the Scriptures * Vt imperitus in agrum salubribus herbis divitem venerit omnia inutilia promiscue genita existimans praeteribit peritus contra Ita de Scripturis Hilar Psal 134. And as Bernard Why may I not draw a sweet and wholesome repast of the Spirit out of the sterile and insipide letter as grain from out the huskes as the nut from out the shell as the marrow from out the bone And as Basil * Quid ni dulce eruam ac salutare epulum spiritus de sterili insipidâ literâ tanquam granum de palea de testa nucleum de osse medullam Bernard in Cant. serm 73. All bread affoords nourishment for health but of no use oft-times
judgement in this life often wasting of the body and fearefull diseases poverty reproach and ignomy such as shall never be put out that fearefull judgement Iob speakes of Cap. 31.9.10 But if these be not feared because they befall in a few and yet may he be of the few yet this should Eccles 11.9 that Christ will judge him and condemne him exclude him heaven cast him into hell and the fire that burnes for ever And against false swearers The third particular which is not set downe barely as the others but with this addition of falsly or vainely The reason is because to sweare is not simply unlawfull as the other but a thing that a man is oftentimes bound to for the glory of God and for the profit and necessity of others so it be by the Lord alone and taken in truth not swearing a lye and false thing in judgement advisedly and upon necessary occasion in righteousnesse promising by oath nothing but that is lawfull and just and undertaken for the glory of God the discharge of duty the appeasing of controversie the satisfying of others and the clearing of a mans innocency But these and their like being wanting it is a false oath and men sweare falsly Doctrine The Lord he will judge and condemne all false swearers such as sweare by others then himselfe false things not in truth rashly not in judgement unlawfull things not in righteousnesse neither respecting Gods glory the good of others discharge of duty c. So here and Exod. 20.7 Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vaine For the Lord will not hold him guiltlesse that taketh his name in vaine Not guiltlesse but under that bitter curse of condemnation Deut. 27.26 Zach. 5.2.3.4 James 5.12 But before all things my brethren sweare not neither by heaven nor by earth nor by any other oath but let your yea be yea and your nay be nay lest ye fall into condemnation Reason 1 Because he hates such oathes Zach. 8.17 And let none of you imagine evill in his heart against his neighbour and love no false oath for all these are the things that I hate saith the Lord now hating these he must needes for them hate those that love and practise them and hatred will procure judgement wrath and destruction Reason 2 Because swearing by others they are idolaters for whereas an oath is not onely Gods ordinance but a speciall part of his worship both because there is invocation and because it is in the first table commanded and of the solemne forme of imposing an oath which was this give glory to God Josh 7.19 And the solemne rite of taking an oath among the Jewes which was to stand before the Altar 1 Kings 8.31 and was a custome among the Athenians and Romanes Then to give Gods worship to another is idolatry and idolaters must be judged and condemned Reason 3 Because if rashly by him the name of God so deare unto him he dishonouring and vilifying it by such usual rash swearing he wil revenge it If seriously yet not in truth for things past or to come knowing them to be false intending not to do them he cals God as a witnesse of his false-hood and a revenger of it and so must he come upon him for this he tempteth God desperately and dareth him as it were to his face to execute his vengeance upon him Vse 1 This may shew us the fearefull estate not of a few but of a multitude and whole troopes of men and women being common and usuall false swearers who can neither buy nor sell meet nor depart neither speake seriously nor in jest neither perswade nor promise neither intreat nor threaten neither relate things past nor draw men to the expectation of things to come without swearing and many oathes oftentimes by those which are no Gods committing idolatry usually rashly and unadvisedly and not seldome wickedly falsly and deceitfully In this sin are wrapped both parents and children masters and servants rich and poore high and low noble and base Minister and people If the Lord that threatneth to be a swift witnesse against such and a severe Judge should now come to destroy and cast to hell all such how fearefull then would we thinke and account their condition to be Verily how nigh that day of Assize and of his glorious appearing is no body can tell few suspect it to bee so nigh as it is but say it be as farre off as they suppose yet doth he judge them every day It is a judgement and a fearefull one that they sinne every day and sweare every houre and see it not to leave and forsake it but the morning swearing is punished with the afternoone this day with to morrow c. And for all these the plague of God and his judgements ready to breake in at the doores though he see it not yet others may see it manifestly Tell me what wouldest thou thinke his state and condition to be that had a bal of fire hanging over his house ready to fal upon him to consume him his wife and children servants and all that he hath in a moment and yet he and they all within doores give themselves to chamberings and wantonnesse to drunkennesse and gluttony to whoredome and uncleanenesse by that meanes to drawe and hasten this to fall upon him and consume him wouldest thou not thinke him in a fearefull condition such is the state of every swearer the plague of God tends upon their house the volume of curses is hovering and flying about their houses and this fire hanging over them and still by their oathes as the Faulconer by his Lure and hallow calling this to fall upon him and their case the more fearefull because custome hath made them when they sweare they deny they did and if they be evicted for it they account it as nothing no more then an ordinary speech As Saint Chrysost ho. ad Baptiz si quis jurantem increpaverit risus movet jocos narrare putatur But the same day or the day after that Lots sonnes in law mocked and despised their fathers admonitions the fire of God devoured them and their City Gen. 19. So may it upon them pitty then their fearefull conditions and feare and flye their society their fellowship their families for though thou hast escaped hitherto yet when the flying book enters in at their doores and windowes thou maiest happily be there then and partake in their plague but in truth thou hast not escaped but as they by the custome of their owne sinne are growne sencelesse so thou by theirs art grown lesse to fear an oath then thou didst before and so hast got more hurt to thy soule then ever they shall be able to doe thee good to thy body and state howsoever thou promise thy selfe great things by them Vse 2 This may serve for secure men who lye in this sinne to hate swearing or are ready to fall into it to perswade
downe the good services done unto them As we have an instance of that custome Esth 6.1 Wherein Mordecai's service was remembred And Corn. a lapide tells us that the Pope hath a booke of the merits of his Prelatesi whom hee promotes accordingly The prophet speakes Anthropologicè not that God needs any memoriall but because men doe keepe such bookes and the Lord will as surely remember to reward his as if they were written in a register Sepher Ziccaron The Lxx 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A booke of memorialls A chronicle An history As God hath a bottell for his peoples teares so he hath a Chronicle for their sufferings Vers 17 Thirdly he answers their blasphemy by declaring Gods gracious promises of dealing well with the godly and such as feare him ver 17. And they shall bee mine saith the Lord In that day when I make up my Iewells and I will spare him as a man spareth his sonne that serveth him A text of most sweete and comfortable contents But for the choyce and practicall Notions which it doth afford for the encouraging and supporting of the soule I doe refer to a discourse upon this verse by that excellent preacher my Reverend and worthy friend D. Richard Sibbs now with God They shall bee mine Vulg. and Genev. They shall be to me In that day when I make up my Iewells Vulg. They shall bee to me in the day in which I doe that is Doe judgment as they that follow the vulgar make good the sense as well as they can for peculiar The Geneva they shall be to mee in that day that I shall doe this for a flock The old autorised English Bible They shall be to me in the day that I shall doe judgement a flock And Peculium the word of the Vulg. Latine sometimes signifies a flock As in Plautus Asinar Quanquam ego sumsor didatus Frugi tamen sum nec potest peculium numerari But properly it is that part of the flock which the father 's granted their children or the masters to their servants as a stock whereon to exercise their industry according to Hottoman A stock of Cattell peculiar And so it somewhat agrees with the Hebrem Segulla a select portion So Deut. 6.6 The Lord hath chosen thee to be Segulla a speciall people unto himselfe But it is properly some rare or deare treasure a brooch or rich tablet or pendant a Jewell a rich and peculiar treasure As Eecle 2.8 I gathered me Segullath melachim the peculiar treasure of Kings Exod. 19.5 yee shall bee a peculiar treasure unto mee above all people Lxx 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A peculiar people The Lord promiseth to take such care of the godly and to lay them up so safely as one would a speciall jewell And I will spare him as a man spareth his sonne The Geneva his owne forme that serveth him I will bee indulgent towards and have pitty upon the godly I will deale tenderly pardon and remit their punishment See 2 Sam. 22.7 David spared Mephibosheth Or I will have compassion So the word is ordinarily translated as 1 Sam. 23.21 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yee have compassion on me Vers 18 Fourthly he answeres their blasphemy by warning them that Gods dealings and judgements shall bee so manifest even in their owne fight that they shall be clearly discerned from the godly ver 18. Then shall yee returne and discerne between the righteous and the wicked betweene him that serveth God and him that serveth him not You oh wicked blasphemers shall change your opinion and whereas you said the wicked prosper and it is in vaine to serve the Lord yee shall see a great difference betweene them and how much they gaine by it that serve the Lord. So. S. Hierom c. See the point wholesomly and profitably handled in a Treatise of D. Preston● on Eccles 9.1 2 3 4 annexed to his treatise of The new Covenant Verse 1 Fifthly and lastly Chap. 4. he answers by a further amplication of that which was proposed before to shew Gods different dealing with the righteous and the wicked by an Hysterosis the righteous were first named in the proposition verse 18. but the wicked are first treated of in this amplication Chapter 4 ●h as the Hebrew Bibles that we now use and the Latine and our English and most others doe distinguish it which yet Tremellius and Piscator and some others doe continue to the former Chapter making but 3 Chapters of this prophecy and so the first verse of this Chapter to be the 19th verse of the third and so on Where let me take oocasion by the way to note it that all antiquity was ignorant of the division of the Bible that wee now use which was made about the yeare 1250 The worke as Genebrard thinks of those Schoolemen who assisted Hugh the Cardinall in gathering The Concordances and an invention so usefull and so much approved that the Iewes themselves after followed it in the Hebrew Bibles The Ancients indeed had their Titles and Chapters or versicles too but not so as wee divide them but usually in shorter periods as appeares by that of Caesarius We have saith he foure Gospells which consist of one thousand one hundred sixty two Chapters And Euthymius quoting Math. 26.58 calls it the 65th Title and quoting Mat. 26.74 calls it The 66th Title Their Titles were as our Chapters and their Chapters much what as our verses For instance S. Mathew which we divide into 28 Chapters they divided into 68 Titles and 355. Chapters But all distinguished not alike As the Iewes had their Parschiot as namely Bereschit Noah c. according to which they cited the Scripture of the old Testament So the fathers some of them divide bookes according to the Histories as Cyrus Prodromus makes his First title In the beginning was the word his second Title There was a marriage in Cana His third Title Christs night disciple Nicodemus c. Some divided them according to the miracles as Gregory one Title Of the mariage in Cana another Of the five Loves c. Cyril as hee wrote 12 bookes upon Iohn so hee divides the Evangle the first begins at Ioh. 1.1 The second at Ioh. 1.29 The third at Ioh. 5.35 c. S. August makes a Period in every Tract and S. Chrysost in every Homilie S. Hierome on these small prophets oft begins a booke in the middle of a Chapter as we have them now divided In Oecumenius his Enarrations hee hath 40 where we make 28 Chapters on the Acts hee hath 20 where wee make but 16 in the Epistle to the Romans c. many of them indeed oft end their paraphrases and discourses where our Chapter end But that is because the matter in hand breakes off there The truth is Distinguishing of the Bible into Chapters and verses much helps the reader but it is so divided as sometimes obscures the sense as we oft finde in reading the Bible and of which the learned
heare from God Mat. 15.3 why doe you also transgresse the commandements of God by your tradition for ever his command is above them and theirs else this were to make them gods and God man and were a deed of Idolatry performed unto them Martin Luther sayd well that in keeping of the first precept was shewed obedience of all the rest for hereby we acknowledge God to be our God in preferring his will before the will of any other And so whose will we preferre before Gods we take them to be our god The Apostle makes the Devill to be the Prince of this World because men obey his will before Gods so in this Therefore if the question be of these two God must first be obeyed a Honora patrem tuum sed si te à vero patre non separat tamdiu scito sanguinis copulam quamdiu ille suum noverit creatorem alioquin Psal 45.10 Hieron Ep. 8. ad Furiam Honour thy father but so as he draw thee not from thy true father so long acknowledge the bond of blood as he acknowledgeth his Creator otherwise as it is Psal 45. hearken O daughter forget thine owne people and thy fathers house saith St. Hierome to Furia And his reason is b Non es ejus cui nata es sed cui renata qui te grandi pretio redemit sanguine suo thou art not his of whom thou wert borne but new borne who hath redeemed thee with a great price even his blood And Clemens Rom. Epistola 4. to the sayd purpose c Authores non sunt vitae nostrae parentes sed ministri non enim vitam praebent sed ingrediendi in vitam exhibent ministerium solus deus vitae author fons est S. Clem. Rom. Ep. 4. Our parents are not the authors but the instruments of our life they give not life but are the meanes of entring it only God is the author and fountaine of life he is then to be preferred and his commandement and not as many who have excuse for things they doe our fathers did so or they commanded us In things wherein God hath neither commanded nor forbidden it is sufficient but where either there must they take notice of it and obey him But yet he must doe it with due respect and reverence manifesting no contempt of their authority Some will demand The magistrate commands me one thing and my parents a contrary what must I doe whom must I obey It is answered that the magistrate must be obeyed 〈◊〉 God hath given him a larger Commission then to them for they themselves are subject as their children who neither may doe nor command contrary to their authority but doing so he sinneth and the sonne sinneth in obeying Againe Princes commands commonly respect common good and the good that is more common is more excellent a common good must not be neglected for a private nor this preferred before it A mans countrey is to be prefer●●● before his parents and the goods of it And to obey them were not a good thing for d Bonum non suo loco non est bonum a good thing out of its place is not good blood out of the veines in other vessels is hurtfull though in his place the life consist in it A good thing not done in his place were better undone yea it cannot be well done Moreover we must distinguish betwixt the affection and action A man may love his parents better then the magistrate but he must obey him rather as he may love a good man better then a great man yet in many cases he is not bound to doe so much for him The first because God hath shewed his speciall love more to him then them The second because God hath given him a great authority of command So 't is in this inward affection and outward obedience because the bond of nature is stronger in the one and the force of authority is greater in the other Finally if the things prejudice the State they must not be obeyed but if it doe not prejudice the publique good and be much benefit to a private parent so the ends of the two be regarded no contempt of authority shewed a man be content to abide the penalty A man may disobey and prefer Parents before Magistrates without sinne to God As in the case of Hester and Mordecah and the Jewes and the Kings commandement Vse 3 What if my Father commands me one thing and my master the contrary I am a servant or an apprentice What must I doe Answ As before obey thy master for thy father hath given over his authority to him over whom he hath no power for his power is not subordinate to thy fathers as a Steward or Tutor wherein there is reservation but absolute And thou art now of another regiment and corporation But yet as before thy affection may be more to thy Father but thy labour and service to thy master thou mayst wish his good more but thou must work for and procure the others good for for that end thou wast placed under his power But if without neglect of thy masters affaires thou may be helpfull to thy parents standing in need of thy helpe or by leave and consent thou art no more free to refuse now then before Vse 4 I am the Daughter of my Father he hath bestowed me in marriage if the commands of husband and father crosse one another whom must I obey undoubtedly thy husband for the father hath given over his authority to him And more then in the former both thy affection and action must be more to thy husband love him better and obey him rather For Gen. 2.24 is spoken comparatively when the one must be forsaken or in cases that so fall out that both be in question For he ceaseth not to be a father still but reserveth to him as reverence so obedience while it is not crosse yea in some things he may challenge it that are crosse if it be not to the prejudice of thy husbands good and greatly for his helpe yea and thou must obey him with some hazard of thy selfe so there be no contempt of the authority of thy husband As in the case of Hester which serves both for a subject and a wife Hitherto of their obedience now of their subjection and submission and this may consist in these things First for correction Doctr. Children must submit themselves to their Parents to be rebuked and corrected by them It is that which we have Pro. 15.5 A foole despiseth his fathers instruction but he that regardeth reproofe is prudent When the Apostle maketh it a reason for subjection to God Hebr. 12.9 10. it must needs hold in this yea the Apostles will carry it not only when they doe it justly and from sufficient matter but for a wrong cause which the tenth verse sheweth implying thereby that this submission is required when they shall correct of a spleene or a
comparison of that which makes a man a beast which is worse sayth Saint Chrysostome then to bee a beast because istud naturae illud culpae est which some small difference from them cannot make But say it were greater yet doth it not therefore dissolve the knot or relation betwixt them for it is not in the greatnesse of the sinne but when such a sinne can be given that doth breake the relation for instance Idolatry is a greater sinner then adultery yet this not that breaks and dissolves marriage Because that not this meets in cominter-position with the knot of marriage In that they being and becomming one flesh with another 1 Cor. 6.10 and so cutteth himselfe from her he was knit to before in this they are onely one spirit with an Idol and cease to be one spirit with the Lord. So this It is not heresie for his greatnesse that can dissolve this naturall bond which is perpetuall for it cannot make that he had not his essence and being from his father and the duty depending upon this obey thy father that begat thee hath he begotten thee it is no matter what he is thou must honour him Then impious are their positions but no marvaile if they teach rebellions and diobedience and murthering of Princes if they allow dishonouring of parents Vse 2 To teach every child to performe this honour his Parents whatsoever he is whatsoever they are Art thou higher and richer and wiser than they yet must thou doe them honour and by it shalt thou have these the more Looke upon Joseph Solomon and Christ and no thing can be in thee that can give thee freedome from it when they did it the two first ex debito Christ ex placito to fulfill all righteousnesse and give us example Though then thou be married or advanced or howsoever yet still they are thy Parents and thou must not deny but performe honour unto them for thou hadst thy being from them and till that be dissolved thou owest them still the duties the bonds remaining yea whatsoever infirmity is in them no sinne dissolveth the bond it makes not an annullity of the duty for as Gold is Gold though it be smeared over with durt and filth so are they thy Parents whatsoever their lives and manners be Thinke with thy selfe how their love made them beare with many naturall infirmities of thy Childhood and not to neglect thee for the many untoward carriages of thy youth and not to cast thee off from them And thinke what duty now should bind thee unto if they for their perfect love and upon some hope of comfort many yeares after did passe over all how much more thou in duty and in lieu of thankfulnesse for that which thou enjoyest from them Children must not be like Flies as Plutarch which slip along the glasse where it is smooth but catch hold of it where there are any scratches or flawes They must turne away their eyes from their infirmities and forget their hard usage if it have beene any and not be undutifull for that because they have their being and education from them Take heed of Chams curse and seeke Shems blessing by not seeing their infirmities but covering and performing duty to them accounting it to be a sin to be repented of when they cannot find their hearts so cheerefull in their duties as they ought because of their Parents infirmities A servant his master The second rule of nature the ground or other pillar of Gods reason against this people For the meaning 't is plaine the duties here required are in the generall the same for the most part with the former though not in every particular The first is reverence and this both inward and outward To joyne them together Doctr. Servants must give all reverence unto their Master all inward good affection and estimation of them and all reverent respect in gesture and speech Eph. 6.5 1 Tim. 6.1 Eccles 10.20 It may be applyed to Masters for the King is but a great Master and the Master a little King The outward in words as not replying unreverently Titus 2.9 not speaking their infirmities to others as 1 Sam. 25.17 giving them all reverent speech and submissive gesture as 2 King 5.13 not despising them as Hagar did Sarah Reas 1 Because God hath made them reverent in that he hath communicated unto them part of his excellency and dignity that is his Lordship and Dominion making them his Vicegerents and Lords over their family therefore they ought to reverence them Reas 2 Because his Commandements are spirituall and reach to the inward man and without it were all outward but hypocriticall and counterfeit which is abhominable And this without the outward is imperfect if it may be supposed it may be without it and so cannot be acceptable Vse 1 This is to let servants see their sinnes past or present when they have or doe carry themselves unreverently towards their Masters in heart and outward man in eye and tongue to their faces and behind their backs they are all guilty of the breach of the decree of the most High and indeed all for where shall we finde a servant any thing neere performing the carriage he ought to his Master and Mistris that he hath a base thought opinion and estimation of him appeares by his speech and carriage his speeches so void of reverence nay his answers full of contempt his eye and carriage so full of scorne and disdaine Hagar despising Sarah looking scornfully upon her which must needs argue unreverence in the heart for by these things many a man well knows what is in the privy Chamber of the heart and by this outward pulse thus beating may we discerne how the inward parts are affected For he that will speake so frowardly and looke so scornfully and doggedly as many will it must needs shew he hath no reverence but his heart is full of despight and contempt and he that will speake so to his face and in his presence what will he to others behind his back and in his absence Where is the feare and trembling Paul calls for Where is all the honour Peter exacts when ye will thus bourd them often thus disdaine them when ye will answer them frowardly or murmuring when their backs are turned when you tell their weaknesse not to your fellows but to neighbours servants whereby their estimation is impaired Thinke you the Apostles call for these in vaine or shall such things goe unpunished Assuredly no for when the Apostle saith to servants to encourage them that are good Eph. 6.7 8. with good will doing service as to the Lord and not to men knowing that whatsoever good thing any man doth the same shall he receive of the Lord whether he be bond or free did he not meane the contrary and would have you to understand that whatsoever evill thing a man doth that shall he receive of the Lord whether he be bond or free so expect it in this
