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

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the earth and I will haue mercie vpon her that was not pitied and I will say vnto them which were not my people thou art my people and they shall say thou art my God In which words is set downe first the multiplication of the Church and secondly The exposition the meanes whereby it should bee multiplied The first in these words And I will sow her vnto me in the earth The which speech is allegoricall borrowed from the practise of husbandmen who desiring increase of their corne doe sow it in the ground so the Lord promiseth that hee will sow his Church that is he will multiplie and exceedingly increase it as the seed is multiplied which is sowne in the earth so that it shall no longer be contained within the narrow borders of the land of Canaan but be propagated farre and wide ouer the whole face of the earth Where he alludeth to the name Izreel signifying the seed of God of which hee had spoken in the former verse although the word her being of the feminine gender hath relation vnto the spouse for whereas his meaning was that hee would sow Izreel his seed he saith he will sow her because all this while he had spoken of his Church and faithfull people vnder the name and title of a wife But besides the multiplying of the Church here is also as I take it promised the continuall stabilitie therof for so this word sowing or planting signifieth as appeareth Ier. 24. 6. I will plant them and not roote them out Psal 92. 13. 14. Ier. 31. 27. 28. 42. 10. Iere. 24. 6. Psal 92. 13. 14. Iere. 31. 27. 42. 10. Further he saith that he will sow her vnto himselfe where he noteth the end why he would multiplie his Church and people namely that they being chosen and called might glorifie his name by seruing and obeying him and this is the maine end not onely of our calling but also of our creation and redemption 2. Cor. 6. 20. Ephes 1. 4. Tit. 2. 14. 2 Cor. 6. 20. Ephes 1. 4. Tit. 2. 14. Againe whereas hee saith that hee will sow her in the earth without any special restraint vnto any particular place the meaning is that hee would sow her thorowout the whole earth and no longer confine her within the limits of Canaan the which promise was accordingly accomplished when Christ gaue commandement to his Apostles and Disciples that they should goe teach all nations Matth. 28. 20. the which they also performed as appeareth in the Acts of the Apostles Matth. 28. 20. And this is the promise concerning the multiplying of the Church Now the meanes whereby hee would increase it to so great a number is expressed whereas he saith that hee will haue mercie vpon Lo-ruchamah and will call Lo-ammi his people wherby he vnderstandeth the calling not only of the ten tribes but also by occasion of them the Gentiles amongst whom they were scattered as the Apostle plainly expoundeth this prophecie Rom. 9. 24. 1. Pet. 2. 10. for of whom it might be said Rom. 9. 24. 25. 1. Pet. 2. 10. that they were without mercie and not Gods people of thē he promiseth that he would haue mercie and chuse them for his people but this might be said not of the Israelites alone but also of the Gentiles as the Apostles testifie and therefore of them also this prophecie is to be vnderstood And these are the meanes whereby the seed of the faithfull is multiplied In the last place he setteth downe the disposition affection and dutie of the Church being called in these words And they shall say thou art my God Where there is implied the entire loue of the Church towards God in that she vseth here the vocatiue case as the originall hath it and by a certaine kind of hearty acclamation crieth out O my God which briefe maner of speech doth most pathetically expresse the otherwise vnexpressable affection passion of the heart So Thomas rauished with Christs assured presence crieth out My Lord and my God Ioh. 20. Ioh. 20. 28. 28. and Mary v. 16. Rabboni Master Rom. 8. 15. Secondly that Rom. 8. 15. she shall not only beleeue that the Lord is her God but also acknowledge and make profession hereof for she shall not only thinke it but also say it Thirdly that she shall inuocate and call vpon his name as is signified in this phrase of speech O my God And this is the meaning of these words The doctrines which The do ∣ ctrines arise out of thē are these First whereas the Lord saith that he will sow his Church hence we learne that the Lord is the sole cause of The Lord is the principall cause of multiplying the Church Ephes 2. 5. the multiplying of his Church by his word and Spirit and not our owne inclination and free will for we are as seed in the hand of the sower vnlesse hee husband vs wee will euer remaine vnfruitfull Eph. 2. 5. And this the Apostle affirmeth namely that the faithfull are not borne of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Ioh. 1. 13. Iohn 1. 13. God multiplieth his church for his owne glorie 1. Pet. 2. 10. 11. 12. Secondly we learne here that the Lord doth sow or multiplie the Church vnto himself that is for his own glory worship and seruice that the Church being chosen to be a royall Priesthood and holy nation may abstaine frō fleshly lusts haue their cōuersation honest that so God may be glorified euen of those that are without And therfore seeing the Lord hath made choice of vs for this purpose let vs labour to attaine vnto our end otherwise we can haue no assurance that we are in the nūber of Gods people seeing it is impossible that he shuld be frustrate of his end Thirdly by this chāge of names no mercy into mercy no Gods anger turned into loue people into a people we learne that in the time of the Gospel Gods anger is turned into loue iudgement into mercy punishment into reward cōdemnation into life saluation by vertue of Christs merits mediation The which serueth notablie for the consolation of al those that mourne in Sion whē as being beaten downe by the apprehēsion of Gods anger the sight of sinne and the curse of the law they consider that Christ hath freed them from them all reconciled them vnto God and procured for them remission of their sinnes Fourthly we here learne that the wall of separation is broken The Iewes and Gentiles gathered into one Church downe both Iewes and Gentiles admitted into one and the same Church so that as our Sauiour speaketh there is now but one sheepfold one shepheard Ioh. 10. 16. See p. 125. 133. 135. Fiftly we here learne that our vocation was altogether free and vndeserued for when as we were without mercy deseruing Our vocatiō is
of the abstruse depth and obscure difficultie therof it doth as much as any other stand in need of explanation In handling whereof I haue chiefely endeuoured to cleare the text from all obscuritie and hauing laid open and discouered the hidden treasures therein contained to communicate and applie them to the inriching of all those who are willing to receiue them by their reading and meditation The which my labours I desired should come forth into publike view vnder your Lordships patronage and protection in respect of that great loue which you haue shewed to learning and religion euen from your tender youth For howsoeuer you were descended of a noble house and from parents of great worth and worship yet you made choice of a schollers life and of the profession of a Minister of the Gospell which howsoeuer it is in it selfe a calling most honorable and best replenished with happie contentment yet is it so contemned and vnder valued by the world worldly men that many much your inferiours both in birth and meanes do thinke this profession a great disparagement to their state and credit The which also would haue discouraged you from entring into this calling had you not with eyes spiritually illightned beheld the inward dignitie and glorie thereof through the ragged vaile of worldly contempt And as your loue to learning moued you to enter into this profession so the same loue incited you to take such extraordinary paines in your studies that I may truely say vpon mine owne knowledge being a poore member of that Colledge whereof you were once a chiefe ornament that scarce any of the poorest schollers who had no other meanes but learning to aduance either state or credit did goe before you in vnwearied paines and industrious labour The which your diligent studies the Lord so prospered with his blessing that the plentifull haruest answered and surmounted the greatest expectation which could bee had of such an hopefull seede time insomuch that in the iudgement of the most iudicious Vniuersity you were thought fit for the greatest honour which it could yeeld vnto any before the ordinary time which you preuented not onely by noblenesse of birth but also through sufficiencie and desert and since haue been thought the meetest by our Soueraigne King who is best able to iudge of those gifts wherein himselfe excelleth to bee his assistant in his most learned studies and after manifold experience of your great sufficiencie to be aduanced vnto one of the chiefe preferments which our land affordeth to those whose gifts are of greatest eminency whereby you who haue alwaies been a louer of learning are now enabled to be a chiefe patrone of the learned Of all which I now put you in minde not in base flatterie which the searcher of hearts knoweth my soule detesteth nor to angle your affection by casting before you the bait of your owne praises but rather to admonish you of your dutie towards God which worldly prosperitie causeth vs too often to forget namely that with your whole endeuour you seeke to honour him who hath thus highly honoured you and to imploy those rich talents of learning authoritie honour and fauour with your Soueraigne which your great master hath bestowed on you to the aduancement of Gods glorie and the good of his Church ouer a part whereof you are now made a steward and ouerseer Otherwise howsoeuer these gifts may adorne you in this life in the eyes of worldly men yet they will not profit you in the life to come but rather the greatnesse of your receits will inlarge the bill of your accounts in that great and last audit which you must make in the presence of God and his holy Angels More especially I entreate your Lordship to labour that in all places where you haue any authoritie and iurisdiction God may be glorified in the propagation of his truth and in the diligent preaching of his Gospell which is the spirituall sword and scepter of his kingdome whereby hee raigneth and ruleth in the hearts of men and to this end that as much as in you lieth you will endeauour to plant vnder you a godly learned and faithfull ministerie who may instruct the people committed to their charge in the true religion of Iesus Christ and to countenance and patronize them being placed against wicked Atheists prophane worldlings and idolatrous Papists that so vnder the shade of your protection they may comfortablie persist in the painfull worke of their ministrie and be sheltered from the scorching furie of all opposers So shal the Lord inlarge his mercies more and more towards you perpetuate vnto you an honorable name and memorie amongst his faithfull seruants in this life present and crowne you with endlesse glorie and immortalitie amongst his holy Saints in the life to come Your Lordships in the Lord to be commanded IOHN DOWNAME TO THE CHRISTIAN READER CHristian Reader although the world is alreadie so full of Bookes that a man may spend his whole time in reading titles and inscriptions yet are there but few amongst this multitude in our English tongue which containe sound expositions of the bookes of holie Scriptures which are appointed by God to be the obiect of our faith and the rule and directorie of our life and manners In consideration whereof as I did in the generall thinke that no man can better spend his labours then in expounding and cleering these holie and hidden mysteries so more particularly that it should be a profitable and acceptable labour to explaine the Prophecie of Hosea which as it is exceeding obscure and not by any that I know of expounded in our tongue so also when it is vnderstood most excellent and of singular vse for these times And therefore relying my selfe vpon Gods assistance I haue vndertaken this hard taske and by his blessing haue alreadie proceeded vnto the fifth Chapter In handling whereof I haue chiefly laboured to cleere this Scripture from all obscuritie and then to informe the Readers iudgement by such instructions as naturally arise out of the text and to reforme his affections life and conuersation by making thereof vse and application The which my labours I may truly say I only intended for the benefit of mine owne priuate charge and neuer thought of making them publike by the presse till I had finished the three first Chapters when as being perswaded by some of my friends to set them out for the good of others I began to resolue vpon this course yet with a purpose not to diuulge any part till the whole were finished But he who is at the charge of printing this booke herein ouerruled me perswading me to publish my readings vpon these Chapters first for a taste of the rest Vnto which motion I haue condescended with a purpose to take the like paines in those Chapters which remaine by the assistance of God if I shall in the meane while perceiue that this part findeth good acceptation and shall be thought profitable by
of Israel appeareth by the order of the words where first it is said that she was not his wife and then that he was not her husband for the Lord did not forsake her before shee forsooke him hee did not deny to bee her husband before she refused to be his wife hee did not cease to performe his couenants which hee made with her of grace protection and preseruation before she withdrew her loue falsified her faith denied her seruice and obedience and went a whoring after strange gods And therefore there was no cause why for this diuorce they should expostulate with God and impute any fault vnto him but rather they were to lay the blame vpon themselues who by their spirituall fornications had broken off the mariage knot and had refused to be the Lords spouse so that hee was constrained to proclaime this diuorce because she had first refused him The like place vnto this we haue Esay 50. 1. Thus saith the Lord Where is the bill of your mothers diuorcement whom I haue cast off or who is the creditour vnto whom I haue solde you Behold for your iniquities are ye sold and because of your transgressions is your mother forsaken Where the Lord expostulateth with the Iews concerning the cause of their reiection and sheweth that the cause was not in him but in themselues and this he proueth by an olde rite and custome vnder the Law which was that those who were put away by the husband had a bill of diuorce giuen vnto them and that Deut. 24. 1. parents which were deeply indebted sold their children to satisfie their creditors as appeareth Exod. 21. 7. 2. King 4. 1. But I saith the Lord neuer put you away for if I did where Exod 21 7. 2. King 4. 1. is the bill of diuorcement neither did I sell you for where is the creditour to whom I stand indebted And therefore the fault is not in me but in your own iniquities and in the transgressions of your mother why you are sold and shee diuorced So Ier. 3. 8. Ezech. 16. Jer. 3 8 Ezech. 16. And this is the meaning of the diuorce which the Lord commandeth should be denounced The doctrines which The Law and the Gospell must be intermixed in the ministerie of the word hence arise are diuers First out of this mixture of Legall comminations with Euangelicall consolations Gods Ministers may learne spirituall discretion neither onely to thunder out the threatnings of the Law nor wholly to stand vpon Euangelicall promises but in their sermons to mixe the one with the other that whilest they beate downe the pride and presumption of secure hypocrites they doe not altogether exanimate deiect those who are truly humbled and contrariwise that whilest they comfort and raise vp Gods children who are afflicted in mind and deiected they doe not confirme proud hypocrites in their securitie and presumption Neither is this course profitable alone in respect of hypocrites and secure worldlings but also in respect of Gods deere children for being partly flesh and partlie spirit as in respect of their spirituall part they haue neede to heare the sweete comforts of the Gospell for the confirmation of their faith so had they in regard of the flesh neede to heare often of the threatnings of the Law to restraine them from sinne to beate downe pride presumption and securitie and to containe them in holy obedience Secondly we may obserue the nature of hypocrites who The nature of hypocrites to expostulate with God when they suffer the punishment due vnto their sinnes are ready to expostulate with God and to calumniate his iustice of crueltie as though their punishment were either altogether vndeserued or else at least farre greater then their sins To this purpose they vse all friuolous pretences to excuse their faults laying them of themselues vpon others yea rather then faile they will not sticke to accuse God that they may excuse themselues And therefore the Lord is faine oftentimes to expostulate the matter with them to cleare himselfe from all imputation of fault and to conuince them of their sinnes that they may be brought to true repentance An example hereof we haue in our first parents Gen. 3. 12. Gen. 3. 12. 4 19 Ier. 2. 35. Mal ● 8. 1. King 18. 17. Math. 25. 24. 13. In Caine Gen. 4. 13. In the Iewes Ier. 2. 35. Mal. 3. 8. In Ahab 1. King 18. 17. In the vnprofitable seruant Mat. 25. 24. 26. Thirdly we here learne when we suffer affliction or beare We must not murmure against God in our afflictions our punishment that we doe not murmure and expostulate with God as though he dealed more seuerely and rigorously with vs then we haue deserued but let vs descend into our selues and examine our owne hearts and consciences and so shall wee find that not the Lord but our selues are in fault that our punishment is farre lesse then our sinnes and that it is the great mercie of the Lord that we are not vtterlie consumed as the Church confesseth Lament 3. 22. And this Lament 3. 22. course must be taken of euery one of vs before we will euer be truely humbled and brought vnto God by vnfained repentance or before the Lord will euer bee mooued to pardon our sinnes or release our punishment For none will euer sorrow for those sinnes of which they thinke they are not guiltie there is none wil lay them to hart be humbled vnder the weight of them so long as they pretend excuses and seeke to put off their burthen from their owne to others shoulders and so long as wee content our selues with these fig-leaues we wil neuer looke after a better garment to hide our nakednesse Againe the Lord will neuer absolue vs before we condemne our selues he will not pardon our sinnes till we setting aside all excuses ingenuously and freely confesse them he will neuer case vs of this burthen whilest with false pretences we seeke to vnloade our selues neither will he euer make vs partakers of his mercy till we acknowledge that we haue deserued the extremity of his iustice as may appeare by the former examples Fourthly wee are to obserue that the children are commanded That particular men may expostulate with their mother the Church to expostulate not onely one with another but also with their mother the Church that so both the particular members and the whole Church in generall comming to a sight of their sinnes and condemning themselues for them they might bee brought to true repentance Whence wee learne what dutie is owed by children to their parents and by particular members to the whole body of the Church namely they are so to honour them that God bee not dishonoured so to excuse them that God bee not accused so to hide their faults from others that they doe not ignorantly foster them in themselues The Papists crie out vpon vs for discouering the nakednesse of their Church which