him faithfully The Prophet never forbade Naaman his service to his Master after he was become a Jew that is a servant of God He speakes to those who are free not to bind themselves to such 2 King 5.23 hereto may we apply that 1 Cor. 7.20 21 22. not to deny service but to alter the manner of service before for feare of Masters displeasure now for conscience of Gods command before their Masters onely now Christ in their Master Reas 1 Because as was noted in Children out of Chrysost it is due to their place not person as Non principi sed principatui so Non magistro sed magisterio The feare is due not to his person and so good or bad high or low gentle or churlish but to his place and authority as a master which he may be of what quality or condition soever he be and from them as servants whatsoever their persons and quality and gifts may be Reas 2 Particularly for such as are religious that they bring not dishonour upon Gods Name and Doctrine 1 Tim. 6.1 but may honour him Reas 3 For both because it shall be more respected of God the lesse it is deserved by any thing in thy master for then it is done of conscience and for God as a good worke ought to be Vse 1 This will condemne the Doctrine of the Church of Rome howsoever bragging it selfe to be Apostolicall yet holds it but few of the Apostles doctrines which it hath not either corrupted or taught something to the contrary And in this point most directly to Peter and Paul forbidding feare and faithfulnesse to be performed of servants to their masters and them who put them in trust Symacha saith Instit Cathol Tit. 46. sect 74. that all keepers of forts and all other vassals and slaves are freed from the oath of subjection to their Lord and Master he being an Heretick affirming that by it he is deprived of his civill power he hath over his servants the ground of the unfaithfulnesse of Sr. William Stanly in yeelding up Daventer an act approved and commended by Cardinall Allen how unlike are these spirits to the spirit of Saint Peter and Saint Paul who will have faithfulnesse to the good and bad to the Infidell aswell as the beleever shall not that be verified of them Math. 5.19 But they will say Heresie is a greater sinne then infidelity first I answer not as they make Heresie ut ante secondly be that true of August Sanata vulnere infidelitatis sed gravius percussa vulnere Idololatriae yet all Heresie is not Idolatrie neither can this if it be destroy the knot and bond of this duty which is not faith nor the foundation of divine religion but a politique title having force and strength from the law of nature which is not to be dissolved by Heresie not contrary to it And the Apostles reason will be here aswell as in Infidelity it will make the name of God and his doctrine ill spoken of But the truth is this is but a shift of theirs for they teach no faith to be kept with such and so no faithfulnesse with such as are heathen or Infidels If we may gather the lesse from the greater Vladislaus he was I take it the King of Hungary and Poland in a battaile against the Turkes Amurath the second of that name had the better hand so that the Turke offered to yeeld to any conditions whereupon Vladislaus and the Turke swore to Articles of Agreement but presently a Legate came frome the Pope and urged Vladislaus to set upon the Turke againe Eugenius 4. neere vanquished already telling him that the Pope had power to dispence with his Oath which he attempted though sore against his will Then the Turke cryed out O Crucifixe crucifixe vide gentem tuam perfidam Oh thou crucified thou crucified take notice of thy treacherous people And so bestirred himself that he overthrew Vladislaus which hath ever since turned to the greatest detriment of all Christendome out of this by proportion we may see it is but a colour of their distinction of Heresie and Infidelity Vse 2 To reprove all such servants as thinke they owe no feare nor duty or lesse feare and duty to their Masters because of some defects in them or some excellency in themselves if he be base borne and they of worshipfull Parents if he be irreligious and they have somewhat or more taste of piety if he be poore so when they came to him or impoverished after c. But they must know that none of these will dispense with omission of any duty Is he their Master If they give him not all respect they sinne against his place and dominion and so against God that hath given it him If God had allowed only rich men or religious men or good and courteous Men to be his Vicegerents in the family then it were somewhat but he hath given this to the rich and the poor alike he hath lightned both their eyes the good and the bad hath the seale of the Commission alike therefore they who doe not alike reverence their masters one as other are guilty of sinne before God and shall have no reward from God because he doth it not in conscience to Gods Commandement but for sinister respect for which they may receive their reward from men but a heavy one from God Vse 3 To perswade servants to feare and doe all duty to their Masters whatsoever they are one or other he that is well borne must forget his father and his fathers house and looke not upon his master whence he came but what he is he that is religious remember he must adorne his profession and looke not upon his master what he is of himselfe corrupt and prophane but what God hath made him his owne Vicegerent and his master and thinke what unworthinesse soever be in thy master yet that thou art most unworthy to doe him any disgrace or to deny him any duty Remember that what is due to him it is not to his person but place indeed not to him but God and to him in Gods stead and the more unworthy he is of any duty the more readily thou perform'st it the more reward thou shalt have from God yea for the present it is a speciall proofe of true grace in the heart For as it is Rom. 5.7 8. so every one will obey a great and a good master but that is true obedience when the master is neither great nor good or great and not good or good and not great for so have good servants and holy men done in times past unto their masters If I be a father where is my honour Here is the application of the former ground and rule to himselfe and them not speaking in generall but applying it particularly teaching in his example what is the best and most profitable kind of preaching when application is joyned with doctrine Vide Heb. 12.1 If I be a
and David Psal 1 19.53.136.139.158 such are commended and marked Ezechiel 9. as they are condemned 1 Cor. 5.1 who doe contrary The fifth a trembling at the wrath and anger of God declared for sinne either in word or deed First in word at Gods threatnings either against him selfe or others as a child quaketh and trembleth at his fathers chyding though it be with some others so doe the children of God commonly when they heare the wrath of God denounced against others so is it Isa 66.2 Psal 1 19.161 2 Chro. 34.27 Jer. 26 18. Habacuk 3.16 Now secondly if at his word how much more at his rod if when he speaks more when he beats themselves or others as a child if he see his father to take the rod in hand to correct any of the family he standeth trembling and quaking he feareth lest he should have a wipe by the way so the child of God feareth as before Gods face when he seeth the hand of God upon others as when he feeleth it upon himselfe David 2 Sam. 6.7.9 the Church Acts. 5.11 Psal 119.119 120. Habacuk 3.16 Now these being the effects and as it were the fruits of this filiall feare it shall be good for a man to examine himself by them whether he have it or no for by the fruits you shall know it It is to be feared that if men will doe this seriously but a few of those who call God father every day wil be found to have this filiall feare and so his sonnes indeed The first fruit is a desire to know and finde out Gods will and then to doe it but alas how many have wee that refuse to seek after the knowledge of his wayes like those Job 21.14 but say some will search the word yet it is onely to furnish themselves with matter of discourse and not to finde out that which may serve to order and direct their lives they are a curious kinde of Men and as Seneca saith Scholae non vitae discitur they study schoole quirks and not points of practice others are sorry many times that they lighted on more then they looked after As the yong man not answered to his mind was sorry he had asked Luke 15.23 Bernard hath observed of his experience Cant. ser 74. many saith he have I known Ber. in Cant. serm 74. made sad upon the knowledge of the truth because they could not so pretend ignorance as before Or if not this but with the sonne in the Gospell stay and doe not or deferre as Jonah or doe as Balaam blesse when he would have cursed so they their hands go against their hearts these and such like must needs be voyd of this feare The second is a jealousie over his particular actions but how many runne headlong into all actions never regarding what warrant they have for them that though never so many make doubt of them and the lawfulnesse of them yet all is one to them as they know nothing for them so they know nothing against them and they eyther doe as Peter Luke 22.49.50 who cut off Malchus eare before he could heare his answer or as Prov. 20.25 doe things first and examine them after These are farre from this feare for where it is there if any doubt arise about an action that seemed indifferent before he will be jealous of himselfe and walke the surest way when he knoweth he may doe or abstaine without offence but he is in some suspicion of the other he will rather be sure to goe on a good ground than hazard the incurring of Gods displeasure though he lose somewhat yea much both of his profit and pleasure knowing the feare of God is opposite to this manner of walking and so 't is made Eccles 5.1 5 6. The third is a carefull avoiding of knowne sinnes and things that will offend but how many give liberty to their flesh runne with a full swinge into the practice of sinne and never care to returne out of it againe who vaunt of this feare and yet often vaunt of their sinnes and never shame at them Nay sooner shame and blush to be a man noted to have a care to avoid the common sinnes of the age how have these men any child-like feare will they account that their children doe lovingly feare them when they runne into all or many things they know will displease them and are ashamed to be accounted more than ordinarily dutifull Questionlesse no then let them be their own Judges and shall for they tell us they have no feare if that be their feare Prov. 8.13 The fourth is a griefe to see others offend but many boast of the feare of God and yet they delight and take pleasure in the sight and hearing of other mens sinnes never caring nor regarding what others doe so they be not like them They can dayly see many Laodiceans neither hot nor cold amongst us many Ephesians that have lost their first love many Jebusites Idolaters amongst us and swarming amongst us these they see and yet they sigh not as it nay either take pleasure or make profit by it it is but a boast they are void of the filiall feare of God because they have no care whether he be honoured or dishonoured pleased or displeased as if a Child could endure his fathers dishonour if not be revenged of them for want of power and such like yet will he mourne and sorrow How should I beare my fathers dishonour and if these much more those who seeke to draw others to sinne swearing whoring drunkennesse and such like they can have no true feare of God as Children The fifth trembling at his judgments threatened or executed upon others Many say they feare God and yet they can heare the wrath and judgments of God denounced against sinne and it may be the sinnes they practise yet are never a whit moved at all but goe as they came as if the Word were but wind As Jer. 5.13 Their hearts melt not nor they mourne not nay when they see Gods judgments upon others they censure and condemne them but feare nothing themselves nay often when they are in the same condemnation if they be not in the same punishment Sure it is they have no child-like feare at all they are worse than the beasts yea senselesse things who tremble at his voice and they shew themselves Children of wrath Onely the children of wrath are fearelesse of wrath Soli filii irae iram non sentiunt Bern. as S. Bernard speaketh If I be a Master where is my feare The application of the second rule of nature we must speak of Gods Lordship then of the feare he requires for it He is a Lord in respect of his creatures either generally or specially First generally jure Creationis gubernationis by right of Creation and government Secondly particularly jure pacti redemptionis by right of Covenant and Redemption First jure redemptionis Exod. 20.2 1 Cor. 6.20 Secondly jure pacti
conventionis by right of Covenant and agreement Those who live in his Church have made a Covenant with him by sacrifice Psal 50. and have bound themselves by Oath to serve him and have covenanted to be his people Jer. 40. Here he meanes both but not of the whole in both but onely of government and covenant for the other in the former and by these he challengeth obedience and service as by the former for that which is required under honour is here under feare the same thing but differing in affection and some circumstances as before But first of his government and jurisdiction in respect of his blessings and preservation Doctrine Men in respect of Gods government over them ought to serve and obey him being under him as subjects are under their Lords and Princes by whose authority and Lawes they enjoy their lives and liberties increase in state and riches So under God he preserving protecting increasing them and their states himselfe If I be a Master and Lord and you enjoy these things by me where is my service and obedience This is proved by Isaiah 1.2 3. That of the devill in accusing Job Chap. 1.9 10. shews that Gods government requires this and his answer to his wife Chap. 2.10 also shews it That of David Psal 71.6 is pertinent and that of Jer. 5.24 Reas Because this is no lesse benefit than the former of Creation for that was once done this is alwayes and as it were every day after a sort God creates man anew ever preserving that he once created shewing in this no lesse power nor love than in the other and if for that obedience is debt for creating in a moment how much more for a continuall preservation Vse This may admonish all men that as their Creation before so their continuall preservation under Gods government his Lordship and Dominion over them requires all the service and obedience they can performe because they are his subjects and servants he their Master and Lord. All Soveraignes and Lords looke for all feare and obedience from such as they governe protect and whose good and peace they procure All Masters from servants they feed and cloath and governe and this they yeeld unto them how much more all men to God who is King of Kings and Lord of Lords their Soveraigne and Lord of all and over all Therefore all high and low Kings and Subjects Male and Female bond and free rich and poore owe this to him and are bound unto him for it For Kings rule the great ones governe the rich prosper the poore live by him yea all are under him he preserveth and governeth all Whatsoever priviledge one man hath above another yet there is no priviledge in respect of God If the King reigned without him if the Noble ruled without him if the rich increased without him it were somewhat but when none of these all is by his providence and from his power which makes him say to all If I be a Master or Lord where is my feare The King is great but in respect of his subjects nothing greater in respect of God than another as the earth is but a small mote or point in respect of the Heavens the rich are wealthy in respect of the poore but but poore compared with the Kings treasure more poore compared with God so that be they all great and as high and as rich as may be yet their Crownes and Crownets their honours and riches their states and lives are in his hands And as a Ship in one day upon the Sea would perish without a governour so would all these in a moment come to nought without him his government protection and providence See then how every one that acknowledgeth God his Lord and Master and feeleth indeed his government and providence for good ought to serve and feare him If thou doest not beleeve that God moves all thy members when thou doest move thou art not worthy the name of a Christian saith one for St. Paul hath taught it Acts 17.28 But if thou doest beleeve it that thou receivest such from him and yet darest provoke and offend him I know not what name is evill enough for thee so for this if thou acknowledge not all is from God through his providence and from his care that thou art as thou art thou art not worthy the name of a sonne or servant but if thou acknowledge it and yet shakest off his feare and performest not obedience to him what name is bad enough for thee nay what punishment is sufficient for such an offence what then if for life and continuance how much more for a well and wealthy being when mens portions are made fatter and their state better both than in former times and also than thousand others Gods providence and care more to them their obedience and service should be more to him And yet it is a lamentable thing my eyes could cast out teares for it in secret as the Prophet to see many men risen of nothing when they had little were diligent and carefull to serve and obey God in themselves and in their families and those who belong to them but after that Gods government was more good to them and they prospering better by it I know not how such is the corruption of our nature they serve him now farre lesse in them and theirs and yet it is thought excusable as if a Subject who lived under his King and that onely lived without wealth or honour or advancement or but with a small pittance of these and then gave him service and all loyall duty should after when he had received these in bountifull measure by his gracious bounty and government either lesse respect him or be lesse loyall or more rebellious and thinke it were tolerable enough because he is now more wealthy worshipfull and honourable But whatsoever he thinks others would condemne him and every of these who deale thus with God then shall they be judged by their owne mouth Oh that they would indeed judge themselves that they be not judged of the Lord 1 Cor. 11.31 else undoubtedly he will judge them if his in this life punishing them in those things which have made them by their corruption lesse loyall unto him as wealth riches honour friends and such like that he may so bring them home againe and let them see how they have wronged him for great things giving him lesse If he doe not the case is more fearefull he meanes to condemne them with the world And though they will not now acknowledge they injure God any wise in thus dealing outwardly with him yet the day shall come and it is now at hand when this injury shall be made manifest and when as these complaints which are now made by us shall be heard though men have now their eares so heavy and their eyes so shut up and their hearts so fat that they cannot see or heare or understand to be converted and healed It
shall saith one be equall and right with God that those who will not now open their eyes when there is time and while the multitude of blessings they enjoy by Gods gracious government doth invite them to serve and feare him yea I say it shall be just and right that their eyes shall be opened by the multitude of torments which must continue for ever But of you who heare me this day let mee hope better things nay let mee see them If I be a Master God is a Master secondly by covenant specially in this place for he speakes to such as professe him and his worship and such as were in his Church and had made a covenant with him as his subjects he their God and Lord. Psal 50.5 Jer. 50.5 Doctr. In the Church all ought to obey God because of the covenant they have made with him being in that speciall manner his servants having covenanted with him that he should bee their God and they would be his people Psal 50.7.14 Jer. 3.4 5. Isaiah 48.1 2. Luke 6.46 Reas 1 Because if the former and for the former reason more for this when God hath taken them so nigh to himselfe in speciall place For if all subjects owe duty and obedience more they whom the King takes into his owne House and Court into his Chamber of presence So if all that are in the world bee the Lords Kingdome and ought to serve and obey him and are bound by his generall government and protection more those whom he hath taken into his Church his House his Court and his Chamber of presence and imployed them to some speciall service and office about his person as it were Reas 2 Because if they be covenant servants and that be professed then must they remember their conditions for without them no covenant is made and the condition on their parts is to serve and obey him and this very common honesty and servility requires of every servant Reas 3 Because God tooke them into covenant not as men doe commonly their servants then when they were able to doe him service and looke before they agree with them what service they are able to performe them but God saith Chrysostome farre otherwise he receives them into covenant when they are able to doe nothing and maintaines them long before they can doe any thing therefore reason they should doe him service when they are able Vse 1 A reproofe of many men who live more disobedient and rebellious in the Church then thousand heathens have done out of it who onely are Gods servants at large and yet doe they outgoe them in many things in the outward service and subjection to God according to the law of nature he hath ingrafted into them Many sinnes thousands of them would have blushed to have heard tell of and been marvellous ashamed only to speake of them without detestation which these in the Church and for all their covenant shame not to doe and blush not to brag of them Questionlesse as the same sinnes are graater in the Church then out of it for ignorance excuseth à tanto though not à toto so the same and greater shall have greater punishment howsoever they may carry it out for a time Yea and howsoever some dream all in the Church must needs be saved though the multitude without be condemned yet they shall find as it is Math. 11.22 24. so it shall be easier for those heathen then for them lesser shall their torments be in Hell Vse 2 To instruct every man in the Church who is Gods covenant servant having made a covenant with him with the sacraments and by them that he ought to serve and obey him with all faithfulnesse and diligence So doe masters looke for from their covenant servants so will servants of any honesty doe with their masters So God expects so should they performe It is not the boasting of their baptisme and comming to the Lords Supper the renewing of their covenant that will be profitable unto them when they performe not their conditions to renounce the enemies of God and to serve him Nay it will be their shame greater reproach because while they boast of the covenant they shew themselves covenant breakers such as common honesty would blush at the sin of Gentiles who were given up to a reprobate sence Ro. 1.30 If any man imagine that these set him at liberty that is carnall liberty he marvellously deceives himselfe Truth it is that it is true liberty for the service of God is most true liberty but it is not their carnall liberty to doe as they list but to follow the command of God as the Centurions servants for they have their presse money or souldiers oath given unto them yea and being so nigh brought to him they owe more service for their more honour more obedience he that imagineth it is an easie life to be a Courtier to be imployed about the Kings person in his presence or bed chamber doth much deceive himselfe as ignorant of such things for though they have more honour more favour and obtaine many speciall suits for themselves and friends yet they have more labour more watching yea more diligence and industry is looked for from them and they usually performe so in this in the Church Gods Court there is more honour more comfort more suits obtained but more service required or at least more bonds of this service more reason they should performe it That Chrysost urgeth touching virginity of a woman a virgin and married may be here applyed that if there be any liberty to mind earthly things to follow the pleasures of the world and such things it is to those who are out of the Church not to those who are in it further then helps them to this service Where is my feare Wee have seen the reasons why this is due and why God doth chalenge it wee must now see the duty and this is servile feare feare in generall is but the expectation of an imminent evill this feare rises from the consideration of the power and justice of God And of this first a man ought to performe and give it to God Secondly the effects of it Of the differences were spoken before Doctr. The servants of God howsoever they be servants even in the Church ought to feare him that is to serve him and avoyd the evils he hath forbidden them for fear of his power and justice Jer. 5.22 and 10.7 Math. 10.28 Psal 33.8 2 Cor. 5.10 11. Rom. 11.20 Revelat. 15.4 Reas 1 Because he is able as he made them with a word and the whole world at first so to destroy them and bring them to nought with a word when they displease and provoke him Now in reason as naturall men as Tully said doe more regard what he can doe to them in whose power they are then what he will doe with them For being able he may when he will come upon them and destroy them but being willing