might bee releeued and deliuered out of his hands by their louers that is their false goods shewing that their ioyning with them should not hinder the course of his iudgements for so far was he from fearing their succouring of them that hee wuld inflict these his punishments vpon them euen in the presence of their idols neither should they be able to releeue or deliuer them out of his hands So that still he alludeth to the practise of insolent and impudent adulteresses who when their husbands threaten that for their whoredomes they will strip them of all the gifts which they haue bestowed on them they are readie to deterre them from such seuere courses by telling them that they haue friends in store who wil reuenge their wrongs and not suffer them to be so euill intreated vnto whom their husbands being men of spirit and courage will returne answere that they are so farre from fearing their louers that they will not sticke thus to vse them euen in their presence But let vs come to the words themselues in which is expressed first the time when he would inflict his punishmēts And now will I c. where he sheweth that because his patience and long-suffering had made her insolent and secure he would no longer make delayes but presently execute his iudgements vpon her and this hee doth to make her rouse vp her spirits and speedily to turne vnto him by true repentance Eccles 8. 11. Eccles 8. 11. Secondly hee setteth downe the punishment it selfe to wit that he would discouer her leaudnesse c. The word here vsed signifieth either foolishnes or filthines in the first sense it is taken 1. Sam. 25. 25. Psal 14. 1. Deut. 32. 6. in the latter Gen. 34. 7. Deut. 22. 21. If we vnderstand it in the former signification 1. Sam. 25. 25. Psal 14. 1. Deut. 32. 6. Gen. 34. 7. Deut. 22. 21. the meaning is that by stripping her of all his benefits he would shew that she had done foolishly in ascribing them to her louers seeing they were his gifts and in forsaking him a God most gratious and almightie that she might follow after her louers who had neither will nor abilitie to releeue her wants But the coherence with the former words is better if we vnderstand it in the latter signification for in the former verse the Lord threatneth that he would strip her of his benefits and namely of her clothes which he had giuen her to couer her nakednes and here hee sheweth that he would not strip her in a corner but euen in the sight of her louers that they might also behold and detest her abominable filthinesse And this interpretation I rather embrace then the other because it agreeth with the like places of Scripture as Ezech. 16. 37. Ier. 4. 30. Ezech. 16. 37. Jer. 4 30. Now this her punishment is aggrauated in that he saith he would strip her in the sight of her louers for as men are impatient of all disgraces so especially of those which are offered them in the presence of their most respected friends but they grow altogether intolerable when as their friends in whom they most trusted shall to their shame and reproch see their wretchednes and vncleane filthines and not be able to make any apologie for them or to defend them against the accuser But this the Lord threatneth should be the condition of the Church of Israel namely that hee would strip her of all his benefits and discouer her naturall filthines and vncleannes her pouertie miserie sinne and grosse corruptions and that in the sight of her louers that is when she depended vpon her idols and most assuredly hoped that they were present to helpe and releeue her Lastly because while they conceiued any hope of helpe in their idols they would easily neglect and contemne Gods threatnings hee taketh away from them this vaine confidence in these words And no man shall be able te deliuer her out of my hands as though he should say It may be she will hope when I haue taken from her my benefits that the sun starres planets and her other idols will supplie her wants it may be she may thinke that when I haue discouered her filthines her louers wil relieue her miseries but all in vaine for who amōgst the gods is able to help whē I who am almightie take in hād to punish her Wel may they behold her abominable filthines to her further griefe and disgrace but they shal only look vpō her not be able to afford her any relief And this is the meaning of these words Out of which we Punishments deferred shall be inflicted vnlesse wee preuent them by repētance may first learne that howsoeuer the Lord in his mercie doth long deferre our iustly deserued punishments as he did the Israelites of whom the Prophet speaketh here yet if his patience and long-suffering doe not moue vs to repentance the time will come that the Lord will say as he doth in this place And now I will discouer your leaudnesse c. For as there is a time for mercie so there is a time for iustice and though the Lord be slow to anger and vengeance and swift in the course of his grace and goodnes yet he goeth forward as surely and certainly in the way of iustice as in the way of mercie if wee doe not meet him in the way and turne his course by turning vnto him by vnfained repentance Examples hereof we haue in the old world in the Sodomites Cananites Israelites c. And therefore let vs seeke the Lord whilest he may be found c. Isay 55. 6. let vs take hold of the acceptable Esay 55. 6. time and day of saluation and whilest it is called to day let vs hearken vnto his voice and not harden our hearts Psal 95. 7. 8. For though the Lord now hide our sinnes vnder the vaile of his mercie blessings and benefits yet the time Psal 95. 7. 8. will come vnlesse we repent when as hee will strip vs and discouer our filthines c. Secondly we may obserue the the Lord oftentimes punisheth our vaine confidence in worldly things by making them God punisheth vaine confidēce in creatures by making them insufficient to helpe vneffectuall and insufficient to satisfie our desires in those things for which we most trusted in them that when they most abound and seeme to promise vs most assured helpe So heere hee strippeth the Israelites in the presence of their idols in whom they trusted for deliuerance and discouereth their filthines euen in their sight when as they seemed in regard of their presence to giue them the greatest hope of their assistance Thus he ouerthrew Pharaoh Senacherib Benhadad in the middest of their great armies Nebuchadnezer in his greatest pride and power Thus he destroyeth idolaters in the presence of their idols thus he maketh the couetous to feel the smart of his punishing hand when as their
heare her when as he giueth vnto her vertue to gather cloudes and vapours and open her windowes floodgates so as she may distill her sweete drops to water the earth The last thing here expressed is the persons vpon whom the Lord will bestow these benefits namely all his elect and faithfull ones whom hee hath espoused vnto himselfe and these are comprehended vnder the name Iizreel the signification of which word is here changed neither is it here taken in the euill part as it was Ch. 1. 4. to wit for the seed of God whom he would scatter and cast away but in the better sense for the seed of God whom he would gather into his Church and store vp in his garner of euerlasting happinesse By which change of the signification the Lord would shew that his wrath was changed into mercie and his iudgements into benefits in the time of the Gospell And that this name is so to be taken it appeareth by the verse following where the Lord following the allegorie saith that he will sow her that is this Iizreel his holy seed as also in that he changeth both the other names Lo-ruchamah into ruchamah Lo-ammi into ammi No mercie into Mercie and Not my people into Thou art my people And this is the meaning of these words The doctrines The Do ∣ ctrines which arise out of them are these First wee may here learne who is the author of all our blessings and benefits temporall The Lord is the author of all blessings and spirituall namely the Lord himselfe for he it is that giueth vs our corne wine and oyle he it is who causeth plentie and maketh dearth and out of the garners of his al-sufficient prouidence wee haue all our prouision and sustenance The eyes of all waite vpon him and he giueth them their meate in due season and if he shut his hand they all hunger and pine for want if he open it all things liuing are filled with plentie as it is Psal 145. 15. 16. Psalm 145. 15. 16. The consideration whereof should moue vs rather to depend vpon the Lord for our plentie and prouision then vpon the heauens the earth or the seasons of the yeere seeing he is the principall cause and these but his instruments and inferiour meanes which he vseth for our good Secondly if wee abound in these blessings let vs praise the Lord in the fruitiō of them and be readie out of our abundance to relieue the want and penurie of our poore brethren as the Lord hath inioyned vs for all these temporall benefits though good in themselues are not good vnto vs vnlesse they be receiued with thanksgiuing and sanctified to our vse by the word and prayer as it is 1. Tim. 4. 5. And if abounding with them we do 1. Tim. 4. 5. not communicate them with the poore we commit the sinne of the Sodomites as appeareth Ezech. 16. 49. and consequently Ezech. 16. 49. make our selues obnoxious to their punishments Secondly we may here obserue the time when the Lord The new Couenant is the fountaine of all our good bestoweth these benefits vpon his Church expressed in these words And in that day that is in the day of her espousals when she is married vnto Christ in righteousnes iudgement c. and by Christ reconciled vnto God for before this day we are not onely strangers but also enemies and so remaining subiect to Gods wrath we haue all the creatures opposed against vs but when wee are married vnto Christ and in him reconciled vnto God then all things work together for our good and nothing is wanting vnto vs which is profitable Rom. 8. 28. for vs to receiue From whence we learne that this new couenant of grace betweene God and vs and this spirituall marriage with Christ is the fountaine from which all blessings and benefits spring and flow vnto vs. And therefore if we would haue no good thing wanting which we can desire thē let vs in the first place seek to be espoused vnto Christ in righteousnesse iudgement benignitie and compassion and then the Lord will supplie all our wants and giue vs plentie of corne wine and oyle and all other his benefits And let vs auoid the practise of worldly men who in the first place seeke for glorie riches houses lands and pleasures and in the meane time neuer seeke to be espoused vnto Christ or in him to be reconciled vnto God deferring this as a matter of least importance to old age or the end of life but rather let vs In the first place seeke the kingdome of God and his righteousnesse Matth. 6. 33. and then all other things shall be cast vpon vs as our Sauiour hath promised Matth. 6. 33. Let vs first labour to be receiued into the couenant of grace and to be espoused vnto Christ Iesus and then he will inrich vs with the dowrie of all his temporall and spirituall benefits Thirdly we here learne that whatsoeuer vertue strēgth The creatures haue all their vertue from God whereby they benefit vs. is in any of the creatures to benefit sustaine and nourish vs they haue it wholly from the Lord as appeareth by this notable gradation for we cannot ordinarily liue without corne and food we cannot haue these vnlesse the earth bring them foorth for our vse the earth is barren and vnfruitfull vnlesse it be watered with the dew of heauen the heauens haue no power to distill their fruitfull and pleasant shewers vpon the earth vnlesse the Lord giue this vertue vnto them So that he is the principall cause and first mouer who setteth all inferiour meanes on worke and giueth them motion and strength to deriue his blessings and benefits vpon man neither can a drop of raine fall vpon the earth nor the earth bring foorth one graine of corne but by Gods prouidence and appointment and therfore we may conclude with the Apostle that In him we liue moue and haue our being Act. 17. 28. Is then Act. 27. 28. the earth fruitfull let vs ascribe the whole glorie vnto God haue we a fertill soyle let vs not rest vpon it but vpon Gods prouidence for he that hath giuen it this power and vertue can take it away make it barren Is there a dearth and scarcitie Psal 107. 34. in the land let vs not looke so much to the heauens clouds and weather as vnto God the ruler and disposer of them all expecting and begging plentie at his hands and so hee will heare the heauens and the heauens the earth the earth the fruits and the fruits will heare vs c. Fourthly we here learne that howsoeuer the Lord is the God bestoweth his blessings by inferiour meanes principall cause and chiefe author of all the benefits which we receiue yet we are not to expect them from his hand immediatly but mediatly by inferiour causes and instruments as appeareth by the gradation here vsed and therefore wee
Lord said vnto Verse 1 me goe yet and loue a woman beloued of her husband and was an harlot according to the loue of the Lord towards the children of Israell yet they looked to other Gods loued the wine bottles In which words the loue of God is typically propounded The exposition and afterwards plainely expounded it is typically shadowed vnder another vision not much vnlike vnto the former Chap. 1. 2. wherein the Lord commaundeth the Prophet to loue an adulterous and vngratefull harlot not that indeed he would haue him to set his affection vpon such an one seeing it was a thing vnlawfull and dishonest for the Prophet of God to loue an Adultresse being another mans wife but that hee hauing receiued this commaundement by vision might propound it as a Parable vnto the people that hereby they who were dull of conceit might see both the loue and mercy of God and their owne wickednesse and vnworthynesse represented as in a cleare glasse or plaine picture As though he should say go yet againe vnto the Israelites and propound this parable vnto them that the Lord is like vnto a husband who continueth to loue his wife though she neglecting his loue and forgetting his benefits haue forsaken him committed whoredome with her louers and giuen ouer her selfe vnto all voluptuous pleasures But let vs come to the words more particularly And the Lord said vnto mee that is after I had deliuered the former Prophecie the Lord againe spake vnto me by vision saying goe yet againe that is content not thy selfe to haue spoken once of my mercy loue and gracious benefites and of the wickednesse and vnworthinesse of this people but againe repeate and reiterate these things vnto them that so eyther they may be moued at the second hearing or that their obstinacie and hardnesse of heart may be manifested and they left without excuse And loue a woman beloued of her husband and was an harlot that is by propounding vnto them this Parable shew them that I am a gracious Husband in that notwithstanding their manifold whoredomes I continue to loue them and withall conuince them of their grose wickednesse and vnthankfulnesse in that all my loue and gracious benefits will not restraine them from committing Idolatrie and spirituall adultery with false Gods In which Parable vnder the husband wee are to vnderstand God himselfe who loued his people from all eternitie and continued constant in his loue euen after the people had broken their mariage faith plighted vnto him in mount Sinai and committed spirituall whoredome with false Gods By the wife wee are to vnderstand the people of Israell and not the people of Iuda as some haue imagined for first in this first verse here mention is made of the children of Israell and secondly it is not true of the Iewes that they should be without Magistrates and gouernement for the Scepter might not depart from Iuda till the Messias came Gen. 49. 10 Gen. 49. 10. But is was verified in the ten tribes who had no Magistrates of their owne in the time of their captiuitie Yea but the ten Tribes were diuorced from God excluded out of the couenant and for euer debarred of mercy how then could it be said of them that God loued them as his spouse and that they should being conuerted seeke the Lord I answere that we are not to vnderstand these words generally of the whole people of Israell but of those onely amongest them which belonged to Gods election for of these alone it could truely be said that God loued them and that being conuerted they should seeke the lord And vnderstanding it of them we may easily answere the former obiections for though they were excluded out of the couenant of works yet this hindreth them not from being admitted into the couenant of grace though they were debarred of mercy in respect of their deliuerance out of a temporall captiuitie yet they obtained mercy in regard of their spirituall freedom out of the captiuitie of sinne and Sathan though they were for euer exiled out of the earthly Canaan yet being reconciled vnto God in Christ they might neuerthelesse become Citizens of the heauenly Ierusalem Lastly by the Prophet who is commaunded by God to loue this Adultresse beloued of her husband wee are to vnderstand Iesus Christ who loued these elect Israelites which were exculded out of the couenant of works and marryed them vnto himselfe by making with them the new couenant of grace and this appeareth in that hee willeth him to loue her with such loue as the Lord loued her namely with a constant most infinite and eternall loue which properly can be ascribed to no other sauing to our Sauiour Iesus Christ alone And this is the meaning of this parable The exposition followeth According to the loue of the Lord towards the children of Israell yet or when as they looked to other Gods and loued the wine bottles In which words the Lords loue is amplyfied by the wickednesse and vnworthinesse of the people and the peoples sinne aggrauated by the loue and goodnesse of God towards them The Lords loue is hereby commended in that he did not onely loue this people whilest they loued him kept their coniugall faith and serued him according to his word but euen when they dispised him forsooke him violated their faith and committed spirituall whoredome with false Gods the which he could neuer haue done had not his loue beene infinite most constant and eternall Secondly their sinne and wickednesse is exceedingly aggrauated in that they were so vngratefull and obstinate in their Idolatry that neyther Gods loue nor all his manifold benefits which he had multiplyed vpon them as pledges of his endlesse loue could moue them to loue him againe nor containe them in their fidelitie nor restraine them from committing spirituall fornication with false Gods If a wife doe not loue her husband who loatheth her and behaueth himselfe towards her cruelly and inhumanely though this doth not altogether take away her fault yet it doth much extenuate and excuse it but if she loue not such a husband as entirely loueth her nor will be restrained by his great kindnes and manifold benefits from breaking her faith and following her louers her fault is so haynous that it admitteth of no excuse but such a louing husband was the Lord to this Church of Israell and such a rebellious and vnfaithfull wife was she to him and therefore her wickednesse was so much the more grieuous and intollerable But let vs come to the particular branches of their sin the first whereof is expressed in these words Yet they looked to other Gods by which phrase with the Hebrewes is vsually signified loue and desire hope and trust reposed in that thing which they are said to looke after Wheras therefore they are said to looke after other Gods the meaning is that they set their hearts and affections vpon them and hoped and trusted in them and in these respects