thou standst upon thy credit for if thou make open restitution then thou shalt be accounted a fraudulent and deceitfull man and every body will cast it in thy teeth upon any breach if privately thy credit will so sinke for thou art not able to drive a trade as before and to maintaine thy selfe wife and children Know this thou art void of this servile feare while thine heart is so full of pride that it will not stoope to God and his commandement for if thou fearedst his power and justice thou wouldest not stand upon this reputation with men Can he not make thy wickednesse knowne to thy shame and can he not make thee as poore to thy dishonour If thou diddest feare this thou wouldest never stand upon that The like may be said of men who make profession of conversion and Religion and yet neglect the duties of it for feare of the scornes and reproaches of men and stand upon reputation they have no feare But if thou canst be content to hazard thy credit to obey him that gives credit and honour and riches to whom he will and takes them from he pleaseth it will prove to thy selfe and to others that thou hast this feare at least what else may be more if not then the contrary for there can be no place for feare where the heart is puffed up with pride To obey God in honourable things and things to be done without crosse or hazard of credit is but to serve themselves The fifth effect of this feare is diligence and carefulnesse that is it will never let a man rest till he have used all the meanes whereby he may have any hope to escape that which he is afraid of Instance for the feare of man in Jacob Gen. 32.6 c. manifest in Ahab 1 King 21.27 Exod. 9.20 Acts 2.37 Acts 9.6 Ninevites Reas 1 Because this feare is credulous makes a man beleeve that will come which is threatened and that such things are not scarre-crowes but if they be not prevented they will come and suspects often more than is uttered Now that men beleeve they use meanes to compasse it if good to avoid it if evill If good hope for it if evill feare it and so seeke to avoid it Reas 2 Because feare breeds a desire whether a man feare he shall not enjoy some good he would have or lest some evill should come upon him he would escape the desire to have and the desire to escape is increased by his feare He that feares neither may have some desire but when feare comes it increaseth his desire yea as the feare increaseth so doth this Now a desire and a desire enlarged gives a man no rest till he use the meanes to have or escape desire is never without endeavour for it or against it to use all the meanes knowne unto the desirer Vse 1 This as the other two argues great want of this feare because men are so secure and use no meanes at all to avoid Gods judgments here or to come or use them carelesly and coldly which must needs prove want of feare when they heare that no adulterer usurer blasphemer or any that loves and lyes in any sinne shall inherit Heaven but shall have their portion in the burning Lake without faith and repentance which can never be had but by diligent and carefull hearing of the Word this they contemne or regard not if it come not to them well they will not seeke after it if these fall into their mouths well it is but otherwise they will never trouble themselves further about either of them For if they be elected they are sure to be saved and therefore they will leave all to Gods disposition Thus some say desperately but more deale thus and shew plainely there is no feare of God in their hearts or before their eyes for that would keepe another manner of coyle in them and would not suffer them to sleepe so securely in sinne never regarding what became of themselves If they had this we should not need to threaten the wrath of God nor to excite them to flye from the wrath to come and by well-doing to seeke honour and immortality And we should need lesse to doe it or at least we should more prevaile with them for then workes the hammer when the Iron and metall is mollified and softened by the fire then the Word when men are softened and mollified by this feare then the Word is most regarded when the heart is wakened by the present feeling or feare of judgment to come Questionlesse the generall security that hath overgrown the whole body of our people that they neither seeke to escape the vengeance to come of themselves nor yet when the Ministers of God doe with one consent threaten them though many Johns have preached for a long time that the Axe is laid to the root of the tree yet they come not to enquire what to doe as the people did Luk. 3.9 10. Our age as Chrysostome observed is like to the old world our Cities like Sodom and Gomorrah still secure The plague of God that was upon our houses and persons hath not wakened them the Sword that was even at our heeles hath not made them shake off security and begin to feare what is this but a fearing of some judgment that will make our hearts to ake and the eares of posterity to tingle when it shall be told them according to that of Jer. 2.19 Thine owne wickednesse shall correct thee and thy turnings back shall reprove thee know therefore and behold that it is an evill thing and bitter that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God and that my feare is not in thee saith the Lord God of Hosts Yea finally to knit this to our present matter what proves this else but that the men of our times are so farre from the truth of Christianity howsoever they professe themselves to be Christians that they are not come so farre as yet to be Gods servants worse than servants yea than beasts yea than Sathan Jam. 2. who beleeves and trembles Vse 2 This may teach every man to try whether he have this feare or no feare breeds carefulnesse to avoid that is feared or is and ought to be fearefull Doth any man heare of the judgments of God sounded out many wayes by the words and workes of God is he carelesse of them for himselfe for his family if he have a charge and possessed with the security of the age not seeking all meanes to avoid them not as the masters of the families Exod. 9.20 such then as feared the Word of the Lord among the servants of Pharaoh made his servants and his cattle flee into the houses But as Gedaliah when it was told him by many the danger by Ishmael he beleeved it not and so would not prevent it Jer. 40.14 16. and saith the Lord will doe no such thing and so will not take the meanes to avoid them thou hast not so much
our selves together will build it unto the Lord God of Israel as King Cyrus the King of Persia hath commanded us If they have parts of learning it were fit they should bee imployed otherwayes then in the ministry to the scandall and hurt of many Vse 2 To admonish the Ministers of their duty that they would as much as they have any power in their hands reject and exclude the wicked and not receive them as John would not the Pharises and Sadduces till they confesse their sinnes and so give some testimony of their repentance But yet this must not be done upon every small infirmity or hidden sinne but for hainous sinnes that are contagious in respect of the quality of them are scandalous in regard of the opennesse of them for hidden sinnes must be left to the judgement of God and infirmities must be otherwise dealt withall mildly with lesse censures Gal. 6.1 3 4. secret sins secretly reproved Math. 18. onely publique sins to be publiquely censured and the offender to be excluded and yet not at first but as in the matter of the Leper so he must not presently expell him the Church but admonish him the first and second time Tit. 3.10 11. and then expell him if he persist obstinatly in it This being the last censure and the greatest As Physitians seeke all meanes to cure before they cut off a member Vse 3 For the people to learn to submit themselves to the censure of the Ministers of the Church as Hebr. 13.17 Obey them that have the oversight of you and submit your selves for they watch for your soules as they that must give accounts that they may doe it with joy and not with griefe for that is unprofitable unto you to doe as they say and be ruled by their censure and that first for their own good 1 Cor. 5.5 be delivered unto Satan for the destruction of the flesh that the spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus Excommunitio est medicina Ecclesiae For even excommunication is the Churches medicine It casts not off from the whole Church but from a particular congregation or one visible Church to keepe him from infecting others and to recover him from his owne corruption The not yeelding is the rebelling against Christ who hath so commanded his and not carrying his yoake here is to deprive themselves of the Crowne there yea and when they are cut off from a particular Church to persist and contend it is to cut themselves of from the whole whereas to submit and to seek the effect off it is their good as it was Onesimus his and as a bone that is broken if it be well set groweth stronger againe so is it with them Doctrine They who have the charge of others by God committed unto them are guilty of the offences that are committed by them Ezech. 33.8 if they be not carefull to censure them for them so is it here and vers 9. When I shall say unto the wicked O wicked man thou shalt dye the death if thou doest not speake and admonish the wicked of his way that wicked man shal dy for his iniquity but his blood will I require at thine hand Yea the Magistrates doe sin in not punishing Nehe. 13.17 2 Sam. 3.38 39. and for this is it thought that law was made Num. 35.31 Yee shall take no recompence for the life of the murtherer which is worthy to dy but he shall be put to death For by that he should give others incouragement to kill and make also the sin his own yea and as the peoples sins are the Ministers and Magistrates so the Childrens sinnes are the Parents 1 Sam. 2.29 Wherefore hast thou kicked against my sacrifice and my offering which I commanded in my tabernacle and honourest thy children above mee to make your selves fat with the first fruits of all the offerings of Israel my people said the Lord to Eli when yet his sonnes only were guilty Reas 1 Because every man is commanded to reprove his brother his friend Levit. 19.17 Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thine heart but thou shalt plainly rebuke thy neighbour and suffer him not to sinne If he may not beare with the faults of his friends lesse of children servants subjects people where not only the generall charge is in the command but a speciall one also and so the twofold cord binds them Reas 2 Because every man is bound to prevent sinne as much as lyes in him specially the sins of his charge but he that reproves not corrects not censures not punisheth not according to his place prevents not sinne Because every one that scapes without these or some of these is hartned and incouraged to commit other sinnes and others of the same condition by him servants subjects c. Reas 3 Because they are made keepers of both tables such as ought to looke that both tables should be kept therefore the command touching them is made the sinews strength of the other that if they be obeyed the other are better kept if they doe their duty the breaches of the other are better withstood and therefore some think the law of the ten Commandements was given to Moses the Magistrate for them all Exod. 19. Vse 1 It shews the wretched estate of Ministers Magistrates Mrs. Parents if they neglect reproving correcting punishing censuring as their place requireth they have their Bill of indictment increased against the great day by the sinnes of other men Vse 2 This teacheth us that those who have charge of others have a farre greater account to make then those who have not for it is enough for those if they keep themselves from their owne wickednesse the other must be carefull to keep others in a good course and so from sinne The governours must care for those who live under them the householder for such as are under his roofe the Prince for such as are within his Realm it is not enough they serve God themselves but they must cause others to doe likewise as Abraham Gen. 18.19 and as Joshua 24.13 the Master must looke his servant keep the Sabbath to him is the command Exod. 20.10 he must come with his traine to the house of God Psal 42.4 he must prepare himselfe for the Sacrament and charge his and sanctifie them Job 1.5 yea he must correct censure and punish unlesse he will have their sinnes fall on him if he thinke he have not personall sins enough of his owne let him be herein carelesse but he that thinks he hath enough and too many of his owne to answer for let him seek to restrain others committed to his charge by his censures and power that he may be free from them which is done two waies and two things are required of him that he keep himself free from others mens sins The first is to pry and enquire into the lives of those that are committed unto him into their carriage and
the Apostle hath Hebr. 11.6 is here more if not without faith then not without knowledge Now what servant or child is it that obeyes and doth service to his father or master and knowes it is not acceptable and yet if he be told what way he may take to have it accepted will not so in this if there be any desire to please him labor not so much to doe as how to doe or to know what you doe and this not onely by siting at Gamaliels feet and hearing the Ministers but by reading the Scriptures and word of God your selves diligently and painfully Col. 3.16 for the Apostle so perswades Let the word of Christ dwell in you plenteously in all wisdome teaching and admonishing your selves in Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs singing with a grace in your hearts to the Lord not as Chrysost well saith that the word should be in you that is come as a stranger and stay for a night a season and gone againe but it must dwell in you and that not sparingly but copiously and abundantly Chrysost exhortation is not so necessary for these times and this audience to get them Bibles for they must have them in their hands and houses but to use their Bibles which most neglect Therefore as he de Lazaro Semper hortor hortari non desinam ut non hic tantum attendatis iis quae dicuntur verum etiam cum domi fueritis assiduè divinarū scripturarum lectioni vacetis Quod quidem iis qui privatim mecum ingressi sunt non desisto inculcare Chrysost Hom. 3. I againe and againe exhort you not only here to attend to the things that are spoken but when you are at home to read the Scriptures carefully which I use to presse upon them that are about me If this may prevaile a little more may that of Moses Deuter. 6.6 7 8. and that of Christ John 5.39 and the former of S. Paul But alas how may that complaint of Chrysostome be applyed Homil. 13. in John Quinostrūquaso repetit domi aliquid aut Christiana dignum opus aggreditur Quis Scripturarum sensus perscrutatur Nemo sane sed alveolos talos frequenter invenimus libros quam rarissimos Chrysost Who is it that when he comes home doth any thing worthy of a Christian who is it that seekes the meaning of the Scripture None at all we may ordinarily finde you at Tables or Dice but very seldome at your Bibles Doth not he describe many of our Christians and their familes and so that being without knowledge all they doe is unacceptable Let us labor then for this knowledge and be not Idols in the Church who have eyes and see not so much knowledge is required as there is capablenesse and meanes And if yee offer the lame Lame sacrifices forbidden signified the dislike that God had of such service as was done by halfes in body and not in minde è contra in hypocrisie for fashion and custome and such like Dorct Lame service which is done to God is unacceptable unto him whether it be done with the body without the heart or pretended to be done with the heart when the body goes another way when it is hypocriticall and dissembling or by parting or sharing with God it is abominable and not acceptable unto him therefore rejected he the lame sacrifices the ceremony leads to this substance the shaddow to this body 1 Kings 18.21 And Eliah came unto all the people and said how long halt yee between two opinions If the Lord be God follow him but if Baal be hee then goe after him And the people answered him not a word This God complained of Isaiah 29.13 Jer. 12.2 Ezek. 33.31 Act. 4.36 with 5.1 2. Math. 6.2 5. Reas 1 Because all and the whole is his both body and soule by his three-fold right of creation redemption and preservation or gubernation therefore he will have all or nothing can be accepted of him Reas 2 Because this is to make a false God of him for it is a position full of truth that a true God as hee will not be worshipped with fained and counterfeit worship so not with partiall worship but he will have all or none whereas false gods will be content so they may have but a share But the true God is like the true Mother 1 King 3.26 will not have it divided Vse 1 This condemneth all presenting of the body before an Idoll or in Idols service under pretence of keeping the heart to God whether it be done by feare fancy or for profit and gaine This is to offer up a lame sacrifice to God such as he abhorres it is without any president or precept in the Scriptures nay the Commandements precepts lawes admonitions judgments of the Law and Prophets of the Old and new Testament are all against it commanding to fly Idols and Idolatry The companions of Daniel chose rather to bee cast into the fiery fornace then to bow to the Kings Idol The mother in the Maccabees and her children embraced death rather then they would eate swines flesh contrary to the law of God Infinite are the Martyrs of all times who have couragiously embraced death before they would doe any such thing who had been all very unwise and fooles if this would have served and God would have accepted such lame sacrifice Object But for all this a man may goe to masse and such superstitions may he not Answ No more to the one then to the other for this is the greatest Idol in the world and for it more abominable Idolaters are the Papists then any other for never any worshipped the thing it selfe as they doe the breaden God and the crosse but they worshipped God at it and in it as their old distinction hath been Object But we goe to make us abhorre it when we see their follie and vanity Answ This were as if a man should goe into a harlots house or stews under pretence to see and to abhorre whom shall he make beleeve that is his end if it were apparent yet what madnesse were it for a man to lay himselfe open to bee taken with such a danger He presumes of his strength nay he provokes God to take his strength from him and to let him fall into it as in Peter This is not the way to abhorre it But as he that would abhorre uncleanenesse or drunkennesse must not take that course to go to stewes or to frequent tavernes for that is to make him more in love with them but must labor for a chaste and sober heart and that will make him abhorre it so here for a religious and holy heart for it is not the seeing of evill that makes men abhorre it but the seeing of good If men labor for true grace they shall easily abhore sinne and in this as in all others evill must not be done that good may come Nay though never so much good would ensue yet when God
hath forbidden it when he dislikes it it must be avoyded Vse 2 This condemneth all prophane men who talke of serving God with their hearts howsoever they serve him not with their bodies and they doubt not but God will accept them The Lords day is a day God hath required men to doe him publique service in how many spend that day either in journeying for some small affaires or withdrawing themselves upon some small occasion and yet tell us they doubt not but God will accept their thoughts and their heart as they ride or the like as if he that dishonors God in his body could honor him in his heart at one the same time or if he could he would accept it As if he could serve him within that rebels against him without As if a child or servant could think to perswade his father or master that hee respected and served him in his heart when he disobeyed and dishonoured him in all his outward carriage and did not that he bade him Nay the contrary is most true so for alms that it is enough to looke upon the poore rufully and speake mournfully to them and seeme to have affections within but their goods they bestow upon harlots and vaine persons their labour and strength upon them And yet they thinke God will accept their heart as if a subject should pretend a loyall heart to his Prince and thinke to be accepted for it when he gives his goods and spends his strength in a service against him serving his Enemy Vse 3 Here is condemned all lame service of God when men will give their bodyes but reserve their hearts from him they will come before him and draw neere to him with the outward man heare the word pray and offer him prayses and receive the sacraments but in the meane time their hearts are absent they are without their soule for all things are done without understanding praying and hearing c. they were as good be done in a strange tongue in respect of them yea better for they had the more excuse Their affections which are as their hands either to receive that is offered to them or to hold up that which they bring to God are so full of their covetousnesse and worldlinesse of their feares joyes severall pleasures and delights that they can receive nothing else but whatsoever is offered them is as water powered upon a vessell that hath the mouth full stopped and so all runneth by or if they receive a little yet their pleasures or covetousnesse or such like doe soon exclude them or choak them as thornes doe the corne or seed Vse 4 To teach every man to endeavour and performe services to God both in body and soule as 1 Cor. 6.20 seeing his right is to one as well as the other and the giving of him one condemns a man for not giving of him the other If God was so angry with Ananias and Sapphira that he divided them because they had devided that which they ought to have given whole unto him how will he accept a man that shall divide himselfe when he comes to him Their heart is divided now shall they be found faulty Hosea 10.2 we must bring both body and soule to the service of God to pray with the mouth and to pray with the understanding to hear with the eare and to speake with the heart for the body hath both os and aures to speak to God and to hear him Men must give God the bodily presence when hee calleth for it they must come to his service but they may not leave their hearts behinde them or suffer them to be carried away when they are present but leave every thing when they come behind them that may hinder them as Abraham did at the foot of the mount yea when they would fall upon his service as the fowls would upon Abrahams sacrifice Gen. 15.11 drive them away and performe all duties with the whole man that it may be a whole and so an acceptable sacrifice 2 Sam. 5.8 And sicke Sick sacrifices of beasts were condemned to shew how God dislikes that service that is without spirit and affection faintly and drowsily performed Doctrine Sick service God dislikes when things are performed without spirit and affection when the duties are done without zeal and fervencie without alacritie and cheerfulnesse This was the reason why Aaron and his sons would not eat the sin-offering because they could not doe it cheerfully Levit. 10.19 Hee would have all things done cheerfully fervently zealously Isaiah 58.13 1 Cor. 9.17 Rom. 12.8 11. 2 Cor. 9.7 Eccles 11.1 Reas Because when things are done dully and coldly by one it argues little account of Gods Person and small desire of the things he hath but the contrary is when they are done fervently and busily when a man sets his heart to the work as that Dan. 6.14 when as the cold and carelesse performing of these things argues no account nor love to God and his service no marvell then though he dislike it and contrariwise accept it being done with fervencie Vse 1 This condemneth those who condemn zeal fervencie and heat in the service of God Vse 2 To teach every man to labour to doe all things in the service and fear of God with zeal alacritie and earnestnesse not to goe about it as sick men doe about the works of their callings faintly and feebly but earnestly whether they pray or preach hear or give almes whether for a short time or long It is not enough that the Lords day be kept that the Word is heard and preached that the Prayers be made almes given and such like unlesse they have that affection which God requires and be done with that sense and feeling that zeal and fervencie which is fitting The work is common to hypocrites and profane men with the Children of God the affection is proper to his owne not that the other have not the naturall affection but that they have not the sanctified affection Their affections are about worldly things pleasant or profitable these about Spirituall things As the vaine men or worldly men are tickled and marvellously affected with the things they goe about so ought men in the service of God And though happily it is not to be attayned unto to have as fervent affections to the things of God as carnall men have to the things of the world because they are wholly carnall these but partly sanctified they have nothing to hinder them these have great hinderances and pull-backs even their own corruptions yet must they endeavour what they may to doe every thing with all cheerfulnesse and even grieve to see them goe about their sports and profits their delight and gaine with greater spirits and more cheerfully then themselves about these holy things yea let it grieve them that they themselves follow worldly things more eagerly and affectionately then spirituall things and find greater chearfulnesse in the one then in the other And so