himselfe in marriage Now because this tedious captiuitie and confused anarchie should not be without comfort therefore the Lord giueth them some testimonie of his loue by assuring them that hee would as well waite for their true conuersion as they for his mercy and that in the meane time he would not reject them and make choyse of some other people to be his Church but would stay his choyse till vpon their true repentance hee might receiue them into his former loue and fauour And this is emphatically signified in these words And I wil be so vnto thee wher the Lord not doth explicate his meaning at large but like those whose mindes are exceedingly perturbed with griefe indignation or some singular commiseration he vseth this abrupt and broken speach as though it so much grieued him to deferre reconciliation and to withhould the outward testimonies of his loue from his people that he was not able to pronounce this his definitiue sentence at large but in these abrupt and broken speeches So that here is Iudgement mixed with Mercie Iudgement in that he with-houldeth from them the signes of his loue for a time Mercie in that he with-houldeth them not for euer Iudgement in that he would not as yet admit them to be his people Mercy in that for their sakes he wil make choyce of no other but expecteth their repentance that thereupon hee might be reconciled vnto them But against this there may be made two obiections first An answere to a two-fold obiection that this testimonie of Gods loue and hope of their future reconciliation will not stand with Gods former threatnings namely that hee would no more haue mercy vpon them Chap. 1. Ver. 6. That they should not be his people nor he their God Ver. 9. That hee had vtterly diuorced and rejected them Chap. 2. Ver. 2. And secondly that it will not stand with the euent seeing the Lord did neuer after espouse this whole people nor yet them alone Both which obiections are taken away with one answere namely that this Prophecie is not to be vnderstood of the whole body of the people but of the faithfull amongst them which belonged to Gods Election of which it is truely verified so as it may well stand with the former Prophecie and the future euent For though he rejected the whole body of this people yet he reserued a remnant according to the Election of grace Rom. 11. 5. whom after their repentance and conuersion he did espouse to him and for these hee reserued his grace so as he would not after the people were excluded from the outward couenant admit of any other neyther before the comming of Christ nor after he was come till he had called and reconciled them and so vpon occasion of their calling and conuersion hee called also and conuerted the elect Gentiles amongest whom they were scattered and to them both who only were the true Israelites according to the spirit he made good his promises of mercy and grace and this appeareth Math. 10. 5. 6. 15. 24. 26. Act. 13. 46. Mat. 10. 5 6. 15. 24 26. Act. 13. 46. And so much for the exposition of the words the doctrines which from hence arise are these First whereas the Lord saith that he will not presently be reconciled vnto the Length of affliction no signe of our rejection Church of Israell but she shall waite his pleasure and bee content to liue in an afflicted estate vntill hee saw fit time of giuing vnto her assurance of his loue and fauour hence we learne to arme our selues with patience when our afflictions are tediously continued and not desperately to cast aside all hope as though the length of our afflictions were a signe of our vtter rejection for as it appeareth in this place the Lord causeth the afflictions euen of those that belong to his Election to endure for a long time together and maketh them to wayte and expect till hee seeth the fit time for their deliuerance Examples hereof we haue in the captiuitie of Aegypt and Babilon in Dauid Iob and many others The vse hereof is that though our afflictions be of long We must waite vpon God for deliuerance frō our afflictions continuance we waite the Lords leasure and possesse our soules with patience and so in the end wee shal be assured of deliuerance An example hereof we haue in Dauid Psal 40. 1. I wated patiently for the Lord c. In the faithfull grieuously Psal 40. 1. and 123. 2. Esay 8. 17. afflicted Psal 123. 2. Esay 8. 17. in Iacob Gen. 49. 18. Which duety that we likewise may performe let vs consider first that the Lord inioyneth and requireth it at our hands Psal 37. 34. Wayte thou on the Lord and keepe his Psal 37. 34. way Secondly that the Lord wayteth vpon vs that hee may finde vs fit to receiue his mercy that is humbled in the sence and feeling of our owne misery and want and earnestly hungring after his grace Esa 30. 18. Yet therefore will the Lord Esay 30. 18. wait that he may haue mercy vpon you Seeing then the Lord wayteth on vs to shew mercy great reason haue we to wait that we may receiue mercy for waiting and attending better becommeth suiters then benefactors Thirdly let vs waite vpon the Lord because the holy Ghost commendeth it vnto vs as a good thing Lamen 3. 26 Lamen 3. 26. It is good to trust and to waite for the saluation of the Lord. Fourthly if being afflicted we doe not onely watch but also wayte in prayer it is a good argument to confirme our faith in this assurance that our prayers shall be heard and our petitions graunted and therefore the Church vseth this reason for the strengthening of her faith Esay 33. 2. O Lord Esa 33. 2 haue mercy vpon vs we haue wayted for thee And Mich 7. 7. Mich. 7. 7. she joyneth these two together I will wait for God my sauiour my God will heare Of this Dauid had experience Psa 40. 1. Psal 40. 1. I waited patiently for the Lord and hee inclined vnto mee and heard my cry Fiftly because our waiting and patient abiding the Lords leasure shall assuredly haue a good issue for he will not suffer those that wait vpon him to goe away ashamed Esay 49. 23. And howsoeuer the hope of the afflicted may bee Esa 49 23. deferred yet it shall not perish for euer Psal 9. 18. But those Psa 9. 18. that attend the Lords leasure in the end shall be exalted haue the land in possession Psal 37. 34. They shall be saued and deliuered Psal 37. 34. from all euill Pro. 20. 22. Yea they shall be eternally Pro. 20. 22 blessed Esay 30. 18. The Lord is the God of iudgement blessed Esa 30. 18. are all they that wait for him Howsoeuer therefore the hope of the afflicted being deferred is for the present bitter and irkesome yet
were tyrannicall vsurpers to wit Zachariah Shalem Menahem Pekahiah Pekah and as it is very probable in the daies also of Hosheah but mention is made of him that light might be giuen to the Cronologie that it might appeare how long Hosea prophecied as we shall shew afterwards The causes why mention is here made of the raigne of these Kings are First to shew the certaintie of this prophecy in that the particular time wherin it was deliuered is specified Secondly because in Cronologies no fitter course can be taken for the numbring of times and yeares wherein things were done then by the raignes of Kings because the time by this meanes is better obserued and remembred Kings raignes and the things done by them being often repeated in common discourse Thirdly because it giueth light vnto the vnderstanding of the prophecie by hauing recourse to the historie of these Kings where vnderstanding their disposition life actions wee may thereby guesse at the state and condition of the Regis ad exemplem totus componitur orbis times and people ouer whom they raigned seeing the subiect either for feare or fauour vsually imitateth and conformeth himselfe to the nature disposition and behauiour of his Prince Fourthly that it might appeare that these prophecies were not deliuered for priuate ends and respects but for the publike vse and profite as well of their people as of their Princes that all with one accord both by Gods sweete promises and seuere threatnings might bee brought vnto true repentance Lastly that we might know how long the Lord vsed the constant ministerie of his Prophet in mouing the people to How long Hosea prophecied forsake their sinnes before he would inflict the punishments which they deserued the which may be gathered out of this Cronologie of the raigne of these Kings of Iuda and Israel For Vzziah who is called also Azariah raigned two and fiftie yeares in whose raigne hee beganne to prophecie and lest we should thinke that hee beganne to prophecie in the latter end of his raigne he addeth also that hee prophecied in the daies of Ieroboam who raigned one and forty yeares ouer Israel 2. King 14. 23. And in the seuen and twenty yeare of his raigne began Vzziah to raigne ouer Iuda 2. King 15. 2. King 14. 23. 1. So that if we reckon but from the last yeere of Ieroboam it 2. King 15. 1. will appeare that Hosea prophecied in the time of Vzziah thirty seuen or almost thirty eight yeares to these if wee adde the time of Iothams raigne which was sixteene yeeres 2. King 15. 33. And of Ahaz which was sixteene yeeres more 2. King 16. 2. it commeth in all to 69. or 70. yeares 2. King ●● 33. 2. King 16. ● Now it is likely seeing mention is made of Ieroboam and Hezekiah that hee prophecied also in some part of their raigne and according to Ieromes iudgement he prophecied fiue yeares vnder the raigne of Ezechias For as hee saith of him he did foresee the future and bewailed the present destruction of the Kingdome of Israel which was effected by Salmanasser in the sixt yeare of Ezechias raigne To all which time if wee adde some yeeres of Ieroboams raigne it will amount in all almost to eighty yeeres For whereas some imagine that the yeeres of Iothams raigne are to be numbred with the yeeres of his father Vzziah because in his time he being strucken with leprosie Iotham gouerned in his fathers stead it is very probable that besides this time he raigned after his fathers death sixteene yeeres For it is not said that he raigned as King while his father liued but that hee gouerned his fathers house and ruled the people of the land 2. King 15. 5. 2. Chronicles 26. 21. Namely as Vice-roy or his fathers Lieuetenant or Deputie 2. King 15. 5. 2. Chro. 26. 21 The doctrines which we hence gather are diuers First we Gods mercy in affording to his people the meanes of saluation may obserue Gods infinite mercy towards this people of Israel who before he would destroy them as their sinnes deserued he continued this and other of his Prophets ministery for a long time together to the end that they might be turned vnto him by true repentance and so escape his iust iudgements threatned Of this mercy we haue the like example in the daies of Noah before the captiuity of Iuda and the vtter destruction of Ierusalem in the times of Christ and his Apostles and in our owne daies Secondly we may obserue the obstinate wickednes and inflexible obduratenesse of this people who notwithstanding The hardnes of the peoples hearts this mercy of God and meanes of their conuersion continued in their sinnes without repentance The which obstinacie and rebellion is not proper vnto them but common with vs in these times wherein we stubbornely refuse the like or greater mercy and make no profitable vse of far greater meanes which God hath giuen vs for our conuersion But if we continue in the hardnesse of our hearts let vs not expect or hope for immunitie of punishment for as in the time of this Prophet after the people had long contemned Gods mercy he brought vpon them his fearefull iudgements so will he deale with vs c. The vse which we are to make hereof is that seeing our hearts are so hard and inflexible we doe not onely labour to bruise them by the hammer of Gods word and by applying vnto them the threatnings of the Law but seeing this is not sufficient in respect of their more then adamantine hardnesse we are often to implore the assistance of Gods holy Spirit for that onely is that precious oyle whereby they are suppled softned and made plyable to Gods will Thirdly we may heare obserue the painefull diligence The patience and diligence of our Prophet and vnwearied patience of the Prophet who for the space of so many yeeres continued his laborious ministerie and that not with a religious and obedient people which might haue yeelded vnto him some comfort and incouragement when as he did see the fruit of his labours but with an idolatrous and stiffe necked nation who scorned and despised his ministery The vse hereof serueth to stirre vs vp to follow his example in our seuerall places and callings though they seeme tedious and toilesome vnto vs especially Gods Ministers haue here a patterne of diligence and painefulnesse for their imitation which that they may imbrace and follow they are often to call to minde the recompence of reward promised Dan. 12. 3. Dan. 12. 3. So likewise the hearers of Gods word may here learne patiently to harken to the word of exhortation and reprehension and not to waxe wearie and tired though Gods Ministers doe for many yeares together inueigh against their sinnes and denounce Gods iudgements due vnto them as the custome of many is who though they be neuer wearie of sinning yet they are presently weary of
ouertaken with their punishments but they neglecting this example which the very sight and name of the place should haue continually called to their remembrance and going forward in their blinde superstition and idolatry the Lord in the verie same place brought vpon them the very like destruction The vse which we are to make hereof is this that we take warning by the example of others and make profitable vse of Gods iudgements which like a gracious Iudge he inflicteth on some that others being hereby admonished may escape which gracious warnings if we neglect he will likewise make vs examples of his iustice ANd so much concerning the first degree of the Israelites punishment signified by the birth of the Prophets first childe Now followeth the second degree the withholding of Gods mercy from them The which is first typically shadowed vnder the name of the second childe and after manifestly expressed first simply in the reason why this name was imposed verse 6. and afterwards amplified by way of comparison or dissimilitude verse 7. The second degree of their punishmēt is simply set down verse 6. Shee conceiued yet againe and bare a daughter And Verse 6 God said vnto him Call her name Lo-ruchamah for I will no more haue pity vpon the house of Israel but I will vtterly take them away Whereas the Prophet saith that his wife conceiued yet againe he sheweth that there was a certaine space or distance Exposition of time betweene the birth of the two children by which he signifieth that the Lord after that he had for their sinnes inflicted vpon them the first punishment would not presently bring vpon them his second and more grieuous iudgement but would giue them some respite and time of repentance that so turning vnto him hee might spare them and receiue them to mercy For if they had after they were ouerthrowne and led captiues vnfainedly repented of their sinnes the Lord would haue had compassion on them and receiued them into his loue and fauour But when they obstinately continued in their impenitency the Lord refuseth to shew mercy vnto them And this he signifieth by the birth of the second child Secondly by this second birth the Lord sheweth that they made no good vse of his former iudgements but grew from bad to worse and therefore his iustice required that he should lay vpon them a second punishment much more grieuous then the former And these things are to be gathered out of her second conceptiō It is further said that her secōd child was a daughter by which he intimateth their declining both in respect of their maners and state the former whereof was the cause of the latter First he sheweth their declination in manners for as the woman sexe is more weake and inconstant then the man so they were declined from that strength of faith vertue and constancy that was in Iacob and the rest of their godly ancestors and were become weake and inconstant in all good things Secondly he sheweth their declination in respect of the state of their Common-wealth For whereas their ancestors had valiantly defended and inlarged the Kingdome against all their enemies they were so weakened partly through their effeminatenesse the daughter of peace and plenty and partly through seditions and ciuill warres that they had made themselues a fit pray for their enemies being no more able to defend themselues then if they had been a Common-wealth of women And this weakenesse and infirmity is signified vnder the sexe of women in the Scriptures So when God would signifie that the Babylonians should not be able to stand in the hand of their enemies he saith that they should be like women that is weake and impotent Ier. 50. 37. Now this weakenesse in their state proceeded Ier. 50. 37. from their weakenesse in grace vertue faith and constancy for when they declined from holy obedience and after a weake and inconstant manner suffered themselues to bee withdrawne from God and were inticed to serue idols God tooke away from them their valour strength and manly courage and depriuing them of their hearts of men gaue them womens hearts which caused them to be so effeminate timerous and cowardly that they durst not indure the least incounter of their enemies And these are the things signified by the sexe The next thing to be considered is the name Call her name lo-ruchamah The signification whereof is without mercy or not obtaining mercy or as the Apostle Paul expoundeth it Rom. 9. 25. Not through Gods mercy beloued The which name is Rom. 9. 25. giuen to signifie that the people of Israel after they were led captiue by the Assyrians should neuer obtaine either presently or for the time to come Gods mercy to be restored againe into their Country And this is the meaning of these words concerning the Doctrine imposition of the name The doctrines which arise from Gods mercy euen in his punishments hence are diuers First me may obserue Gods gratious goodnesse in his manner of punishing men for their sinnes after he hath smitten them once he doth not presently strike againe but he pauseth and giueth time and respite that they may make profitable vse of his former visitation and amend their faults for which they were punished that so he may not be moued to redouble their punishment as it appeareth in his dealing with the Israelites in this place Whereby it is manifest that he taketh no pleasure in our paine and torment but in punishing aimeth at our amendment that so we may be eternally saued and therefore as he is hardly drawne to punish so when he hath begun he is loth to go forward but hauing like a gratious father giuen vs a few stripes he laieth the rod aside expecting our amendment that so he may no more punish vs. And thus he dealt with the Israelites in the time of the Iudges in the captiuity of Babylon and with vs likewise as at many other times so especially in the daies of Queene Mary and in our late visitation Secondly we may obserue in the example of the Israelites That we quickly forget Gods iudgements how soone we forget Gods iudgements when they are once past making no good vse of them nor amending those faults for which we were punished but when the affliction is once past we securely go forward in sinne and become worse then we were before as though now God had emptied his quiuer and had not one arrow of wrath and vengeance more to shoote at vs. A notable example hereof we haue in Pharaoh yea and in our owne times for how few is the number of those who haue made any profitable vse of Gods late visitation Nay how many are there who as though hauing escaped that they were priuileged from all others are growne worse and worse This is a miserable euill of which the Lord complaineth Esa 1. 5. and the forerunner Esa 1. 5. of vtter destruction For as the father