things done drowsily and heavily without cheerfulnesse shall not be accepted Quest But what if this affection be wanting shall a man therefore not doe it or doe that which will not be accepted Answ Nay that follows not for then should God have no service of the best who finde themselves ever unfit but onely of hypocrites and carnall men who think any thing good enough but though wants this way be yet must not this be left off for so we read the Children of God have done Nehemiah unfit to pray yet prayed Chapter 1.4 Hanna 1. Sam. 1. Our Saviour Christ himself when his heart was full of sorrow though this was in him an infirmitie without sinne though not in us because of the corruption it draws from our vessell as new wine put into a mustie vessell Vse 3 To teach men not to deferre the service of God till sicknesse and old age when they must needs be without heat and affection Vse 4 To teach every one to whet on one another and to labour to set an edge on one another and to stir up their affections when they are with them to come to the service of God specially such as have charge of others for their charge As they have any desire that God may have the sacrifice and service that is pleasant unto him and to keep themselves free from their sinnes they should as Prov. 27.17 sharpen and Deutr. 6.7 whet and in generall Hebr. 10.24 provoke one another Offer it now unto thy Prince The second reason and proof of their offence because they had gone against civilitie and common honestie Doct. This is the corruption of mans nature that he preferreth man before God loving fearing serving seeking his honour before Gods Gen. 27.12 2 Kings 5.18 John 12.42 43. Neverthelesse even among the chief rulers many beleeved in him but because of the Pharisees they did not confesse him lest they should be cast out of the synagogue for they loved the praise of men more then the prayse of God Joh. 5.44 Yea in all things man is more carefull of all duties and maketh it much more hainous to faile in duty to the one then to neglect and set light by the other Reas 1 Because they see and converse with men daily not so with God it is the reason why John gave him the lie that would brag of the love of God whē he lived in the hatred of men 1 Joh. 4.20 Reas 2 Because love being the ground of all duties to God or man and affection to man is naturall to God spirituall that we have of our selves this is the gift of God therefore meere naturall men have care of duties to men more then to God because they have this Love not the other And regenerate men too because after conversion nature helpes us with the spirit to the service of man but to God the spirit onely workes yet but weakely Men being more flesh then spirit a long time after conversion Reas 3 Because men have a carnall understanding because they are able to see what they receive from men but not from God hence no good turn from men goes unrecompenced at least not without thanks but from God many goe without thanks we have carnall eyes to see what men give us not spirituall to see what God bestowes to see the Instrument not Author Reas 4 Because men have perverse and partiall judgements for that which befalleth a man every one thinkes may befall him but that which toucheth or dishonoureth God they think it toucheth not their freehold at all Vse 1 To teach every man to see the corruption of his heart when when he findeth that he is in himself and others more carefull of the duties that belong to men then to God where the fayling of the one troubleth him more then the neglect of the other In himself he is carefull to live civilly and honestly in the world to give every man his own c. But in the mean time he is carelesse in the duties of Gods service This bewrayes the corruption of his nature for that he may doe by the light of nature and so have heathen men both cōmanded done And as it is meer hypocrisie for a man to be carefull in duties unto God when he is careles in duties unto men so the contrary is but meere civilitie he that is truly religious is carefull of both hee that faileth in the one is short of many Heathen and Infidells And in the other hee that goes no further is still but a naturall and carnall man They have carnall affections and understandings and are men of perverse judgements we shall finde that true of them which Saint Augustine writ de mendacio * Nulla homines graviora peccata aestimant quam quae huic vitae faciunt injuriam Aug. Men esteem those sinnes worst that are most injurious to this life And again Non odimus eos qui nulli molesti sunt Wee doe not hate those that live in the practise of sinne be it never so great against God as long as they are not injurious and offensive to man from this corruption is it that men feare man more then God are more desirous to please him to keep and recover his favor then Gods If a great man be offended with them as Chrysostome they will intreat friends and neighbours and others tend patiently many dayes entreat humbly once and again a 100. times and if he will not bee reconciled they can not be in quiet but when they have offended God they can lye and sleep securely and take their ease and follow their pleasures shews not this their corruption From the same corruption is it that if they receive any benefit from men or by them they labor to be thankfull and to recompence but though they cannot but looke upon some of Gods blessings they return none to him As men are liberall in thanks for their feasts and refreshings to the instruments not to the author as Basil As little children that thinke they have their coats from the taylor that maketh them and bringeth them home and putteth them on by reason of their weake conceit from this corruption is it that men mislike disobedient sonnes and bad servants of other men because it may be their owne case to be abused so by their own and the bad example of others may be a meanes to effect the like in theirs when they no waies be like affected when they are rebellious to the word of God Masters will be bitter to servants for unthankfulnesse negligence and carelesnesse of their commodities whereas they never take notice of their lying and swearing that brings in gaine of prophaning of Gods day because the one concerneth them and may be a meanes of their danger and losse and the other nothing so neere toucheth them which maketh God give them over to their corruption to be more unfaithfull to them To be briefe all hate a covetous man more then a prodigall man
stroakes wrath and displeasure followes the sinner as the shaddow the body But if God spare and be not angry that is shew it not Magna est ira non irasci 't is a signe of greater displeasure The master that respects his servant corrects him for a small fault if he let him alone Chrysost in Mat. ho. 17. it may be thought he doth it till great faults bee joyned to it and he may either punish more or cast him out of his house so in this Neither will I accept an offering at your hand Because he is displeased with them therefore he will not accept their offerings nor their service and prayers Doctrine The person of a man must first please God before his prayers his offerings or any worke that he doth can be pleasing or acceptable to him That is before reconciliation justification they are unaccepted It is hence manifest because he rejecteth their offerings being displeased with their persons hereto belongs that Ge. 4.4 that Prov. 15.8 The sacrifice of the wicked is abomination to the Lord but the prayer of the righteous is acceptable unto him Hence Isaiah 1.13 19. 1 Pet. 2.5 And yee as lively stones hee made a spirituall house an holy priesthood to offer up spirituall sacrifices acceptable to God by Christ Jesus Hebr. 13.16 Reas 1 Because all workes are made acceptable to God by faith as all things are made pleasing to men by the light so Chrysost and without it nothing is Hebr. 11.16 Now faith is that which makes the person accepted for by it we are justified Rom. 5.1 and made the sonnes of God Rom. 3.26 Reas 2 Because before they are strangers Ephe. 2.19 yea and enemyes Rom. 5.10 now things done by strangers are not greatly gratefull but by enemies they altogether distaste us Vse 1 This confuteth the Papists who make good workes the cause of our justification and reconciliation to God when as they can not be good so they can not be acceptable before we be reconciled and acceptable in his sight How doe they then justifie us and reconcile us for that which must justifie and reconcile another must needs it selfe be in favor for as that is true of S. Augustine Opera non praecedunt justificandum sed sequuntur justificatum So that is as true whensoever they come they are not acceptable in themselves because they are imperfect our evill works are perfectly evill and so deserve to be cast out of favour but our good works are not perfectly good and so cannot procure favor of themselves Object If any object as some of our Papists sticke not to doe that we are justified by works because by faith for faith is a worke Answ I answer faith is not our worke but Gods in us John 6.29 Againe though having received faith we doe beleeve yet it is not faith or the worke of it that doth justifie us but the righteousnes of Jesus Christ apprehended by faith for as a hand that hath taken a treasure doth not inrich us but the treasure and it is not the mouth receiving the mean but the meat that doth nourish us so in this And being thus justified then we work and our works are acceptable because we are first accepted in Christ Vse 2 To stirre up every man to the tryall of his estate and himselfe whether he be indeed reconciled to God or no whether justified or no that if he be not he may labor and endevor to be because while he is in that condition whatsoever things he doe as they are but splendida peccata August so they are altogether unacceptable to God whether he heare or give or receive or pay a heavy condition of a servant that doe what he can yet he can not please Quest But happily thou art desirous to know whether thou art reconciled or no and if not how to come by it Answ I answer thee if thou hast true faith then shall this be like the salt 2 Kings 2.21 which healed the spring of waters and of it may be said as there Vse 3 This comforts God children who are justified in Jesus Christ and so accepted in his sight their works their sacrifice and worship liketh him howsoever they are done in imperfections and in many great weaknesses and are not so fully with their whole soule minde and heart as they should be but carry the touch of mans corruption and are not able to abide the strict and streight judgment of God yet because they proceed from them who are accepted in Christ they please him and the imperfections are pardoned in Christ and they taken for pure and holy Prov. 15.8 1 Pet. 2.5 As a little thing done of a child is more acceptable then much done by a servant VERSE XI For from the rising of the sunne unto the going downe of the same my Name is great among the Gentiles and in every place incense shall bee offered unto my Name and a pure offering for my Name is great among the heathen saith the Lord of Hosts FRom the rising of the sunne Here is the second part of withdrawing Gods mercy from these Jewes And this is the removing of his worship word from Jewes to Gentiles set down by a comparison of dissimilitude betwixt Jewes and Gentiles The proposition of the Gentiles and their great care and respect of his worship verse 11. the reddition of the Jewes and their corruption and carelesnesse of his worship renewing the former expostulation verse 12 13. In this we are to consider the worship of God the circumstances of it In it we consider 1. the ground of it my name is great repeated in the beginning and ending of the verse for more certainty of the thing 2. the matter incense and oblation 3. the manner and quality of it pure opposit to the Jewes prophane and polluted service of God The circumstances 1. persons Gentiles 2. place everywhere Now for the meaning The Papists have wrested this place to establish the doctrine of their Masse but how absurdly shall appeare before we have ended with the Verse in the meane time we will search the true meaning of them as they ly in order For from the rising of the Sunne These words expresse the place some expound them in the time present and these either take them absolutely thus The Gentiles though they have no knowledge of God but by nature as much as they may learne out of the great bookes the Heavens and the Earth and the revolutions and changes of them by the rising of the Sunne and the going downe of the same yet they offer unto God oblations in their kind Thus Montanus But this cannot be because of the quality of the sacrifice following for it is said to be pure which could not come from them in that dimme light they had Or conditionally that the Gentiles would offer a pure sacrifice if God did reveale himselfe to them as he hath to the Jewes But the words are so absolutely spoken
said I have nourished and brought up children but they have rebelled against mee and 5.4 What could I have done any more to my Vineyard that I have not done unto it why have I looked that it should bring forth grapes and it bringeth forth wilde grapes 2 Sam. 12.7.8 Math. 11.23 24 Reas Because the one hath lesse the other moe causes why they should honour him and be carefull of his worship every benefit and favour deserves it the least meriteth it much more many and great ones where then the most and the greatest are there the contempt is the most hainous As the husband man the more labor and cost he bestowes upon his ground the greater harvest he expecteth when for equall paines and cost he lookes for equall fruite as Luke 13.7 8 9. Then said he to the dresser of his Vineyard behold this three yearer have I come and sought fruit of this fig tree and finde none cut it down why keepeth it also the ground barren And hee answered and said unto him Lord let it alone this yeere also till I dig round about it and dung it And if it beare fruit well if not then shalt thou cut it downe Vse 1 Then the contempt of Gods worship and service that is in this City is farre more hainous and grievous then of any other place in the Land besides because God hath bestowed upon it more favor and greater things then upon any other more wealth greater strength more honor for it is the wealth and the strength and the honor of the Land he hath crowned it with much honor and loving kindnesse hee hath given it the Gospell the watring and planting of Paul and Apollo more abundantly then any part of the Land besides he hath freed it from the plague he hath delivered it from the sword which should have been first in the confusion if the enemy had had his wished-for day howsoever it flatter it self in the strength of it the wealth of it would in that day have made it a prey He hath done this and many more that I cannot speake of and yet the contempt of Gods worship name and service is in all from the highest to the lowest Like Magistrates like subjects like Minister like People like Masters like servants parents and children rich and poore bond and free all contemners of the worship and service of God which is the more fearfull and hainous sinne because of the riches of Gods goodnesse his bounty and blessings and he takes it more hainously that when he will visite the land with another judgment the sword or any other as it was the first in the plague it shall be in the other unles it repent and grow more zealous for his service worship Vse 2 More particularly there are many particular men in this City and elsewhere who are carelesse of the worship of God and doe indeed pollute his name and thinke it no fault in them because they are above others in wealth above them in worship or honour exceed them in wit and learning These are the men if a survey be taken who are lesse frequent in Prayer and in hearing most carelesse both privately and publiquely of the worship and service of God either not doing or so doing as if they doe any thing God is more beholden to them then they bound to him As if Gods favor and the fruits of his love were faculties and dispensations to beare them out in dishonouring of him and polluting his name Nay let them know it if they doe not or if they will not now they one day shall to their cost that their carelessenes and contempt is more hainous then of others and he so takes it They shall find these contrary the eyes of God and men in mens eyes a little thing in them that is good is great a great evill but a little not so with God And when every man shall give his account as he shall one day it shal be be farre easier for the unlearned then for the learned for the base then honorable for the poore then rich The benefits of God specially these generall ones are not alwayes proofes of his love but they are ever provocations of obedience and honor from men That if they answer it not as they have received more here so they shall have more hereafter Why doe they deceive themselves or suffer themselves by flatterers to be deceived we will make but them judges and they will give sentence of themselves What is that Courtier worthy of that receives abundance of favor from the King and requites him with contempt or treason so of a father and his sonne of a servant and his master c. will they not take it more hainously and shall not all their benefits and favors increase their faults And are not Gods wayes just more equall and farre above the wayes of men Then let me speak to you rich men c. I beseech you be deceived no longer you ought to be more religious and more carefull then others I pray you correct your error and begin to be more carefull lest you be forced to condemne your selves when it will be too late You who professe your selves in speciall manner mine and specially professe my worship Doctr. It is a farre more grievous and hainous sinne for such as specially professe the worship and feare of God to contemn his name and not regard his worship then for those who make none or very little shew of it and God takes it more hainously from them so here and Mich. 2.6 7. Marke 14.37 2 Pet. 2.21 Reas 1 Because he doth it of knowledge and goes against his knowledge whereas the other as is probable doth not so for his profession argues he knows what is to be done and what ought to be done Now sinnes against knowledge are more hainous the other more excusable Religio scientia Dei est ac per hoc omnis religiosus hoc ipso quod religionem sequitur Dei se voluntatem nossce testatur Sal. ad eccle Ca. lib. 2 as a man professing an Art a fault in this work of his Art is more foul then in another mans work Religion is the profession of God and every religious man in this that he takes up Religion professes that he knowes the will of God saith Salvian Reas 2 Because it is here as it were out of his place where the thing is lighter and not so offensive an element in his place not so heavy a spot upon a foule garment not so uncomely an element out of his place a spot upon the purest garment is the sinne of professors Reas 3 Because these things come commonly unexpected and that which is unexpected and unsuspected it commeth more suddenly it lighteth more heavily and is taken more to heart This made David complaine so much of the injury of a friend as a thing that came so unexpected and did so pierce him Vse 1 To instruct the Minister whose
sinnes and contempt of Gods worship he ought specially to dislike to reprove and lay load on It is his part to dislke and reprove all to checke every mans sinne and every mans carelesnesse of Gods worship and service but no mens sinnes no mens negligence and corruption in the service of God ought to dislike him so much and be so earnest against as the sinnes and carelesnes of those who by some speciall profession come neere to God The Minister should be like effected to his Master the servant to his Lord. What God most mislikes that ought they It may be he may find these more kind liberall and respective unto him he must neverthelesse reprove and if need be use sharpnes The Physitian that finds men kind to him and to honor him when they are in health will neverthelesse when they are fallen into a disease use sharp medicines and it may be sharper to them then others that he may the sooner and sounder restore them It is the signe of a false prophet when his mouth is not filled to prepare and proclaime warre and when it is to cry all peace Mich. 3.5 Thus saith the Lord concerning the Prophets that deceive my people and bite them with their teeth and cry peace but if a man put not into ther mouthes they prepare warre against him Vse 2 To admonish all such as come nigh unto God by speciall profession that they endure the words of reproofe from the mouth of the Minister if he deale more sharply with their sinnes covetousnesse usury envy quarrellings pride and vanities and particularly for the sinne in hand for their cold prayers carelesse hearing sleepy attending negligent or late comming the omission and remission of their care publiquely but specially privately in the worship and service of God they must not grudge and goe away discontented saying He knowes me well he might well have forborne this I have been an old professor and an old disciple hast thou then is thy sinne the greater and God is more displeased with it and so ought his Ministers lesse to spare thee and thou the rather to take it from them As Moses said See Israel will not heare then how will Pharaoh I wonder not many times to see common Christians and carnall men to distaste reproofes when I find professors so disliking them but as their sinnes are the greater sinne compared with sinne their reproofes should be the sharper as in diseases Vse 3 To teach every man to consider of his profession which he makes of Gods service and feare and thereby to know he is more bound to procure Gods name to be honored and in himselfe and his to be most carefull for his service and worship His profession requireth he be more devout in prayer more watchfull and diligent in hearing and in every duty whereby God is immediately worshipped and glorified more carefull This his profession requires of him which if he performe not he must know that as every sinne he committeth is more hainous so his carelessenes and corruption in the service of God is much more intolerable and hainous in the sight of God then his who makes no profession Thou seest a man who is but a state-Christian and professor withdraw himselfe and be negligent to come to the place of Gods worship thou dislikest and yet occasion of friends pleasure or profit will sometime draw thee aside from it thy sinne is farre more intolerable then his So of sleeping thy nod is worse then his halfe houres nap for to thee Christ saith as to Peter Marke 14. Ideo Ethnicis deteriores sumus quia meliores esse debemus quia pugnamus professionem nostram moribus nostris nec sumus id quod profitemur Salv. 37. sleepest thou and so in every duty of Gods worship We are then farre worse then Ethnicks because we ought to be better because our profession and manners are repugnant and we are not what we professe our selves to be Object Then better not professe at all Answ Admit thy conceit but what is gained by it Paul saith Rom. 2.12 For as many as have sinned without the law shall perish also without the law and as many as have sinned in the law shall be judged by the law and Christ Luke 12.47 48. That servant that knew his Masters will and prepared not himselfe neither did according to his will shal be beaten with many stripes but he that knew it not and yet did commit things worthy of stripes shal be beaten with few stipes for unto whomsoever much is given of him shal be much required and to whom men commit much the more of him will they aske There was one had two sonnes Math. 21.28 he that said he would not and did was commendable doe thou like and it shal be well with thee but otherwise thy not profession shall also condemn thee and if it be lesse yet if thou perish thou hast gained little The best is to professe and also perform with all care the service of God then thou shalt be blessed in thy deed Have polluted it The act of these persons the Israelites the polluting and corrupting of the worship of God And here is the cause why God will take his worship and word from them they polluted and corrupted it and made no account of it Doctrine The prophaning of Gods name that is the corrupting and contemning of Gods word and worship is that which procures God to take it away and remove it from a people and land as here and Isaiah 29.10 ad 14. Jer. 7.13 14. Thirefore now because ye have done all these workes saith the Lord and I rose up early and spake unto you but when I spake yee would not heare mee neither when I called would yee answer Therefore will I doe unto this house whereupon my name is called wherein also yee trust even unto the place that I gave unto you and your fathers as I have done unto Shilo Vse 1 This teacheth us to behold Gods just judgment upon the Church of Rome which once was a famous light and a flourishing Church but it grew both to contemn the word of God and to corrupt his worship It preferred the Church above it yea the Pope holding he might dispence with the word of God so Gratian speciall the new Testament so Panormitan the Church can make morall precepts mutable so Gratian with infinite such like The worship it hath corrupted by unwritten and lying traditions by such a burden of ceremonies as never any superstition had by the precepts of men and such like That God hath dealt justly he hath taken from them his word and left them in palpable darknes more then Aegypt 2 Thessal 2.11 And now are they as a man out of his way and yet thinks he is right the further he goes the more he is out of his way and no hope of returning because he perswadeth himselfe he is in the right way Vse 2 This may make us feare that the