19. and Esa 36. and 37. And secondly when as being led captiue into Babylon he moued Cyrus and Darius to haue compassion on them and to returne them againe into their owne Country And this is that which is meant by these benefits promised Doctrines Now the things which hence are to be obserued are All Gods benefits included vnder his mercy these First that he includeth all his benefits promised vnder the name of his mercy to note vnto vs that they doe not come vnto any by merit and desert but of free grace and Gods vndeserued goodnes for mercy doth not presuppose merit but rather misery both in regard of sinne and the punishment due vnto it And further to assure vs that if we haue Gods mercy and be in his fauour we shall neede no benefit either for our maintenance or else our defence and preseruation whereas on the otherside without this mercy we can haue no assurance of either Secondly we may obserue that he knitteth these two together Mercy the cause of saluation mercy and saluation and setteth mercy in the first place because it is the cause of saluation and the fountaine from which this streame of our deliuerance floweth Whence we learne that when the Lord saueth and deliuereth vs out of the hands of our enemies we doe not ascribe our deliuerance to our goodnesse workes or worthinesse but to Gods free mercy and vndeserued grace The third thing to be considered is the meanes whereby Exposition the Lord would saue them which are described first affirmatiuely by the Lord their God and after negatiuely where the false and insufficient meanes are remoued And will not saue them by bow c. Concerning the first by the Lord their God we are to vnderstand the true Messias Iesus Christ the eternall Iehoua Gen. 19. 24. with his Father and holy Spirit who onely saueth and deliuereth his Church out of the hands of their enemies and procureth for them eternall saluation and happinesse first as the meritorious cause for his sake and merits we haue saluation and all other benefits deriued vnto vs from God the Father who if he should behold vs out of his Sonne in our sinnes and corruptions would in stead of benefits heape vpon vs plagues and punishments and in stead of saluation would plunge vs into euerlasting death and destruction And secondly as the efficient cause of our saluation for the Father saueth vs but by his Son who is his strong power whereby he not onely created vs but also hath redeemed and saued vs. Moreouer he saith that he would saue them by the Lord their God rather then that he would saue them by himselfe to the end that he might hereby signifie not onely that the house of Iuda did make choyce of him the true God whom they worshipped and serued but also that he was not the God of the Israelites seeing they had forsaken him and betaken themselues to the worship of idols But here it may be demanded how this can be true that he was not the God of the Israelites but of the Iewes onely seeing he professeth himselfe to be the God of all the seed of Abraham Isaac and Iacob and also seeing the Israelites at this time professed that they serued him in their idols I answere that God accounteth himselfe to be no God vnto them who had refused him and that they had in truth refused him whatsoeuer shew and profession they made to the contrary when as they did not worship him after the prescript forme of his word but in hypocrisie and in idols not in his temple vnto which place hee had limited and restrained his publike worshippe but in groues and high places And this was the true meanes whereby he would saue them In the next place hee expresseth and remooueth the false and insufficient meanes of their saluation And will not saue them by bow nor by sword nor by battell by horses nor by horsemen As though hee should say Although they bee so weake poore and impotent as that they may appeare vnto themselues and others to lie open for a pray to their enemies yet this shall bee no meanes to hinder their saluation and deliuerance seeing my purpose is not to saue them by any power riches or meanes of their owne but by mine owne might which without all humane helpe is in it selfe omnipotent and omnisufficient Whereas then he saith that hee will not saue them by bow nor by sword c. his meaning is that hee would not saue them by their owne power and strength or by any humane and worldly meanes but that their deliuerāce should whollie come from and by himselfe the which accordingly was effected first in the reigne of Ezekias when as being inuaded with the mightie host of Senacharib hee caused his Angell to slay 185000. of their enemies and so without their owne bow sword or battell deliuered them And after that they were led captiue into Babylon he gaue thē grace in the eies of Cyrus and Darius and when otherwise they were altogether vnable by force to relieue themselues he caused their enemies in pitie and compassion to free them out of captiuitie and to restore them againe into their owne countrie Now the reason why the Lord excludeth all their owne strength and meanes was first to beate downe the pride and insolencie of the Israelites who thought it impossible that the house of Iuda in regard of their weakenesse pouertie and small number should bee deliuered out of their hands especially hauing combined themselues with the Syrians to worke their ouerthrow and secondly to strengthen the Iewes in the assurance of their deliuerance notwithstanding they saw no possible meanes in regard of humane power which was exceeding needfull considering that through our naturally corruptions we are readie to doubt of our deliuerance when as we are abandoned of outward helpes And this is the meaning of these words The doctrines which The doctrines from hence arise are these First wee may obserue that the 1. That we haue all benefits from God in and for Iesus Christ saluation of Gods Church and elect children and all other benefits which they receiue either spiritual or temporal is in and for Iesus Christ alone and not from their owne meanes nor for their own merits And this appeareth in this place where the Lord promiseth to saue the Iewes out of the hands of the enemies but not by their own means but in the Lord their God the promised Messiah And as this is true concerning our temporall deliuerances so especially concerning our eternall saluation for there is not saluation in any other c. Act. 4. 12. And he is able perfectly to saue all those who Acts 4. 12. Heb. 7. 25. come vnto God by him Heb. 7. 25. The vse hereof is that wee doe not with the Papists looke for saluation elsewhere not in our owne merits nor in the merits and intercession of Saints nor ascribe the
we may obserue that the more heauy the iudgement is which is denounced the longer the Lord deferreth The greater the iudgement is the more loath the Lord is to inflict it to inflict it as though he were loth to vse extremities if mans wickednes did not deserue it and his iustice require it seeing lighter punishments will not preuaile When Iizreel was borne Lo-ruchamah was soone after conceiued but she conceiueth not Lo-amni whereby the vtter reiection of the people was signified before Lo-ruchamah was weaned all which time the Lord gaue them to make vse of his former iudgements and expected their amendment with admirable patience that he might not vtterly reiect them Wherein the Lord behaueth himselfe like vnto a good and tender-hearted Surgeon who leaueth no good meanes vnassayed before hee will cut off the member which is ill affected c. Thirdly we may note that before the Lord doth vtterly God taketh away his liuerie before he turne men out of his seruice reiect them from being his people he first weaneth them from the milke of his word and foode of his Sacraments debarring them of all their publike assemblies the meanes of his worship and seruice and taking from them all their priuiledges and prerogatiues which they inioyed whilest they were his people Like vnto Noble men who vpon the ill behauiour of their seruants first pull off their liuery before they turne them out of seruice not onely because they are vnworthy of any such credit or protection as it might cause vnto them but also because they should not by abusing themselues in such habits dishonour their Lords who haue reiected them Fourthly we may here obserue the greatnesse of this punishment That it is a fearefull punishment to be reiected from being Gods people which may be considered in the inestimable benefits whereof they were hereby depriued and in the intolerable euils and miseries into which they were plunged whilest Iehouah was their Lord and King they were vnder his protection and so secured from the danger of all enemies they were prouided for by his al-sufficient prouidence and therefore sure to want nothing indued with many noble titles prerogatiues and priuiledges as being his seruants children heires yea his spouse partakers of many vnualuable benefites temporall and spirituall his word Sacraments and such like and after a short time of their seruice here on earth they were assured to receiue for wages an immortall Crowne of glorie and eternall felicitie and happinesse in his Kingdome But as soone as they are cast out of his Kingdome and reiected from being his people they were stripped of those benefits exposed to the danger of their enemies sinne Satan and the world who speedily assault and easily ouercome all those who are out of Gods protection and so taking them captiue inthrall them in a miserable seruitude the wages whereof for the time present is misery horrour of conscience and desperation and in the life to come eternall death Rom. 6. 23. As therefore we iudge their case most wretched Rom. 6. 