but when they handle them corruptly and carelesly when they are not the same men in their lives they seeme to be in the Pulpit they make the ordinances of God to be out of request and to be loathed as Elies wicked sonnes made men abhorre the offering of the Lord 1 Sam. 2.17 both by their using of it and carriage of their lives for even wholesome meate-men loath an unwholesome and sluttish huswives or Cookes dressing Vse 3 This may admonish all those who contemne the Ministers of God who doe scoffe deride and disgrace them most who seeke most that the worship of God should be had in honour whatsoever profession they make outwardly it is yet manifest they have no inward love to religion nay that they contemne and despise the worship of God They may use the works of his service and performe worship for the outward act but it is without any love and reverence to it but as the Heathen man would have his Tyrant to seeme religious that his people might feare him because they might think the Gods would helpe him if they should rebell or rise against him so these for one sinisterrespect or other Doctr. It hath beene a continuall portion of the Ministers of God to be contemned and not regarded to be basely thought of and spoken of though in this place it may seeme to be a just judgement upon these yet the best and the most sincere Ministers have beene no better esteemed or regarded 2 Kings 9.11 Jer. 29.26 Acts 2.13 and 26.24 Matth. 11.18 1 Cor. 4.9 ad 14. Reas 1 Because it befell to Christ who was many wayes evill spoken of John 10.20 Matth. 11.19 then no marvell if his Ministers and members be in the same condition for Matth. 10.24 25. The Disciple is not above his Master nor the servant above his Lord. It is enough for the Disciple to be as his Master is and the servant as his Lord. If they have called the Master of the house Beelzebub how much more them of his houshold Reas 2 Because the Ministers of God must deale with and reprove the sinnes of men and not spare them but threaten them for them Now when they are as Basil speaketh like Physitians who make warre not with their patient but with his disease and passion so not with them but their sinnes they thinke hee is their enemy and maketh warre against them therefore they speake evill of him Vse 1 To teach us not to be offended if we finde now many mockers and scorners of the Ministers and Ministery many who regard them not but contemne them and raise up all manner of evill speeches against them it is no new thing for there is none under Heaven It was prophesied it should be 2 Pet. 3.3 mockers 2 Tim. 3.3 despisers of them who are good and therefore still will be while the accuser of the brethren doth rule in the Ayre and is Prince of this world and doth rule in the children of disobedience he will make them mock and despise contemne and slander and oftentimes such as would make reasonable men affraid lest their slanders should be found false yet that troubles them not because they still hope it will make for their advantage he instructing them who taught Machiavill * Detrabe audacter aliquid adhaerebit Machiavil Slander one confidently and somewhat will sticke to him If that be true which Tertullian writeth Adversus Gent. Apol. cap. 1. * Nihil iniquius quàm ut oderint homines quos ignorant etiamsi res meretur odium Tertul. Nothing is worse than to hate men whom they know not though they deserve to be hated What is it then that they should slander men whom they know not when the thing deserveth great honour Vse 2 This must teach the Ministers patiently to abide the base conceits and opinions of men It is no new thing if they did it to the greene tree what will they doe to the dry if to those who have lived before more to these It is that whereunto they were appointed 1 Thes 3.3 that of Christ will be true Matth. 5.11 12. Blessed are you when men revile you and persecute you and say all manner of evill against you for my Name falsely Rejoyce and be glad for great is your reward in Heaven for so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you which if any incurre not lesse or more in his portion he may feare and suspect himselfe whether he be Christs or no seeing Christ so speaketh Luke 6.26 Woe unto you when all men shall speake well of you for so did their fathers to the false Prophets he may suspect himselfe rather false than true That of Plinius Cecilius which he was wont to set upon his Schooles may be applyed Sciamus eum pessimè dixisse cui maximè si● applausum Wee know he that hath most applause hath made the worst Oration VERSE XIII Ye said also Behold it is a wearinesse and ye have snuffed at it saith the Lord of Hostes and ye offered that which was torne and the lame and the sick thus ye offered an offering should I accept this of your hand saith the Lord YE say also behold it is a wearinesse The second corruption here reproved is outward pollution which is double in speech and gesture The speech some expound as spoken by the Priests taking up the breast or shoulder of a carrion sheepe which was his due Levit 7.31 32. see what I have for my labour but the Priests themselves had a hand in this sinne This speech is expounded as if it were spoken by a crafty dissimulation and arrogant bragging See how I am wearied with carrying this weighty sheepe when a man might have blowne it over or they say they are marvellously weary with carrying so weighty and tidie a beast upon their shoulders and that they might faine it by their gesture they shew it by panting and fetching their breath deepe and drawing of it short Montanus Some expound what a toile is this that we spend all in the service of God the complaint of the people that they were at great toile and paines and excessive cost and charge in Gods service as over-wearied with labour and eaten out and undone with expences especially comming so raw and bare home and therefore God was to content himselfe with it though worse You have snuffed at it Either you blow and pant as tyred with bringing a tidie beast still their arrogant dissembling continued or by a disdainfull and contemptuous gesture you shew your unwillingnesse to serve God and how vile and tedious it is to you it is the gesture of one refusing a thing with disdaine and contempt as Psal 10.5 Saith the Lord of Hoasts Who is most good and pure and a powerfull and just revenger of all such wickednesse And ye offered that which was torne Their practice and dealing their Sacrifice faulty two wayes they brought blind and lame or if any good not their
owne First in manner of getting of it it was such as was stolne some expound raptum spoiled and wearied with beasts raptus ex ore lupi which was dainty among the Heathen as finer meate and the tenderer so Calvine If by chance a sheepe or other beast were wearied or so they would be content to bestow it on God But this is not like for Sacrifices were brought quick not dead But raptum rather furto rapina quaesitum as Lyra they brought such to God as was gotten by evill meanes thinking to stop his mouth as mans with part of the booty Psal 50.21 Behold it is a wearinesse The complaint of the people thinking too much of that they did in the service of God Doctr. Hypocrites naturall and wicked men doe thinke all time too much all paines too great all cost too chargeable spent upon the service of God and his worship Amos 8.5 Isaiah 58.3 for it carrieth a kind of repentance in them for that they had done all that in the service of God when they aimed not at his service but their owne profit This is that which was in Judas John 12.5 6. Why is this waste murmuring at it and made a good colour for it that he might also infect others pretending it for the members of Christ against the Head by which hee brought the Disciples into the same sinne with him Matth. 26. Reas 1 Because love is the ground of all duties specially of the cheerefull ready diligent performing of them and the cost which men think nothing too much of where they love Parents to their Children the Wife to the Husband Now no naturall and wicked men have the love of God or can have it for it is a supernaturall gift therefore no marvell if they deale thus Reas 2 Because the motives of these duties and the manner of doing them are the benefits received and the blessings and rewards to come upon them that doe them so Now naturall and wicked men want spirituall eyes to see God the giver of all that they have and the reward for things to come and what profit the service of God brings to them then no marvell though they think all too much Object Micha 6.6 7. here are hypocrites that thought not great things too much for Gods Sol. This they offered but they never did it It may be a question if God would have taken them at their word whether they would have performed or no for many promise largely that are short enough in performing But admit they would yet that they would not have done it for any service to God at all but only for a safeguard to themselves and their sinnes The Prophet threatned them with the judgments of God if they did not returne from their sinnes they thinking to save themselves and keepe their sinnes which were so deare unto them offer thus liberally and it may be would have given so but it was not for God but themselves As the Mariner in a storme or danger and the traveller when he is beset with theeves will cast away liberally Vse 1 This teacheth that there are a great company of men in the Church who are but meere naturall men at the best but hypocrites in the Church seeing so many find and professe themselves to find such tediousnesse and wearines in the service of God thinking the time too much the paines too great the cost very burdensome weary of Sabboths and the times and places of exercises can be content to serve with ease but not with any strictnes or as they account it inconvenience a little labor happily but no cost without grudging To whom the Sabboth when it commeth is like to a bad guest whose departure is farre more welcome to them then his comming so is the end more acceptable then the beginning and every houre is a day till it be over others thinke it was ordained for their ease and refreshing from their labors and not for Gods service and therefore thinke it too much to give the whole day to God too much to heare twice but intolerable they should be bound to make care of it in the whole in private besides the publique service Quae diabolus imperavit quam laboriosa quam gravia nec difficultas fitit ejus man datis impedimentū Chry. ho. 19. ad P. many masters are there who thinke much to give to God a whole Sabboth who will not remit their servants a piece of one of the six dayes Many a servant who can be content to toile himselfe more that day with the workes of pleasure and the workes of Sathan then in the week with the works of his Master but thinks every thing too much for God as Chrysostome What commands doth the Devill lay on man how laborious how grievous yet the difficulty is no impediment to his commands But here a little thing hinders and they thinke all too much Ant. how much more shew they themselves wicked men who like Judas finde fault with others care or cost in the service of God and draw others with them into the same opinion to thinke it is too much when it is short of that that is expressely required Vse 2 To teach every man when he finds any such wearinesse in the service of God his heart thinking too much of his cost and pains to censure it in himselfe as a relique of the naturall man whether it come of himselfe or he be drawn unto it by others as the Disciples were by Judas and to humble himself for it for it cannot be good comming from this and men cannot gather figs of thornes nor grapes of thistles to judge it to come from this that his love is unperfect as his knowledge is but in part or from this that he hath not the feeling of Gods love his bounty and mercy towards him as he ought neither knows the fruit of this service Vse 3 To teach every one to labor against this corruption and to withstand it that it sease not upon him seeing God taxeth these for it for wherefore else but that we should avoid it and never think either paines or time or cost too much in his service and worship for which purpose two things must we labor for one the love of God for nothing will we think enough then for him as Jacob and Shechem another delight in the duties Isaiah 58.13 Psal 122.1 John 6.34 give me a man that delights in any thing and all is not enough for it And ye have snuffed at it Their gesture which as it noteth their unwillingnesse so taken as some doe take it for panting then it signifies their arrogant dissembling by which they made shew as if they had brought most excellent sacrifices when they were nothing and brought nothing but wilde and base sacrifices to God Doctr. It is a grievous sinne for men to make shew of great care and diligence in the service and worship of God and indeed doe nothing lesse Men cannot
to the mind of the superior Numb 30.6 9. So Papish children contrary to Parents minds enter their rules Fourthly when it hindreth a man from the duties of his calling as those who leave their calling and goods to professe wilfull poverty or become Friars Mendicant 1 Cor. 7.22 Fiftly when there is put holinesse in it and it is made meritorious If it be faulty in these or any the like then is sin committed in the making of it and so a curse followeth it but if not then the curse followeth the breaking of it When then it is so hard a thing to vow and not to have sinne cleave to it if there be any feare of sinne there will be rashnesse avoided in it and if there be any feare of the curse they will not be so rash lest they provoke God Eccles 5.1 Vse 3 To teach every man when he hath vowed to be very carefull for the performance of it and let neither cost nor labour profit nor pleasure hinder him for he shall lose more by the breaking of it than he can gaine The sinne of breaking a mans vow or promise ought to make men affraid to doe it Men feare perjury and abhorre it this is no lesse if Christ may be beleeved Matth. 5.33 But if not the sinne yet the curse and to avoid it make good that thou hast spoken to God I suppose many men in the time and heate of the sicknesse vowed great things to God if they were preserved and if God would returne in mercy to the City that they might in safety follow their callings againe for I cannot thinke but that most men specially when God came any thing nigh them were affected and touched for the present which usually brings forth such thoughts and such motions If any were not I think their case is marvellous fearefull to be in the fire and no relenting Then you that did remember your vowes and see where is the performance of them it may be sought for but not easily seene or seen in a very few And what is to be expected but these curses and more heavy than we have had If your children or servants all the time you are correcting of them and holding the rod over them promise to learne their books better and doe their worke more diligently whereupon you spare them if they after deale deceitfully with you will not your displeasure be doubled and your anger be increased and you thinke lawfully too thinke Gods waies are more equall and just If thou wouldest avoid this then doe as David said and did Psal 66.13 14. I will goe into thine house with burnt offerings and I will pay my vowes which my lips have promised and my mouth hath spoken in my affliction If a man vow when he is in custody or restraint that when he getteth liberty he will goe and dwell in a place where the Word is if the Word goe from thence he is not bound Ruth 1.16 17. Againe in cases of necessity as a man bound to abstaine from Wine yet if Physitians counsell it for his health he may use it as Jer. 35.11 yet so as hee have a speciall eye to the maine end for which his vow was made as suppose Timothy 1 Tim. 5.23 to abstaine yet for his often infirmities he may drinke For I am a great King saith the Lord of Hostes There is Gods first reason why they ought not to corrupt his worship and deale thus deceitfully with him his greatnesse and power who is able to punish them for evill doing Doctr. Men ought to obey God and to avoid evill and corruption as generally and in all things so in his worship for feare of his power and justice Vide vers 6. where is my feare And a great King It is the Kingdome of power not grace he by his power is absolute King great and the greatest Doctr. The Lord he is the absolute King of all men and Angells and all creatures in the world they are all his subjects so is he here called a King and that 2 Chron. 20.6 Dan. 2.21 This his commanding of all creatures sheweth and their obeying Psal 104.4 Isaiah 37. Joshua 10.12 13. Exod. 14.21 Matth. 8.26 Dan. 3.6 Reas 1 Because he hath created and doth sustaine all it is reason he should be their King and they his subjects Reas 2 Because else there would be no order but all confusion Lactantius de falsa religione lib. 1. cap. 3. hee gives this as a reason for the order of things because there is but one God that governes all For as in an Army if there were as many Generalls as there are Bands Companies and Wings of the Battell it could neither be instructed nor governed because every one would stand upon his owne wisedome and counsell and such dissention would rather hurt than profit So in this world if there were multitudes of Governours if God were not the sole King and Governour there would be nothing but confusion and disorder Vse Uses of this we have before vers 4. The Lord of Hosts FINIS THE SECOND CHAPTER OF THE PROPHET MALACHY AND now O ye Priests this commandement is for you 2 If ye will not heare it not consider it in your heart to give glory unto my Name sayth the Lord of hostes I will even send a curse upon you and will curse your blessings yea I have cursed them already because ye doe not consider it in your heart 3 Behold I will corrupt your seede and cast dung upon your faces even the dung of your solemne feasts and you shall be like unto it 4 And ye shall know that I have sent this commandement unto you that my covenant which I made with Levi might stand saith the Lord of hostes 5 My covenant was with him of life and peace and I gave him feare and he feared me and was afrayde before my Name 6 The law of truth was in his mouth and there was no iniquity found in his lippes he walked with me in peace and equity and did turne many away from iniquity 7 For the Priests lips should preserve knowledge and they should seeke the Law at his mouth for he is the messenger of the Lord of hosts 8 But ye are gone out of the way ye have caused many to fall by the Law ye have broken the covenant of Levi sayth the Lord of hosts 9 Therefore have I also made you to be despised and vile before all the people because ye kept not my wayes but have beene partiall in the Law 10 Have we not all one father hath not one God made us why do we transgresse every one against his brother and breake the covenant of our fathers 11 Judah hath transgressed and an abomination is commited in Israel and in Jerusalem for Judah hath defiled the holinesse of the Lord which he loved and hath married the daughter of a strange god 12 The Lord will cut off the man that doth this both the master and the servant out
to Timothy and Titus by Saint Paul 1 Tim. 5.21 2.4.1 and that 2 Tim. 2.2 All the time Eli was young and able to looke to the worship of God being faithful it was pure and the offerings of God regarded 1 Sam. 1.2 So of Iehoradu 2 Chron. 24.2 Hence that Acts 20.28 Take heed therefore unto your selves and to all the flock whereof the holy Ghost hath made you everseers to feed the Church of God which he hath purchased with his own bloud Hence is that of Hegesippus in Eusebius while the Apostles lived and they who heard Christ teaching the Church remained a pure and incorrupt virgine but when that age was past errour and corruption was spread abroad Reason 1 Because while they are faithfull and watchfull the envious man will not sow his tares They who have desire to corrupt the puritie of doctrine and worship of God will not shew themselves or obscurely or fearfully and if they do yet they will be soone pulled up and the growth of them prevented Reason 2 Because the people shall by their diligence be armed by instruction to discern and withstand corruption from without and be excited against their owne coldnesse and carelesnesse which naturally would come upon them as naturally men thinke any thing too much and every thing good enough for Gods service unlesse they have remembrances to the contrary Vse 1 Then most commonly if not alwayes by the corruption and contempt of Gods service and worship we may gather the negligence carelesnesse and unfaithfulnesse of the Ministery in every Church and è contra for such people such Priests such followers such guides Travellers will hardly go before their guide but follow after him It may sometime fall out otherwise but that happeneth as many a careful master hath corrupt servants though he have never such care over them because his neighbours do not carefully and straitly bring up theirs so from the neighbour parishes But where the Ministers are joyntly faithfull they have not that corruption which otherwise would be Vse 2 To teach as many as desire and love the pure worship of God that it may continue and not be corrupted to do what is in them for their places and condition that there may be continued a faithfull and painfull Ministery Private men use private meanes to pray that the Lord of the harvest will thrust out still more and more labourers Others in their place to speake and advance Lawes and Ordinances for that purpose for if old and faithfull Eli be any way disenabled and his successors be Hophni and Phineas given to their bellies to idlenesse to prophanenesse and yet they may carry it out as they with little or no check and not be compelled to other carriage how shall not the offerings of God and his worship be contemned If Wolves be among the Flocks the Shepheards be asleep and watch them not by night in season and out of season how should they not be spoyled The nature of man of it selfe will be carelesse enough of the service of God how much more if they have corruptions nay if it want encouragers but finde bad and corrupt examples Vse 3 To admonish the Ministers seeing that upon them depends the purity or corruption the honour or contempt of the service of God as they have a desire that he whose they are whom they serve and who hath taken them so nigh unto himselfe may be honoured of his people and have pure and holy worship performed unto him so to be faithfull diligent in their places to teach and instruct to exhort and perswade men unto them As they ought to give the Lord no rest for his people being his remembrancers so not them for him being messenger for if they be carelesse and negligent as the people will grow corrupt so they will like themselves in their corruption For men who carry their sinnes away unrepented will take themselves not to sin and so no glory should be given to his Name How unfaithfull should that servant be who for sparing himselfe a little will let his masters honour fall to the ground so that Minister Be they as watchfull as they can they shall finde that this corruption will sease upon men and settle upon them if they wake them not how much more if they sleep will the enemy sow tares I will even send a curse upon you The curse in generall which is not for their sinne so much as for their impenitencie for so the coherence sheweth and this his long patience towards them I will even send a curse For the contempt of his worship comes many plagues and curses upon men vide cap. 1.14 Vpon you Though his Priests and deare to him yet that would not save them Doctrine No person can be free from the judgements of God if they sinne be they never so neere unto him either in place or particular profession or in generall profession of his Word as it is manifest here So Numb 20.12 Levit. 10.1.2 Eli and his sons 1 Sam. 4.2 Sam. 6. Vzzah Luke 1.18.20 Acts 5. Reason 1 Because when he cannot be sanctified in them he will be glorified Levit. 10.3 that is he will justifie himselfe and his justice when he spares not such as are nigh to him For as it was the greater manifestation of Salomons justice that he put a murtherer to death and a great on Ioab so the more that he put him to death at the hornes of the Altar 1 Kings 2.31 Reason 2 Because he might either purge their present condition or prevent their future sinnes and keep both them and others from presuming What better meanes then sharp medicines and severity in punishing Deut. 13.11 Vse 1 Then from the judgements of God upon men of a speciall or generall profession may not a man condemne the profession because this proves the professors not to be such as they should be as many are ready to condemne the Ministery and the profession of pietie from some judgments that happen unto them that are in the profession Admit that the judgement argue the corruption yet must it not condemne the profession or the place * Si videris sacerdotem indignum non ob id calumniari sacerdotium debes neque enim calumnianda res est sed ille solum meretur onerari convitiis quitanto bono abutatur Non enim si Judas proditor fuit hoc Apostolicae professionis crimen sed unius tantum viri mens improba fuit medici quidem multi carnifices sunt qui pro medelis venenum propinant nec tamen artē vitupero sed qui arte sua iniquus abutitur nautae quamplures navigia amiserunt nec ars navigandi tamen corum perversa voluntas jure damnanda Chrysostom If you see an unworthy Priest you may not presently slander the Priesthood but him who abuses it If Iudas were a traytor it was his owne fault and not to be laid to the Apostolicall profession Many
to the sicke or queamish * Omnis panis nutrimentum affert ad salutem agris autem saepè inutilis sic omnis Scriptura mundis munda Basil ad Chyl de solita vita so is the Scripture pure unto the pure And if any seeme unclean and uncomely it is to those that are such in themselves For other things that men thinke unfit to be taught because of the greatnesse of the mystery and the depth of them I say as to the former If Paul have written of election and reprobation and hath said All things that are written are profitable and are for learning in the same Epistle where he specially handles those things why should they not be taught but with wisedome in their place That which S. Chrysostome speaks in another case we may apply to this * Magister literarum puerulum de gremio matris acceptum ignarum omnium primis tantummodo imbuit elementis quem rursus alius magister accipiens perfectioribus instruit disciplinis Chrys Hom. 9. in Gen. A petty School-master that takes a young childe from his mothers lap ignorant yet of all things onely teacheth him his first letters whom another master takes and instructs after in higher learning so in the knowledge of the Scriptures For as all men cannot dive and fetch pretious stones from the deepe but he that is cunning and hath the Art of it so not all but the wife can either teach or conceive the deep mysteries First children must be taught letters then sillables after words then construction and after all the matter So is it here Vse 2 This teacheth the Minister of God how diligent he ought to be both in his private state and publicke preaching both to finde out the whole will and counsell of God and to deliver it to his people he must exercise himselfe in diligent reading of the Scriptures and comparing of spirituall things with spirituall as Daniel did Chap. 9.2 his time must not be spent in hunting after profits and preferments not in idlenesse pleasures and pastimes more than such recreation as is helpfull to make him fit in body and minde for his Ministery Ars is longa and vita is brevis therefore had he not need to lose no more time then needes must but spend it so as that the Scripture may dwell in him by which he may be made perfect to his workes 2 Tim. 3.17 Then must be instant to teach it cap. 4.2 To deliver the whole counsell of God But no man knowes the whole counsell of God how can he deliver it to others and many have not life and time to deliver it If any man know it not by his owne fault not searching for it not studying and endevouring it will not excuse him but condemne him the more If God hide something from him it is without doubt such a thing as is not so profitable to be knowne or taught and not required of him If God shorten his dayes and that in the first yeare or second of his Ministery there is no more required of him then he can performe so the default be not his Vse 3 To teach the hearers that they must endevour by diligent hearing to know from the Ministers the whole law of God the whole counsell of God for therefore must the one teach that the other may receive it For he would not have it delivered onely because it should be spoken but that it should be learned and received If any say they are not able to conceive and are not capable of it I answere their children at first are not capable of all the learning the School-master can teach them yet at length and by successe and progresse he learnes as much as he can teach him and is fit for a higher Schoole So may it be with them The wit and capacity of man is compared by one to the wombe of a woman which at the first is not able to containe the infant if it were at first conception as perfect for quantity as when it is borne but as parts are added to parts so is it enlarged so they when Christ is formed in them And there was no iniquity found in his lips The second commendable part in them they never taught errour nor deceived his people with lies Doctrine The Minister of God must not corrupt the doctrine of religion nor teach any errour unto his people whether touching knowledge or obedience in matter of doctrine or manners If it was Aarons commendations it is others commandment Hence are the reproofes Isa 3.12 Jer. 23.13.16 Ezek. 13.10.14 Acts 20.29.30 2 Cor. 2.17 Gal. 1.8 Jude vers 13. Reason 1 Because when he exhorteth and perswadeth he may the better be beleeved and prevaile For the case is here as in common affaires once taken in a lie hardly beleeved afterwards so once in an errour and uncertaine in his judgement hardly beleeved again and things before and after will be doubted of Reason 2 Because he being a guide of others a leader of the blinde it is not with him as with another a private man whose errour may live and die with himselfe but it is the hurt of many even so many as are led by him who are readier to wander with him then to walk in the right way after him Vse 1 This sheweth how farre the Priests of Popery are from being true and commendable Priests before the Lord who deliver nothing but lies unto their people For as they have turned the truth of God into a lie hardly holding any one point of the truth truly and uncorrupt but having falsified all the truth of God so that which they specially preach unto the people are lying legends the false reports of lying and false Saints their lying miracles of foolish childish ridiculous impossible things that were done by them That Paul said of the Cretians Tit 1.12 so I may truly of them It were infinite and unprofitable to enter particulars This one thing may sufficiently prove that they have no meaning the people should be taught the truth seeing it is manifest they forbid their Priests to read such things as they may understand the truth by to teach the people or to see more of the truth then ordinary men do For there was an inhibition by his Holinesse that no Priest should be allowed to read Bellarmine because he hath more truly set down the truth as we hold and more largely then others have done therfore none may read him without speciall licence lest they should see the truth and none must be licenced but such as are sufficient grounded Priests that there is no fear they should receive any tincture of the truth being such obstinate heretickes already He walked with me in peace and equity The third thing commended in him his sincere faithfull and upright walking in his place and calling Doctrine The Minister of God ought to walke with God in peace and equitie that is to have his conversation so holy
the wife the particular here spoken of and è contra putting one another way or taking others with them when they promised the contrary but of that after Many forsaking one another in extreamity and sickenesse when they promised and that without exception of any sickenesse still to cleave to them In many as it is infidelity to God so is it perfidie to their husbands and so è contra Many masters unfaithfull to their servants not teaching not bringing them up as they promised not providing for them things necessary in health and sickenesse Many servants unfaithfull to their Master like Iudas like Sion more then Gebez●i that 〈◊〉 but the gaine his master refused they that which is proper to the master Many men one with another deale unfaithfully promising things they either cannot or never meane to performe or know cannot be so many a seller promiseth his ware shall prove thus and thus when he knowes the contrary Many a buyer to pay at such and such a day when he never intends it and knowes before hand he shall not be able Many promising onely to bee free from the importunity of some or trouble of others onely is a matter of complement without any conscience of it when it is once passed them they are guilty of perfidie and unfaithfulnesse and besides are drawne to many wicked and rash oathes for deceiving they are not beleeved which makes them adde to confirme their credit heady and rush oathes Vse 2 To perswade every one to avoide this and to labour to deale faithfully one with another and to be faithfull and true in promises husband to wife c. Seeing it is cōmended unto us 1. from the example of the Lord himselfe whose fidelity in keeping of his promise is to be imitated of us if we would be repured his children 2. From the testimony of the holy Ghost where it is made one of the notes of Gods children Psal 15.4.3 The promise of a great blessing Pro. 28.20 And cōmanded to us not amongst matters of small importance but amongst the weightier points of the law Math. 23.23 Not when it is in great matters but in lesse for as all disobedience is more displeasing when the thing commanded is small because the obedience was so easie August So unfaithfulnesse in the smallest things is the most displeasing to God when fidelity was so easie therefore must we be carefull to performe in all things that we promise and therefore be carefull how we promise that it be of things in our owne power or probability like to be in our power In many things whether we will promise or no it is in our power as Acts 5.4 but when it is made we are bound to the performance of it yea though it cannot be performed without great losse and hindrance And breake the covenant of our fathers That is offend against that law which God gave unto our fathers it being usuall in Scripture to call the law by his name and covenant Psal 119. And this is the royall law according to that James 2.8 Why doe we transgresse c. And break the covenant of c. It is therefore accounted a sinne because it breakes the covenant the law which God hath given unto his people Doctrine Every thing is good or evill righteousnes or sin lawfull to be done or unlawfull not as it is profitable or hurtfull not as it may benefit men or may by Gods providence be turned to his glory and make for it but as it is agreeable or repugnant to the law and word of God Thus he reproveth these because they had gone against the law This is manifest by that 1. John 3.4 Whosoever committeth sinne transgresseth also the law for sinne is the transgression of the law And by that Rom. 7.7 Reason 1 Because the Law and Word of God is the perfect rule of all actions and so ordained of God now in an art whatsoever is according to the rule is good but what is different must needes be corrupt so in this Againe the law is Gods will now every thing is as he willeth or nilleth it good or evil for they are not such and then he willeth or nilleth them but his willing or nilling them maketh them such Reason 2 Because whatsoever is just is good what unjust is evill but whatsoever is agreeable to the law of justice is just and è contra Reason 3 Because whatsoever is agreeable to charity which is the sum of the law is good whatsoever repugnant evill Vse 1 This will confute apoint of Popery whereby they allow things to be done though contrary to the law so they be done with a good intent or with a good zeal for a good end for so it is in the glosse upon Gratians decrees Malum factum excusatur per bonam intentionem And againe Excusatur malum si sit bone zelo propter bonum And upon this ground they allow murdering of Princes massacring of people treason in subjects treachery in servants disobedience in children that they may dishonour their parents deny them and forsake them so it be bono zelo propter bonum And be lawfull to doe any thing And this must make it good contrary to the apparent word of God here and that Rom. 3.8 so contrary is the spirit of Antichrist to Christs spirit Vse 2 To convince amongst our selves men who allow and maintaine many sins because they are profitable to others not hurtfull to them and therefore they think they may be done though they be contrary to the law One or two instances Many hold an officious lye lawfull because it may stand with charity when it is profitable for their neighbour But if against the law and word of God which forbiddeth lyes how should it not be sinne and unlawfull to be done besides they must understand that charity which is the summe of the law hath reference towards God towards our neighbour towards our selves And so is this against charity though helpfull to thy neighbour in whose favour it is told First because it is repugnant to verity and therefore to charity for God who is Truth hath forbidden all untruth as that which is opposite to him and so cannot stand with the charity and obedience we owe to God Secondly it is to the hurt of the teller because Psal 5.6 The lying mouth destroyeth the soule So it cannot stand with love which a man oweth to himselfe Now then though a man may helpe his brother and neighbour with the losse of his goods and hinderance that way but not necessary with the hazard of his life at all times but never with the hazard of his soule as every lyer shall doe Againe things must first be considered whether lawfull or no whether agreeable to the word and then whether profitable or hurtfull that is a second affection of things and a second consideration They cannot be lawfull but they will be profitable though not in our carnal apprehension nor unlawfull
make her a servant to himselfe nor sell her to another which thing they accounted a burden By which things God endeavoured rather to cure such an inordinate love and affection then to give liberty to it Finally some adde that these were used for signes of her repentance and renouncing of her false worship and if she were converted then was it lawfull Object If such doe match together whether is their marriage lawfull or whether a marriage or no Answer Many of the learned doe thinke it is none but ought to be dissolved Tertullian hath called it stuprum The ground of all their reason is because God hath forbidden such mariages to be made therefore they ought to be dissolved but this saving their judgement is not universally true but rather that many things quae fieri non debent facta valent For instance in the like There is a twofold infidell one who doth openly professe it and deny some maine Article of faith as that there is no such Trinity in the Unity Another who professeth in words and denyeth it in deeds and is in heart an infidell It is not lawfull to marry with either of these being known not the later But say a man or woman do marry and after it appeareth whether is it a lawfull marriage or no I presume no man will thinke that after the knowledge of it there ought to be a divorce made But to unfold this as I thinke more fully I would demand this question whether if one of the parties fall after the marriage into heresie whether stands the marriage good or whether ought there to be a divorce Papists generally thinke there should be a divorce à Thoro non à vinculo a divorce unknowne to the Scriptures Celestinus thought à vinculo though Innocentius was much against him Many of our learned men thinke it will breake a contract not a marriage onely they hold liberum divortium That is when all the meanes and wayes are taken to bring them from their errour and heresie and the party infected will not dwell with the other or not without blaspheming or reproaching of Christ they may freely with consent one depart from the other but if he will abide in peace with the sound party he or she is not to put him or her away which by proportion is gathered from that 1 Cor. 7.13.14.15 which place though it be understood of those who were found in their heathenish marriages and visited so of the grace of God And so as Tertullian saith allowes not the faithfull to make marriages with the unbeleevers yet it affoords some equity and direction when they are once made and so that they are lawfull marriages de facto though not lawfully made de jure VERS XII The Lord will cut off the man that doth this both the master and the servant out of the Tabernacle of Iaakob and him that offereth an offering unto the Lord of hostes THE Lord will cut off the man that doth this In this Verse the Prophet threatneth the judgement of God against them for this sinne even the cutting of them off from the tents of Iaakob whosoever commits any such thing whether he that teacheth or is instructed Priest or people whether he stand out obstinately or hypocritically he would seem to appease his anger by some offering The Lord will cut off The Lord will not put up this injury done to him and his daughters but whatsoever he be that either shall doe this hereafter or hath done it and repents and reformes it not every one of them will I cut off and destroy Hierom observes it here as worth the observation that he cuts not men off from pardon or the hope of it for he saith not the Lord curseth him that doth this but hee that shall doe it prolonging his curse as it were for the time to come that he might provoke the offendours to repentance Will cut off It is a phrase like that Gen. 17.14 Exo. 12.15 which Tremelius thus interpreteth that is both here and in the world to come he shall be cut off from the company society of the Saints faithfull The Metaphor as some probably thinke is borrowed from Physitians who cut off the body putrified and rotten members and have often occasion and necessity so to doe As if the wicked were but rotten and putrified members in the Church The man that shall doe this A sentence without exception whosoever he be it shall be all one to him who accepts no mans person Both the master and the servant and particularly both master and servant The Interpreter in the Latine hath Master and Disciple or Scholar following rather the signification then the originall for that is either he that watcheth and answereth or he that exciteth and answereth But for the meaning some difference there is some understand by the watcher or exciter the teacher who watcheth that he may teach true things unto his scholars or hearers and excite their mindes by the answerer the scholar or hearer who followes the master and for further instruction answereth to his demands or questions And so by this should be signified that both the people and the Priests who were authours and warranters or assurers of their course by precept or practice should perish together Others take it more generally and more probably The meaning is one and other and all not one man of those shall escape who are defiled with these profane marriages no not any one of those families shall be left alive but be cut off Out of the Tabernacles of Iacob That is from Gods people or Gods Church some thinke it is taken for the Cities of Iacob as they thinke it to be taken Psal 87.2 But all is to one purpose for those Cities were part of the Church And him that offereth an offering unto the Lord. Some understand these words particularly of the Priest who as we may read Ezra 9. and 10. were not free from this So the Chaldie Paraphrast interpreteth it and Cyril shewing that though he came nigh to the hornes of the Altar yet should he not be there safe with his sins But some understand it more generally though they should be very liberall in offerings unto me and think so to escape my wrath yet though they should be as liberall as the hypocrites Micha 6. yet should not that help for they shall perish with their offerings The Lord will cut off Though the Magistrate will not looke to this evill being carelesse or corrupt though he cannot because many are wrapt in it and the multitude too strong for him or howsoever it be not punished by man yet the Lord will not let it escape his hand but he will cut him off Doctrine When men and they who are in authority to whom the sword of justice is committed do not punish the corruptions and sinnes of their subjects whether they omit it for feare or favour by the greatnesse or the bribery of the offenders or any
such meanes then will the Lord take his rod in hand to punish and gird his sword unto him to cut off every one so sinning and so spared So here So when Adam the Prince of the earth and Magistrate of his sonnes let passe the murther of Abel because Cain was his first borne and his possession yet the Lord did lay to his hand and did punish him Gen. 4.11.12 c. So of the sonnes of Eli 1 Sam. 2.23.24 and 4.11 not simply a judgement to fall in battell but because it was prophesied of them Chap. 2.34 This is manifest further out of the story of Achan while by ignorance of the fact Ioshua did not punish it the Lord did it in the whole people but after the knowledge of it when Iosua had punished it the Lord put up his sword and his wrath ceased Josh 7. To these we may adde that of Numb 25.3.4 c. the cause of the great famine 2 Sam. 21. was the Kings not punishing of a sinne committed by Sauls house which done the famine ended Reason 1 Because as Iehosaphat told the Judges their judgements were his which if they executed he will not because he will not punish one fact twice but if not they then will he because he is just and else should be unjust as well as they for if it be injustice in them to spare the wicked it would be in him Reason 2 Because impunity from the Magistrate makes impenitencie in the offenders and brings them on to hardnesse of heart and security so that they never judge themselves and so neither judged by authority nor by themselves they are judged of the Lord as the contrary proves 1 Cor. 11. For I take it it will hold not onely of those sinnes a man is guilty in foro conscientiae but in foro civili Vse 1 This sheweth the folly of those men who as they make conscience of no sinne and onely care to avoid those sinnes the lawes of men and state will punish them for so when they are fallen into any such offences care onely how to escape the punishment of the law and the hands of the Magistrate which if they can by favour or friendship by bribes or the countenance of others or by dissembling or covering of the fault or howsoever the care is taken and they never feare more Their folly appeareth because then the Lord will take them into his owne hands and that saith the Apostle is a fearfull thing And more cause of feare as Christ speaketh Matth. 10.28 What will it profit them then to escape the one and fall into the hands of the other As much as if a murderer should by means and money either get his fact passed over at the Sessions and fall into the hands of the Judges at the Assizes or scape their hands either by corrupting the Judge or the Sheriffe to pack a Jury for his purpose or the fore-man to lead the rest when the next of kindred is ready to enter an appeale to the Kings Bench where there shall be no such packing All he hath got by it is his repriving for a while but to his greater shame and punishment So with these Many a great man lives in oppressing and injuring others his tenants and inferiours and either there is no civill law against him or if there be either his greatnesse or purse will carry it out well enough that no punishment shall come upon him or take hold of him and then hee sleepeth without feare when he is as a man that hath escaped the rage of a foole and is fallen into the power of a Bear robbed of her whelps As Masters if they live in oppression or usury or deceit or drunkennesse or adultery or some such like and can escape the Magistrates hands by the meanes they make feare nothing That is their folly there is more cause of feare God will take them into his hand Many servants when they have injured and dealt deceitfully with their Masters stealing from them or serving them with eye-service mis-spending their goods and not furthering by their endevours their profites if they can escape their masters hands by lying or shifting or dissembling or by his negligence lenity or remisnesse they never feare this is their folly there is now more cause of feare God will take them into his hand to cut them off by the plague or some other judgement Finally let these and all the like see their folly that thinke there is no feare if they can escape the hand and sword of man by such meanes yet there will be no escaping of the hand of God who will as he saith send serpents that will not be charmed Jerem. 8.17 O consider this yee that forget God! as if hee would not judge the earth when men neglect it least hee teare you in pieces Vse 2 The cause why God sendeth generall judgements upon such a City or Land as ours is why he drawes forth his sword or sends famine pestilence plague or such like It is because the Magistrates of that country or towne are remisse and carelesse suffer sinne unpunished and uncensured for some respect or other making either munera oris or manus or officii For if these did not let them but they would purge the land from the bloud and the adulteries whoredomes thefts oppressions blasphemies and such things wherewith it is defiled there would never come any such generall judgements For if the Justices at the Sessions should reforme throughly and deliver the goale every one to his severall punishment the Judges should have little cause to ride circuit or if they did but to make short ones So if Magistrates God would not punish or if he did yet not so long as three yeares famine and three yeares pestilence So that of all the enemies of a Common-wealth none is so great as remisse carelesse and corrupt Magistrates for they are a cause of Gods generall judgements when as their severity would prevent And none such a fore-runner of some generall judgement as they and their remisnesse and in a Magistrate it is better for the generall good that he be too severe punishing some he ought and might spare then remisse passing by others that deserve it As a Surgeon better too deepe or too nigh then too little in tenting or cutting To teach every inferiour not to seeke and labour to escape the hand and punishing of the Magistrate or his superior who is as a Magistrate unto him his master or parent if he have offended and deserved it specially remaining by that immunity impenitent in his sin for besides that it is sinne to him so to avoyde it it will be but a further meanes to bring him to the hands of God who will punish him more severely and fearefully cut him off from the tents of Iaakob If any say this falls but out seldome here and there one and so no such feare of it I answer with Cyprian l. de laps Plectuntur interim
quidam quo caeteri corrigantur exempla sunt omnium tormenta paucorum These few should be warning to others lest they also perish Againe are there but few who can remember the many thousands that God hath taken away and cut off by the plague of inferiours and servants and such like whose superiors had beene remisse towards them and yet say this befalleth but to few Or lastly who can think of many thousands who are lying broyling in hell and so cut off from the tents of Iakob by the Lord though man winked at them who happily if they had felt the severity of magistracy might have beene saved and yet say there is but a few And though many yet have escaped and doe or may escape though the plague renew upon us with their adulteries c. because this is but the poore mans plague or the servants yet who sees not that even for the rich and the masters the Lord hath a plague for them as Micha 2.3 and happily will it be for them if 1 Cor. 11. they judge not themselves That doth this or that shall doe this God will not presently smite them though they have committed this offence but he will waite for their returne if they continue to do it then will he cut them off Hence the patience of God to sinners waiting for their conversion vide Revel 3. and Isaiah 30. or rather I observe that though the Lord a long time spare the wicked yet he will visite them and pay them home in the end Isa 26.14 Both the master and the servant Both him that wakeneth and exciteth and him that is wakened and answereth the call meaning the whole house and family should be cut off Doctrine Gods judgements against the wicked rest not in them onely but also are extended to their families seed and posterity Isa 26.14 and destroyed all their memory Out of the Tabernacle of Iaakob That is take them out of the land of the living bringeth death upon them and putteth an end to their daies and letteth them be no longer among the living Though it may reach to their cutting off from heaven yea it containeth this whence Doctrine It is a judgement to the wicked to be cut off eyther naturally or violently untimely or in his ripe age Isaiah 26.14 and scattered them And him that offereth an offering Or him also that offered Though he offer noting the nature of men that when they are convinced of their sinnes they thinke to please God by outward things as sacrifices or fastings or outward hearing and multitude of prayers though they continue in their sinnes Doctrine It is the nature and practice of carnall and naturall men when the judgements of God are denounced against their sinnes and the wrath of God declared against them To take any course to free and deliver themselves from them and to appease his wrath rather then humble themselves and forsake their sinnes And sometimes by flying to humane helpes sometimes by religiousenesse as by offerings or fastings afflicting the body outward hearing and multitude of praying and such like It is manifest in these so in Saul 1 Sam. 15.14.15 And Hezekiah when he was led by nature and the common course of men 2 Kings 18.14 So in them Mich 6.6.7 and Isai 58.2.3 c. Reason Because it is naturall unto them they have it with other corruptions propagated from their first parents for thus Adam and Eve dealt with the Lord Gen. 3. Vse To see the policy of Antichrist and the Church of Rome who knowes not from how many things the Antichristian Church of Rome promiseth to her followers remission of sinne and so freedome from the judgements of God never once making mention of true repentance or forsaking of their sinne As the Sacrament of pennance almes-deeds forgiving of injuries and offences abundance of charity holy water sprinkled devout beating of the breast whipping of themselves pilgrimages all sorts of good workes And as the Rhemist in Math. 10. ver 12. Episcopall blessing for Christs death with them doth not take away daily sinnes but originall the sacrifice of the Masse doth that Sicut corpus Domini semel oblatum est in cruce pro debita originali sic offertur jugiter pro nostris quotidiaenis delictis in altari Thomas de sacra Altaris So as the body of our Lord was once offered upon the crosse for our originall debt so it is continually offered upon the altar for our daily sinnes And Catharinus in libro impresso Romae writeth * Christi passionem pro originali tantū peccato satisfecisse actualibus baptis antecedentibus missam vero satisfacere pro peccatis baptismum primam justificationem sequentibus Catharinus in libro impresso Romae That Christs passion made satisfaction onely for originall and such sinnes as went before baptisme but the Masse satisfies for sinnes committed after baptisme and our first justification Finally to say nothing of their Jubile and their Ladies Psalter and her Pantofle and an hundred such things And him that offereth an offering Though he offer an offering and thinke thereby to escape and appease Gods wrath yet shall he not prevaile nor escape Doctrine In vaine do men thinke to appease the wrath of God and to escape his judgements when he is angry and threatneth by any outward means as offerings fastings prayers and such performance of parts of his worship they remaining impenitent in their sinnes and keeping them still So is it here and manifest in that Micha 6.6.7.8 and Isaiah 58. à 2. ad finem Psal 51.16.17 Reason 1 Because God is a Spirit and he will be worshipped in spirit and truth outward things onely cannot please him being different from his nature yea they that onely bring them worship him neither in Spirit nor truth but in body and outward things in hypocrisie and dissembling c. Reason 2 Because all offerings a man brings to God all outward service he performes to him is accepted not for it selfe but if it be it is for him or else rejected for him and not he for it for though men which are corrupt doe accept men for their gifts and disliking their persons yet feeling from their purses they will soone change their mindes and like of them whatsoever they disliked before shall be excused and lessened It is not so with God he accepts men not for their gifts but their gifts for them or else rejects them and their gifts Reason 3 Because they shew more contempt against the Lord then if they never sought him with any such meanes or came before him which is manifest thus A man hath offended his Prince for which he threatneth and menaceth him to execute or destroy him If he seek not to him at all by any outward means or come not to him when he is summoned it is but contumacy not contempt for he may doe it out of feare Now contempt and feare cannot stand together in one subject but if
say of hearts ease that growes not in every mans garden lesse is it in every mans house so not sanctification it is in few mens hearts and manifest not to be there where there is injustice dishonesty no love of God would we marvaile to see men performe no duties to those they are knowne not to love Love and affection being the ground of all duty if not why this Nay rather seeing the wickednesse injustice and oppression of the time is such we should rather wonder there is any religion at all then that there is no more that there is any love to the truth c. then so little Vse 2 To teach us what to judge of many men who seeme religious who will sit at Gamaliels feet have Christ to teach in their streets and Churches he shall eat at their tables and houses and yet they are workers of iniquity live in some one grosse sinne or another of injustice and oppression deceit or unfaithfulnesse and uncleannesse yea after they have beene convinced by the word remaine still in them know them to be but hypocrites they may talke of religion but they have no truth of it they may have the shew of goodlinesse but not the power of it They honor the word Ministers onely as Saul would have Samuel to accompany him for his owne honor before the people or some other sinister respect It is not a sure consequent a man is carefull of the duties of the second table and therefore religious because hitherto by nature he hath beene so there are some civil hypocrites as well as religious hypocrites but the cōtrary cōsequent is good And oftentimes the issue of things proves not to be good for though they hold out a while in such profession yet at length they fall away either when some trouble comes for it that they may enjoy their lives and liberties and so their sinnes And so as Iust Martyr Apol. Ret. Christian made his reason that they were not as they were accused voluptuous intemperate and such like because they so willingly embraced death for their professions sake for then they would have renounced that and deceived Princes to have enjoyed these So on the contray Or else they after twice or thrice standing are deprived of all that as Sampson was of his strength by Dalilah Vse 3 To teach every man that would either preserve himselfe from irreligion or approve that to others that he seemeth to have to keepe himselfe from or to put from him all injustice dishonesty unfaithfulnesse towards men For else this will abandon religion out of his heart and devour up all true profession as Pharoahs leane kine devoured his fat this wil make men judge as wel they may and with warrant that there is no truth of religion in all that shew I deny not but a man may have the truth of religion and should have wrong done him if he be otherwise judged of and yet lye in some sinne against the second table either because he knew it not or the strength of the temptation hath blinded him or the blow he had by it hath for a while stammered him as did David But if they be once convinced of it and wakened as David If Nathan have reproved them plainely yet not so particular yet so as they knew they were the men if they hold on in that sinne it will soon make them irreligious for it will make them out of love with the word and Ministery and then he that judgeth shall have his sentence sealed up by God And Christ shall make it good with that Luke 13.27 I tell you I know ye not whence ye are depart from me all ye workers of iniquity Ye have wearied the Lord with your words Their words were against God they spake wickedly and blasphemy against him Doctrine To blaspheme God to speake impiously of him of his providence power governement and such like is a fearefull sinne James 2.7 Vse 1 If this be such a sinne and God have an action against this people for it how justly may he nay hath he taken a controversie against us and our City when our words are still against him for how is every place defiled with blasphemies and oathes the streets and houses tavernes and mens private families shops and offices who is free from it neither master nor servant husband nor wife parents nor children old nor young buyer nor seller magistrate nor subject If the law for blasphemers were in force that they should be stoned what a cry would be in our City more then when the first borne was slaine in Egypt for old and young should be taken away but if onely the guiltlesse must cast stones at them scarce one of twenty would be found to accuse or execute others This sinne begunne in a swaggerer a stabber and if it had continued there it had beene well but to cease upon a civill City and civill people that there should be as many oathes sworne within a small compasse in it as in a great band of such desperate ruffians it is most fearefull and if God devour them with the sword for such blasphemies why not us with the plague I say nothing of other blasphemies of accusing the providence power and government of God Vse 2 To teach us to resist and reforme this vice every man in himselfe and in his and labour to feare the great and fearefull name of God and use it with reverence and speak of him and his providence and workes with all humility and honour Give him as much honour as to our garments which are more pretious then others for how is it not most absurd that a man having one garment more excellent then others cannot indure it continually to be abused and yet rashly and upon every occasion abuse the name of God Let us not thinke those excuses of necessity and we cannot be beleeved will goe for currant before God or he provoked me for so the first blasphemer could have said for himselfe But as no man will drinke poyson willingly or upon any necessity so should he not take an oath De probo dicturo dicimus o● tuum ablue ita commemora nunc verò nomen super omne nomen venerandum in omni terrâ admirabile quod audientes Daemones horrent temerarie circumferemus O consuetudinem Chrysost ho. 26. ad pop Ant. And to make a more speedy reformation write upon the walls of thy house and of thy heart that same flying booke Zac. 5.2.3 And thinke this is flying to judgement and so fly thou as fast from thine oathes And as the Egyptians thrust Israel out of Egypt because for them the first borne of the King and peasant was slaine so doe with your oathes Ye have wearied the Lord with your words The Prophet saith not barely your words are against the Lord As Isa 3.8 but the Lord is wearied and vexed with them speaking after the manner of men who are vexed with things
them as Zach. 8.17 And let none of you imagine evill in his heart against his neighbour and love no false oath for all these are the things that I hate saith the Lord. If not for the haynousnesse of the sinne yet for the punishment If not in a state where there is little law against it yet in a Church where the King of it is both a swift Witnesse and a severe Judge and will both judge and condemne every false swearer S. Chrysostome disswading from this sinne and perswading little at length breakes forth into this * Vtinam mihi liceret frequenter jurantium animas exuere ipsorum oculis subjicere vulnera cicatrices quas quotidie capiunt à juramentis nec admonitionis nec concilii indigeremus quoniam vulneram aspectus omni sermone potentius Hom. 14. ad pop Antioch I would I might uncover and lay open the soules of ordinarie swearers naked and set their wounds and skarres before their eyes which they daily receive by oathes then there would be no need of admonition or counsell because the sight of their wounds would more prevaile then all my words This would I wish to give them the sight of their sin and the guilt of it but if it prevaile not I would I could give them the sence of it that I could make them see and beleeve the judgements and punishments which belong to it that the flying booke full of curses is long since come abroad and is ready to seize upon their houses and persons That Christ will certainely as he heareth every oath so judge them for it and lay heavy plagues upon them Me thinkes this should be like the Ship-masters voyce Jonah 1.6 What meanest thou O swearer call upon God that thou perish not And so to be carefull to avoid them themselves to reforme them in theirs not swearing for gaine lesse for pleasure or vanity not for curtesie as in sitting down and taking places not in passion and such like but remembring the law thinking of the judgement not forgetting the Judge and so not alleadging excuses Jam. 5.12 But before all things my brethren sweare not neither by heaven nor by earth nor by any other oath but let your yea be yea and your nay nay least ye fall into condemnation And against those who wrongfully keep back the hirelings w●ges The fourth particular is oppression and the particulars of this are severall this the first that when a man hath hired and used another and had his labour and sweat whether he were hired by day weeke or yeare whether by day or by whole if they retaine their wages from them unjustly deny it them directly or under some colour or diminish it or defer it which is an injury unto them he will judge them Doctrine The Lord he will judge and condemne and destroy all such as keepe backe their hirelings wages which for his living worketh with him either by day moneth or yeare and such are here threatned Like to this that Jer. 22.13 Wo unto him that buildeth his house by unrighteousnesse and his chambers without equity he useth his neighbour without wages and giveth him not for his worke Jam. 5.4 Behold the hire of the labourers which have reaped your fields which is of you kept backe by fraud crieth and the cries of them that have reaped are entered into the eares of the Lord of Hoasts Reason 1 Because they transgresse the law of justice which requires they should give to every man his owne and not withhold the right from the owner of it but they having had their labour their wages is then the others right and due so that to withhold it is injustice but all unjust men he will judge and destroy Reason 2 Because they are cruell and unmercifull for a mercifull man will not defraud his beast but gives him his due when he laboureth for him regarding that Deut. 25.4 Thou shalt not muzell the Oxe that treadeth out the Corne. God speakes not for oxen but for men and if mercy be not shewed here then Jam. 2.13 There shall be judgement mercilesse to him that sheweth no mercy and mercy rejoyceth against judgement Vse 1 Then are there many in this City many I fear nay it is without feare hearers of the word whom the Lord will judge because they keep backe the hire of the labourer and are the labourers pursebearers and cofferers whether they will or no verily Christ shall judge them for it will they nill they Vse 2 To teach those who have servants or use hirelings to take the Apostles rule Collo 4.1 Do not detaine and defraud them of their wages it is equall it is right you should give it them know you else you have a Master in Heaven give it them chearefully fully readily not fraudulently else this Master shall be your Judge and he is the witnesse of all your fraud if you have done it do it no more and for that is done make them restitution search your bookes and see wherein you have defrauded them Deut. 24.14.15 Thou shalt not oppresse an hired servant that is needy and poore neither of thy brethren nor of the stranger that is in the land within thy gates thou shalt give him his hire for his day neither shall the sunne go downe upon it for he is poore and therewith sustaineth his life lest he crie against thee unto the Lord and it be sin unto thee And vex the widowes The second particular of the fourth kind of sinners whom the Lord will judge namely such as vex injure and oppresse widowes howsoever this with those which follow are usually joyned together in the Scripture yet because he that doth any one of these though he do them not all shall be judged of Christ I will speake of them briefely and severally Doctrine The Lord he will come neer to judgement to punishment and destruction against all those who vex oppresse and injure the widowes So is it here And that Exod. 22.22.23.24 Ye shall not trouble any widow nor fatherlesse child If thou vex or trouble such and so he call and crie unto me I will surely heare his cry Then shall my wrath be kindled and I will kill you with the sword and your wives shall be widowes and your children fatherlesse Deuter. 27.19 Cursed be he that hindereth the right of the stranger the fatherlesse and the widow and all the people shall say so be it Jer. 22.3.5 Matth. 23.14 Wo be unto you Scribes and Pharises hypocrites for ye devoure widowes houses even under a colour of long prayers wherefore ye shall receive the greater damnation The sinne is made the greater because it is coloured and the punishment threatned to be heavier but a wo is denounced against them because of the simple sin Reason 1 Because they are guilty not onely of injustice but cruelty of cruell injustice for to injure and vex any is injustice but to vex widowes and such as are weake and helplesse is cruelty
if they do in all their lives Others that are Guerdons and Tutors having their portions give unto them such liberty that by their indulgences they grow unthrifts that of their possessions and mooveables they often interest themselves and strip them of all often defrauding them of many things wherewith they were put intrust many feed them with money and inwrap them into bonds to be paid when they come to yeares treble and quadrible that they are often out of their wealth before they be at yeares Many Executors put in trust with the whole estate make their fathers conditions far worse then it was that in this case that part of the proverbe is true There is never any dead man rich that is so rich as he is or was accounted before and in truth was yet Executors extenuate and lessen his state to better themselves counting him a bad Cooke who cannot licke his owne fingers In this number of sinners may go many fathers in law who marrying the widow to inrich her to himselfe cares not how he defraud the children many mothers to advance themselves care not what become of the children of their owne bodies with infinite such which happily many men of more experience could better decipher them but if there be others not touched by me he that is both witnesse and Judge seeth all and will judge and indeed doth judge the former oppressions in the age before by that which is in our age and will this by that which is to come I will make your children fatherlesse and so helplesse As Samuel to Agag 1. Sam. 15.33 But besides all this he will fearefully destroy all such Vse 3 To perswade all guilty persons though not before men yet before God to enter into themselves and examine their owne lives and former practise and see that they repent of this sinne as well as others and if they do truly let them make restitution to such else that may we use Mich. 6.10 Are yet the treasures of wickednesse in the house of the wicked and the scant measure that is abhominable and set it on with verses 11.12.13 shall I justifie the wicked balances and the bag of deceitfull waights for the rich men thereof are full of cruelty the inhabitants thereof have spoken lies and their tongue is deceitfull in their mouth therefore also will I make thee sicke in smiting thee Chrysost ho. 5. de paenitent To. 5. p 734 a.b.c. 2. and in making thee desolate because of thy sinnes For no restitution no repentance where there is knowledge and ability of all without a man do it And oppresse the stranger The fourth particular injuring and oppressing of strangers some were strangers by nature but proselites to the religion of the Jewes and these I take it are not accounted strangers nor so called they had happily a note given them and signification of it that they were of some other country As 2 Sam. 11.6 Vriah the Hittite and 1 Sam. 26.6 Abimelech the Hittite but they were as if they had beene borne in the Land and of these I take it he speaketh not here but others were onely peaceable in the Land and State living or trading with them and though not professours yet not persecuters or open opposers and disturbers of their religion Doctrine The Lord will judge punish and condemne those who injure and oppresse strangers such as being borne in another country doe professe the same religion or live peaceably among them Manifest as here so by Exod. 22.22.23 Deuter. 27.19 Jer. 22.3.5 Ezek. 22.29.30.31 2 Sam. 12.9.10 and Cap. 21.1 Reasons first and second as in the former Reason 1 Because no man ought to oppresse his neighbour or brother if he doe God will judge him for it this will be granted of all but a stranger and such an one as this is as his brother and his neighbour as is manifest Luke 10.30 Levit. 19.33 Reason 2 Because the Lord he loves the strangers Deut. 10.18 Now to injure and oppresse such strangers as he loves or such as he loveth he will revenge and judge Vse 1 To instruct all in authority to use their authority in the defence of the strangers right as well as those who are home borne and to relieve them oppressed as we may understand that Isaiah 1.17 not to accept his person no more then his who is home borne but doe him right against him that is home borne as well as this against a stranger If he must preserve a servant in the cruelty of his Master Deut. 23.15.16 Thou shalt not deliver the servant unto his master which is escaped from his master unto thee he shall dwell with thee even among you in what place he shall chuse in one of thy Cities where it liketh him best thou shalt not vex him It was not a refuge for every wicked man but for him that was knowne to be cruelly used and fled to them for the name of the Lord. Then must also be Sanctuaries to strangers distressed Vse 2 To teach us what their portion shall be from the Lord who grieve and vex strangers that is all such as murmure that our Church should be like to a Hen which doth not onely nourish up her owne Chickens Chrysost ho. 46. operis imperfecti but also strange ones that are excluded from their owne damme So doth the true Church and so hath ours which these men hate and would have them excluded onely for their owne profit and gaine and therefore are they ready to favor any against them as much as in them is to hinder their right and to pervert their justice They tell us they grow rich amongst us and get the wealth when many are impoverished but is their eye evill because the Lords is good or doe they hate them because he prospers them So did the Egyptians the Israelites But by what meanes grow they rich otherwise then by following a lawfull calling and labouring as thou dost and if thou be poorer it is because thou art idler or more wicked The Lord taught the contrary by that Law Levit. 25.47 c. And by that which he allowes unto them one and the same Law as to him that was born in the Land as is often shewed and repeated save in the matter of remitting debts in the seventh yeare Deut. 15.1.2.3 And feare not me The fith sort of sinners that the Lord will judge are in a more generall kinde such as feare not him that is such as have no continuall awe of him in respect of his power and mercy for these and the fruits of them to avoyde evill and flye from sinnes Now in the conjunction of these is noted by some that this is the roote and cause of others i. such and such have they done and this is the cause hence it comes because they feare not me Doctrine The want of Gods feare wheresoever it is is the cause and roote of all sinne many and great as the feare of God is the
governing of things here below do speak proudly and wickedly against God specially if they deny his providence and government in disposing the states and affaires of men This is the sinne these are chalenged withall Such was that which we have Psal 73.11 And they say How doth God know it or is there knowledge in the most High If it be referred to the tenth verse it is the infirmitie of Gods people if to the ninth it is the pride of the wicked In either it is a sinne against God And that Psal 94.4.5.6.7 They prate and speake fiercely all the workers of iniquitie vaunt themselves they smite downe thy people O Lord and trouble thine heritage they slay the widow and the stranger and murther the fatherlesse yet they say The Lord shall not see neither will the God of Iacob regard it Such were they Zeph. 1.12 And at that time will I search Jerusalem with lights and visit the men that are frozen in their dregges and say in their hearts The Lord will neither do good nor do evill Job 22.13.14 But thou sayest How should God know Can he judge through the darke cloud The clouds hide him that he cannot see and hee walketh in the circle of heaven Ezek. 9.9 Then said he unto me the iniquity of the house of Israel and Judah is exceeding great so that the land is full of bloud and the citie full of corrupt judgement For they say The Lord hath forsaken the earth and the Lord seeth us not Reason 1 Because God doth chalenge these things unto himselfe the Scripture giveth it unto him Isai 45.6.7 Prov. 15.3 The eyes of the Lord in every place behold the evill and the good Psal 28.18.19 34.15.16 Then without sinne this cannot be denied which were to give God and his Truth the lie Reason 2 Because by denying this they deny the wisedome the power and the goodnesse of God for seeing God hath created the world and all things specially men how should he be wise if he knew not how omnipotent if he could not how good if hee would not regard and governe the things and men he had made For who would account him a good father of a family who when he can and knowes well how to governe and dispose of the children he hath begotten and of the house he hath erected and his whole family yet will not but neglects them And when they deny this of God do they not deny his goodnesse Vse 1 Then have we many proud speakers many that utter stout words against the Lord for we have many and too many who deny the providence of God some in one thing some in another some after one manner some after another some deny any providence at all some affirme it only to be in heavenly things some if in earthly things then but in great matters and about the greatest creatures not the smallest If in man for the generall not in the particular actions and affaires of men These are all speakers against God when the Word and Reason witnesseth of him that his providence is over all these as in generall Psal 113.5.6 in great things Prov. 16.9.21.1 in particular actions Jerem. 10.23 Acts 17.28 in smaller Job 38.3 Matth. 6.26.28 and 10.50 and many other of the like kinde beside reason as that the world doth so long continue that the heavens still keep their certaine and perpetuall motion that there are interchanging of things and as the day succeeding of the night and the winter of the summer that the earth being founded upon the waters compassed about with it and yet it neither sinketh nor is over-flowed will not all these prove his providence specially when they are created of nothing when many things are compounded of contraries and by a naturall enmitie seeke the ruine and would wrack one another For they must needs be preserved of some other but of none but God for who else is able to sustain to rule and govern so great a masse and so infinite creatures but an infinite power To deny them this is to speake against God himselfe of which all these are guilty either out of the dulnesse of their braines as being not able to comprehend greater things then are before their eyes and which may be groped and felt or else out of the wickednesse and corruption of their hearts who living wickedly and filthily lest the continuall remembrance of this should vex and disquiet them and the perpetuall feare of punishment torment them they frame this comfort to themselves As children when they have offended could wish and desire they had neither a Father at home nor a Master at Schoole and these perswade them so it is with themselves Vse 2 This may teach men to take heed how they deny or call into question the providence of God lest they be found fighters and speakers against God and that proudly and contemptuously For what if they cannot see God how he doth it yet seeing they see it is done and the world and all things in it governed after a marvellous manner they ought to beleeve it is so If a man shall see a ship come sailing into the haven or standing upon the shore see it go along upon the sea and often sailing prosperously in the midst of great tempests though he see never a Mariner never a Master and Pilot yet he doubts not but he is there Or as Gregory Nazianzen If thou heare a Harp sound of divers strings and all keep one harmony thou wilt conceive of one that strikes them though thou see him not so in the government of the world Yea when they cannot see the reason of things that are done yet men ought to admire the wisedome of God As in States men do give more to the wisedome of those which hold and sit at the sterne and governe the State that they thinke well of things done and projected though they see not the reason nay when their reason is contrary Finally well and with good reason may they imagine that if a Father will governe his house and a King will not forsake his kingdome God will much more governe the world and not forsake it And if a ship though well built and strong as Chrysostom cannot be preserved in the sea without a governour no not a day in the middest of the waves nor the body separated from the soule how should this be All which may keep us from denying the providence of God and so speaking against God VERS XIV Ye have said it is in vaine to serve God and what profit is it that we have kept his commandement and that we walked humbly before the Lord of hosts YEE have said it is in vaine to serve God The Prophets replication in the person of God shewing them wherein they had prophanely and impiously spoken against God and this their impiety consisted herein that they said it was a needlesse and fruitlesse thing to serve the Lord that a mans labour should be
Ioh. Tarnovius Hee will manifest his goodnesse from above from heaven upon their border See Psal 126.2 3. Ioel. 2.21 The Chald thus Let the glory of the Lord bee multiplyed for hee hath enlarged the borders of Israel To wit the Idumaeans being subdued and made Iewes by Hircanus Or as some the Lord will be magnified by enlarging the Iewes borders over other nations Piscat seemes to encline to this How much God enlarged their borders see in Ribera comment in Obad. ver 19. fully Or as Osiander let the Lord be praysed who hath againe restored and made our land to flourish Or as others in a yet different sense the Lord will be magnified from beyond the borders of Israel through the World Thus much of their Ingratitude In the next place II. He expostulates with them for their Contempt and Profaning of Gods worship ver 6 7 8. In which wee have First Gods accusation of them ver 6. Secondly the debating of the accusation ver 6 7 8. Thirdly Gods accusation of them 1. more tacite and implyed 2 more open and expressed Verse 6 First Gods accusation of them is more tacite and implyed inlaying a ground of discovery of their contempt which ground is an Axiome in nature A Sonne honors his father and a servant his Master A sonne honors 1 loves reverences obeyes and if need bee sustaines and relieves his Father Hee will honour so Montan. and Pifc that is Honorare solet Not onely the divine law but humane reason and nature teaches him it and hee doth it And the servant his master Here is an Ellipsis of the verb supplyed by Piscator Reveretur Hee feares or reverences His Master the Hebr. His Masters or Lords So Ioseph is called Genes 42.33 The Lords And the man Adone haanets Domini terrae The Lords the Lord of the Country spake unto us A verb singular is in construction with a noune plurall And it is observed to bee ordinary in this word honoris gratiâ to carry with it the dignity of the person Secondly his accusation of them is more open and expresse I. In the applicatiō of that naturall law If then I be a Father where is my honour that is which is due to mee you confessing mee to bee and calling me father And if I bee a Master Adonim plurall as before If as Tarnovius it have not a farther meāing to set out the mystery of the Trinity Where is my feare my reverence so Treniel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Morai of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to feare and to reverence and to venerate and worship But of ●●●●e there are two nounes Ijra which is that Timor by which wee religiously worship God and Mora that feare whereby we are in awe of one that is terrible and that is the word here II. The accusation is exprest in the direct accusation where First who accuseth T is God Where is my feare saith the Lord of hosts See ver 4. Secondly who are accused The Priests Vnto you oh Prists the Italian supplies unto you O Priests I speake S. Hier. Theodor Remig. Hugo c. thinke all the people are reproved for neglect of God and his service And they are so afterwards but here 't is more specially directed to the Priests Gods primo-geniti his sonnes peculiar to him which heigthens the accusation Chohen is a Minister in politicis as well as in Sacris 2 Sam. 20.26 Ira the Iairite was chohen a prince or chiefe ruler about David See Menas ben Israel Conciliator Qu. 29. in Exod. But here the whole context is cleare for interpreting it Priests Thirdly the crime they are directly charged with you that despise my name this is the generall head under which the particulars after mentioned are comprehended The Lxx 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yee that esteeme my Name at a low rate The French yee misprised my Name My Name that is Me My glory or fame and Dignity Renowned men are called men of name Genes 6.4 In opposition to which Base men are called Beli shem men of no name Iob. 30.8 Thus God accuseth them we have next 2. The debating of that accusation First they traverse it They put him to the proofe And yee say or a● the Vulg. And yee have sayd wherein have we despised thy name Doe wee contemne thy Name so Tremel The Tigurine here is rather a paraphrase then a translation In what thing have we counted thy Name vile and is it disregarded by us Verse 7 Secondly Gods reply to convince them ver 7. Yee offer polluted bread upon my Altar The Ital. Supplies it In asmuch as yee offer c. Such as offer polluted bread upon my Altar despise my Name But you doe so Therefore you despise my name Yee offer So Pagnin also turn'd it and 't is agreeable to the mind of the place though that of Montanus correction bee more to the letter yee cause to come or that of Tremel yee bring for so the word signifies Maggishim of Nagash to come neare or To bring Bread S. Hierom Remig. Lyr. Hugo understand The Shew-bread being not wheaten and unleavened but contrary to the law of barly branny and leavened and therefore called Polluted which was brought and set on the Table of Shew-bread for that they also meane by the Altar But Bread here seemes to bee the same with the sacrifices mentioned ver 8. so that here is a Synechdoche Bread that is the meate of the sacrifices or polluted sacrifices For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies as well as Bread all sorts of food Therefore afterwards ver 12. it is called meate So also in the other originall doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signify Mat. 6.11 Luc. 14.1 This is also observed by Steph. Menochius in his short notes Deodate here renders it food in his Italian and his Margin refers to Levit. 3.11 where he saith the sacrifices were called the food of the Lord. Polluted Bread or uncleane the sacrifices are so called either being not according to the law Levit. cap. 1. 2. 3. cap. 22.20 c. Deut. 15.21 Or being polluted through the impiety of the offerers Or that they brought Idolothytes for sacrifices which in the new Testament Acts 15.20 are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pollutions of Idols and that is the word of the Lxx here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And it seemes Daniel was afraid lest if he had eaten of the Kings portion he might eate of the meate prepared in the feasts of the Idols whom the King worshipped and sacrificed unto and so be polluted Dan. 1.8 Vpon my Altar the Altar of burnt offerings Thirdly the peoples answer againe Wherein have wee polluted thee The Lxx 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But whatsoever it is that wee bring or offer yet wherein have we polluted thee Fourthly Gods arther reply for the proving of the assumption of the last Syllogism which they denyed and to shew them how neare they touched himselfe in their profanenes In that yee say The
here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though it bee singular because it was made up of two parts or two Citties the upper and lower Concerning the Situation see I. Weemse Expos of Moses Lawes vol. 2. lib. 1. Exercit 6. 7. and Lud. Capell Hist Apost pag. 146 c. The meaning of the place as it is an aggravation of their sinne is cleare enough of it selfe Thirdly From the qualitie of the sinne Iudah hath dealt treacherously An abomination is committed And hath married the daughter of a strange God Their marrying of strange women the worshippers of an heathen Idoll was a treachery against the wives of their owne tribes and against God an Abomination or an hatefull thing in Gods sight a thing that he loathes Concerning the question De disparitate cultus whether it bee to bee reckoned Inter Impedimenta Matrimonii besides what we shall finde in the following commentary I referre to Reginald praxis Fori lib. 31. cap. 21. Num. 168. and other Casuists who answer negatively So doe the Geneva Divines in their answer to the 8 questions proposed to them which are inserted among Zanchy's epistles lib. 1. ad finem Epistolae 58. and Lucas Osiander ad hunc loc This question divided S. Augustine and S. Hierom as P. Mart. affirmes comment in 1. Reg. 3.1 Where hee hath a very large discourse against marriage contracted by those of diverse religions yet allowes it in conclusion so that both parties doe meet in the beliefe of the maine Articles of the Creed which he saith hee puts in for the mitigation of the severer sentence which yet was the sentence of the Ancients admitting no marriage with any of another faith as it collected by Gratian causa 28. qu. 1. cave c. and non oportet c. But of this obiter Hath married 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Vulg. Hath had Pagn Hath had to doe with Montan. Hath tooke to wife Piscat Hath had an husbandly dominion over The Lxx 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hath loved Schindler Deamavit hath greatly beloved The word will beare all these and more but ours have translated it according to the prime and most used signification of the word The daughter of a strange God They are called 1 King 11.1 strange women As the heathen Idolls are called Gen. 35.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Strange Gods No nation formerly but the Iewes did worship the true God so that any woman of another Nation might bee called The daughter of a strange God which I suppose was the reason of Deodates note A woman of a strange Nation or religion The Lxx here take no notice of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Filia or seem to have mistaken it for some other word and have rendred the place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hath beene diligent towards other Gods Fourthly the last aggravation of their sinne is from the effect of it For Iudah hath profaned the holinesse of the Lord which hee loved Or ought to love Kodesch The Holines that is the holy and separate land of Iudaea the Country that God had chosen to bee holy and peculiar to him they had defiled and their owne dignity who were a people holy unto the Lord and beloved This interpretation is given by the commentary which is that also of S. Hier. Remigius Hugo c. There are others the Vulg. reades The Sanctification Pagnin and the Tigur the holy place The Chalde Paraphrase They have defiled their owne soule which was sanctified to the Lord or before him and beloved of him The Lxx The holy things Some understand the Temple so Osiander some the Law some Their Religion and the worship of God some as Vatable Piscat and many others The holy or sanctified ordinance of Marriage made by the Lord. I assent to S. Hierom as above Verse 12 II. The sinne thus discovered is threatned Verse 12. The Lord will cut off the man that doth this the master and the scholar out of the tabernacles of Jacob and him that offereth an offering unto the Lord of hosts He threatens an utter dispersion even of the whole families of such The Lord will cut off The Lord will scatter him so the Lxx 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or cut him downe or loppe off his boughes Piscator expresseth it thus The Lord will cut off his children that doth thus the children that he begets of the daughter of a strange God Haply hee had respect to those Rabbins who interpret this phrase To be cut off To dye without children which the Reader may see in a peculiar discourse of Sixt. Amama Antib Bibl. appendice ad Genes 17.14 pag. 954 c. Where there is more of this phrase Our commentary makes it a Metaphor from the use of Physitians who cut off rotten members or of the Sword or Axe which cuts off the head and so wee have the word 1. Sam. 31.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They cut off his head The man that doth this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word is foeminine but used Neutrally and so it is by all interpreted The Lxx in the purall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hee that doth such or these things but it is meant particularly of this sinne of marrying Idolaters The master and the scholar Or him that wakeneth and him that answereth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The master and the servant so the Geneva The rayser up or the question-mover and the answerer so our old English Bible He that is the author and he that follows him so the Tigurine He that wakeneth that is he that studiously observes strange women that he may marry where hee likes and hee that defends that is that defends this kinde of marriage so Piscator The French As well him that begins as him that answeres The Italian Him that wakes or watches and him that answers which Deodate in his margin understands of the keepers Aporters and singers of the Temple who answered in course in singing according to the order of that sacred musicke who had polluted themselves with such marriages Others expresse it otherwise I encline to S. Hierom Montanus Tarnovius and our commentary as I have given it above That it is meant of a dispersion even of the whole families of such one and other Priest and people master and scholler which seemes to bee so out of the following words Out of the Tabernacles or Tent of Iacob And what if it were a proverbiall and ordinary phrase among the Iewes to which the Prophet might haply allude and make use of it But I submit the conjecture Only here the interpretation of the Septuag seemes to be singular I will out off him that doth these untill he be brought low out of the tents of Iacob Taking 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ad usque untill for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and missing the sense of the other word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying both To answer and To bring low And him that offereth an offring That is I will cut him off yea though
and reade it that we may heare So Baruch read it in their audience Now when they had heard all the words they were affraid both one and other and said unto Baruch we will certifie the King of all these words Reason 1 Because they are Gods such as have received this honour to be called his and to be his therefore reason as sonnes they should not onely themselves but by all other meanes seeke it in others and draw others to it Reason 2 Because they are members one of another Ephes 4.25 therefore as members they ought to strengthen uphold and keepe up one another that as they naturally in the health and good temperature of the body so these spiritually in the good state of the soule Vse 1 To convince their error who thinke it onely a duty appertaining to the Minister to exhort and stirre up others and to strengthen and confirme them Truth it is that it is specially and principally his duty as being Christs Lievetenant upon the earth who doth by them performe that Isaiah 61.1 Namely preach and binde up the broken hearted but yet it appertaines to every one so is it manifestly proved If any say he is not appointed to be his brothers keeper it is but the voice of Caine of a wicked and gracelesse man Vse 2 To condemne their practice who either out of this error of their minde or out of the corruption of their heart altogether neglect this duty to say nothing of those who labour to weaken the strong to coole the zealous to discourage the forward and shew themselves in the number of the former wicked rather then in these who feare the Lord. I say to say nothing of these the other shew themselves to have little or not such care and zeale for the worship and service of God as sonnes should have for their fathers honour and little love or care of others goods as fellow members and brethren should have one for another And doe they not give just suspition they are neither sonnes nor members or but dead and rotten members of the body not of the soule of the Church as Saint August As that member which hath no feeling of the weakenesse and fainting of another and seeks not to support it may be materially but not formally of the body so in this Or if they be yet can they not avoide to be guilty of their falling away and perishing as he that sees his neighbour fainting or perishing and hee able to sustaine him and both knowes and hath that might helpe him and doth not is guilty of his perishing Vse 3 To teach every one to practice this duty and to shew that he is possessed with the feare of God by exciting and exhorting others by strengthening and confirming others according to the grace he hath received which as it will testifie they are Gods and manifest their love unto their members so will it be gainefull unto them the gaine of it should incite them As S. Chrys of converting I of keeping and confirming When non minor virtus quam quaerere parta tueri If one should promise thee a piece of gold for every man whom thou reformest thou wouldest use all thy study endeavour perswading and exhorting But now God promiseth thee not one piece nor ten nor twenty nor an hundred thousand nor the whole world but that that is more the Kingdome of Heaven as a recompence of thy labour in this kinde What excuse can we have after such a promise if we neglect the salvation of our brethren If Physitians for a piece of gold will come to strengthen the body If Lawyers will defend a mans title how ought we the soule for so much and that we may doe it we must take but the Apostles lesson Heb. 10.24 to observe one another not to triumph over their weakenesse and infirmities but as Physitians that enquire into the state of their Patients bodies and into their carriage and diet to cure them We had neede of others helpe because the gift we have is apt to decay 2 Tim. 1.6 Wherefore I put thee in minde that thou stirre up the gift of God which is in thee by the putting on of my hands Thes 5.19.20 Zach. 4.1 And the Angell that talked with me c●me againe and waked me as a man that is raised out of his sleepe And the profit of this duty will be great for as Prov. 27.17 Iron sharpeneth Iron so doth man sharpen the face of his friend And the Lord hearkened and heard So they arme themselves against those instances given with assurance that the Lord did regard things done Doctrine The Lord he taketh notice and knoweth all things that are done and spoken by men whether good or evill as his eyes are every where Prov. 15.3 so his eares Isaiah 22.14 and Psal 94.9 He that planted the eare shall he not heare or he that formed the eye shall he not see And Psal 139.4 for there is not a word in my tongue but loe thou knowest it wholly O Lord Vse 1 To teach us to keepe a watch over our mouth and lips not let them runne at randome i. for quantity let our words be few be not talkative let them be like Gods Psal 12.6 The words of the Lord are pure words as the silver tryed in a furnace of earth fined seaven fold Prov. 10.20 the tongue of the just man is as fined silver but the heart of the wicked is little worth Eccles 5.2.3.6.7 For as a dreame commeth by the multitude of businesse so the voyce of a foole is in the multitude of words When thou hast vowed a vow to God deferre not to pay it for he delighteth not in fooles pay therefore that thou hast vowed for in the multitude of dreames and vanities are also many words but feare thou God If in a countrey thou seest the oppression of the poore and the defrauding of judgement and justice be not astonied at the matter for he that is higher then the highest regardeth and there be higher then they The wicked talke boldly their tongue walketh against heaven Psal 73. but God in heaven heareth what is spoken in earth therefore consider that of Solomon Prov. 10.19 In many words there cannot want iniquity but he that refraineth his lips is wise Secondly for quality looke to the matter of speech that it be godly and religious Ephes 5. Let not foolish talking be once heard amongst you as becommeth Saints but let it be savoury Collos 4.6 Let your speech be gracious alwaies and powdered with salts that ye may know how to answer every man If a great man overheard us or one we stood in awe of we would be carefull of our speech Vse 2 An encouragement for Gods children that are talking together of good things a strong motive to move them to conferre together of good things as Psal 82.1 God standeth in the assembly of Gods he judgeth among Gods So in the assembly of Saints servants if they
perceive that their masters overheare them talking of any thing or oversee them doing of any thing speake and doe well this is eye service or eare service yet God would be served with eye and eare service and he that seeth in secret will reward openly And the words are Attendit Iehovah auait He hearkened and heard he so heares that he also attends or regards it A man may overheare a thing and not regard it and so as good as he heard it not Eccles 7.22 But God as he heares so he regardeth Contrary to that the wicked say Psa 10. That God regardeth it not Zeph. 1.12 But God doth regard the words of the tongue because he hath made a law as wel for the words as deeds God made the tongue and therefore will have the fruit 1 Cor. 6.20 For ye are bought for a price therefore glorifie God in your body and in your spirit for they are Gods so with tongue as well as hand and therefore we must looke to give account of words as well as of our actions Matth. 12.36 But I say unto you that of every iale word that men shall speake they shall give account thereof at the day of judgement Jude verses 14.15 And Enoch also the seaventh from Adam prophesied of such saying behold the Lord commeth with thousands of his Saints to give judgement against all men and to rebuke all the ungodly among them of all their wicked deeds which they have ungodly committed and of all their cruell speakings which wicked sinners have spoken against him Plumea verba plumbea pondera windy words if they be wicked words lye as a dead weight on thy soule Take heed of lifting up his name take heede of an oath for it bringeth an heavy burthen But it is our incouragement I say that God rewards us for good words as well as for our deeds though they seeme to be but little worth they are arguments of a sanctified heart and of the feare of God as it is Matth. 12.34.35 O generation of vipers how can you speake good things when ye are evill for of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things and an evill man out of an evill treasure bringeth forth evill things And a booke of remembrance was written before him That is he keepes the remembrance of the things he knowes Doctrine The Lord as he seeth and knoweth all things so he remembreth them as he hath knowledge without ignorance of any thing so he hath remembrance without oblivion of the same things good or evill Therefore is he here said to have a booke because things are more certainely and perpetually kept in it then left to remembrance of man Hence is that Amos 8.7 The Lord hath sworne by the excellency of Iaakob surely I will never forget any of their workes Heb. 6.10 For God is not unrighteous that he should forget your worke and labour of love which ye shewed toward his name in that ye have ministred unto the Saints and yet minister Psal 139.2 Jer. 44.21 Psal 56.8 Thou hast counted my wandrings put my teares into thy bottell are they not in thy register Dan. 7.10 Revel 20.12 A similitude taken from Kings who have things written for memory Ester 6.1 though God need not Reason 1 Because of his eternall and infinite apprehension being as able to apprehend things and keepe them done thousand yeares since as but yesterday as man is able to remember things done but yesterday as that Psal 90.4 2 Pet. 3.8 Reason 2 Because he is absolutely perfect without either sinne or imperfection therefore without oblivion that in many things is sinne and in any thing imperfection even as ignorance of things necessary to be knowne and which may be knowne is sinne of things not necessary is imperfection and infirmity though without sin Object Isaiah 43.25 I even I am he that putteth away thine iniquities for mine owne sake and will not remember thy sinnes Then God doth forget and there is oblivion in him Answer Gods forgetting of sinne is like his not seeing of sinne Num. 23.21 which is not that he seeth not the act and thing done but hee seeth it not to impute it to them in that respect hee is as though he saw it not So he forgetteth not the act and the thing done but not to impute it to him or to punish him for it which is in effect to forget it As his remembrance is taken for the effect of his remembrance As Isaiah 38.3.9 I pray thee let me have the effect and feeling of thy remembrance let me know by experience thou dost remember me So his forgetfulnesse or forgetting is taken for the effect and feeling of it They should finde he had as it were forgotten Vse 1 To let us see the folly of wicked men as in committing sinne in secret and darke thinking the Lord cannot or doth not see so in seeking to cover it committed and labour to bring an oblivion of it who though the corruption cleave to them as Jer. 17.1 The sinne of Judah is written with a pen of Iron and with the point of a Diamond and graven upon the table of their heart and upon the hornes of your Altars Yet they by all meanes labour to forget it and if they have escaped and prospered with it for a month or two or a yeare or two c. they thinke also God hath forgotten it But doe they not deceive themselves when with God is no oblivion no forgetfulnesse What benefit can they then get by this even as a malefactor that hath committed some haynous offence whom the Magistrate lets alone to see what he will doe whether he will seeke his pardon or no and he goes about to corrupt or remove all that should give evidence against him when it is in the power of the Judge both to be witnesse and Judge and proceed of his owne knowledge and out of his owne memory of the act and who also cannot forget So here What got the sonnes of Iaakob by smothering their treachery to their father and brother It may terrifie the wicked that every evill word is registred Matth. 12. and though God should not the Divell would keepe them in mind to accuse them Rev. 12. yea and their owne consciences Gods register booke Vse 2 To instruct every man to keep his bookes of account well and to remember all his debts and his sinnes seeing they shall be remembred though he would forget them or could when as his remembrance of them to humble himselfe and to get his pardon makes God to forget them Saint Chrysostome would have a man not to forget his sinnnes after pardon * Non ut taeipsum c. Chryso ho. 12. ad popu Antioch Not to consume thy selfe with the thought of them but to teach thy soule not to grow wanton nor to fall into the same sinnes againe But most necessary before