23. who hauing been the subiects and seruants of some gratious Prince vnder whom they haue inioyed all the benefits of a peaceable and well gouerned kingdome are for their crimes and misdemeanors banished into a Country in it selfe vncomfortable and amongst the middest of cruell enemies so and much more miserable is the state of those who are banished out of the kingdome of grace where is all good and felicitie and liue in the kingdome of Satan where is nothing but all woe and misery And this is that punishment which here is threatned Now let vs further consider vpon whom it is inflicted euen Gods former mercies priuiledge not a rebellious people from future iudgements vpon the people of Israel the chosen people of God vnto whom in former times he had bestowed innumerable benefits Whereby it appeareth that though a people haue in former times been partakers of neuer so great priuiledges and neuer so much inriched with Gods benefits though God haue made his outward couenant with them of his grace and the continuance of his fauour yet if they breake their couenant which interchangeably they haue made with God denying vnto him their obedience and liuing in all sin and wickednesse all this wil not priuiledge them from Gods fearefull punishments no not from finall reiection and destruction And therefore let vs not thinke it enough that God hath outwardly made his couenant with vs vnlesse it be also written in our hearts and we perform at least in our holy indeuour that part thereof which concerneth our selues for vnlesse we liue like his people and seruants he wil not acknowledge vs for such but will cast vs off as he did the Israelites Now the sinnes for which especially the Israelites were Idolatrie and impenitencie the cause of the peoples reiection reiected were first their grosse idolatrie whereby they had forsaken God and betaken themselues to the seruice of idols and secondly their obstinacie and impenitencie in their course of rebellion from which they would not be reclaimed neither by Gods bountifull benefits nor by his seuere threatnings nor yet by his chastisements and more grieuous punishments which first like a tender father and after like a iust Iudge he inflicted on them but rather grew worse and worse and more and more intolerable in their wickednesse For this is the last course and meanes which the Lord vseth for the conuersion of a sinner which when it will not preuaile he giueth them ouer as being past all help seeing they are past all grace If the skilfull surgeon find that healing salues are not fit to heale a deep festered wound he vseth drawing corrasiues and the lancher but if he seeth the part diseased notwithstanding all good and fit meanes vsed to be past cure he will no longer lose his labour and cost but cutteth it off The gratious Iudge when he hath for the offenders first fault giuen him some fatherly admonition or threatned some seuere punishment if he offend again he punisheth him with a whip or with a burning iron but if all these chastisements and punishments will not reclaime him he condemneth him to exile or death as being past hope of amendment And so the Lord when he seeth that neither the healing plaister of his gracious promises nor the sharpe corrasiue of his threatnings and punishments will cure a people of the deepe festered sores of sinne when hee seeth that neither admonition nor gentle chastisement nor seuerer punishment will restraine the sinner from outragious wickednesse then doth he cut and cast them off as men of a desperate estate and past all cure And this was the estate of the Israelites in this place and of the Iewes of whom the Lord complaineth Esa 1. 5. and of Pharaoh Saul Esa 1. 5. and many others The vse which we are to make hereof is that wee doe not neglect Gods mercifull visitations and fatherly corrections
also alludeth to the state of the Israelites in the wildernesse who had no water but what the Lord brought out of a rocke in a miraculous manner Neither doth he onely aime at this bodilie thirst for want of water but also at the thirst of the soule for want of the water which floweth from the sanctuarie the word of God of which Amos speaketh Chap. 8. 11. 13. And of the Amos 8. 11. 13. water of life of which whosoeuer drinketh shall neuer more thirst euen the Spirit of God of which our Sauiour speaketh Ioh. 4. 14. 7. 38. 39. Ioh. 4. 14 7. 38. 39. The scope of the Prophet And so much for the meaning of the words wherein the Prophet aimeth at these foure things principally first hee setteth forth the admirable and infinite patience loue clemencie and bountie of God who when his spouse the Church of Israel had often and impudently plaied the harlot and for her whoredomes was diuorced from him yet he did not according to the iust custome of husbands in like cases take his gifts and rich benefits from her which he had bestowed on her but suffered her to inioy them still and this he implieth when as hee willeth her to repent lest he should spoile her noting thereby that as yet hee had not done it Secondly in these words he intimateth that if she would repent he was readie to forgiue her and to suffer her still to inioy his benefits for he had not as yet spoiled and stripped her as he iustly might and was loath to go about it and therfore he exhorteth her to turne from her sinnes that he might not be vrged to doe it in his iust displeasure Thirdly he laboureth to worke in her true repentance by forewarning her of an increase of punishment namelie that if that great punishment of diuorce and separation from God would not mooue them to turne from their sinnes hee was readie to inflict other punishments vpon them which though they were not so great as the former in their owne nature yet perhaps they were farre more grieuous in their opinion and apprehension For where hee willeth her to take away her sinnes lest hee spoiled her hee implieth that vnlesse she repented he would not content himselfe with that punishment of her diuorce but would most certainely spoile her of all the ornaments gifts and benefits which he had bestowed on her Fourthly because pride and true repentance will not stand together therefore he seeketh to humble her both by putting her in minde of her miserable and base estate wherein she was before hee aduanced her and by assuring her that if she did not humble herselfe forsake her sinnes and turne vnto him from her idols he would leaue her as hee found her depriue her of all his gifts and ourwhelme her with an vnsupportable load of woe and misery And these are the maine things at which the Prophet aimeth The Do ∣ ctrines in these words The doctrines which from hence are to be obserued are these First we may obserue what is the God denounceth his iudgments that we may repent cause why the Lord denounceth his iudgements against his people to wit that they may repent of their sinnes and that repenting they may escape punishment which his iustice vrgeth him to inflict vpon them continuing in their sins So he causeth the diuorce to be proclaimed that they may take away their adulteries and that repenting of them they might not be stripped of all the gifts and benefits which as yet they inioyed So that the end of Gods threatnings is that we may repent and of our repentance that wee may escape punishment and the end of one punishment is that making good vse of it we may escape an other Whence we may obserue that God euen in wrath remembreth mercy for hee threatneth that he may not punish and punisheth that he may not destroy he punisheth vnwillingly after a sort and therefore before hand he giueth warning that wee may escape it and hauing inflicted it he laboureth to apply it to our senselesse hearts that by our obstinacy wee doe not vrge his iustice to proceede in punishing And therefore let vs not by our stubburnnesse and impenitency make Gods end frustrate and turne mercy into iustice but when he threatneth let vs repent that we may escape punishment or at least let vs turne vnto him when he punisheth that we doe not moue him to deale more seuerely with vs. The second thing to be obserued is that after the Lord God doth not alwaies strip a people of al his benefits after he hath reiected them hath reiected a people hee doth not alwaies presently vpon the diuorce withdraw his gifts and benefits from them but leaueth them with them for a time to bee inioyed that this his loue patience and bounty may moue them to forsake their sinnes that so they may bee receiued into his former loue and fauour Whereby as wee haue occasion to admire and praise the indefatigable patience and infinite bountie of our gratious God so may we hereby be admonished not to iudge of Gods loue and fauour nor of our owne happinesse by outward benefits whether they be ciuill or spiritutuall as namely peace plenty a flourishing estate the word Sacraments c. seeing after the diuorce he vouchsafeth to the diuorced such benefits for a time as appeareth in this place The like example we haue in Caine who being banished Gods presence flourished in the world and in Saul who though hee were reiected yet the Lord suffered him a long time to inioy the Kingdome and in Ahab whose destruction was long determined before it was effected Thirdly we may obserue that because the Church of Israel did not repent vpon the hearing of the diuorce proclamed If one iudgement will not reclaime vs God will send another therefore the Lord threatneth an other punishment namely that he would strip and spoile them of all his gifts So that although in his loue and patience he doth not presently after he had diuorced them depriue them of his benefits but giueth them a time to make vse of his former punishment yet his iustice will not euer suffer him to winke at their sinnes but if his first iudgement will not reclaime them he will goe forward to a second which vsually is more grieuous then the first Notwithstanding in this he first denounceth the diuorce which is the greater punishment and after the withdrawing of his gifts which is the lesse for separation from God is infinitely a more heauy iudgement then to be depriued of all other happinesse And this hee doth because howsoeuer these things are in their owne nature yet to worldly men and prophane hypocrites the losse of God is more lightly esteemed then the losse of his gifts for so they may inioy their worldly glory riches and delights they can bee content to liue depriued of Gods fauour and to be diuorced from him And therefore the Lord
he will turne vnto vs his gratious countenance and whilest wee are in the confines of Gods kingdome the Church militant let vs patiently beare our crosse remembring that ere long wee shall haue full possession of our heauenly Canaan where we shall enioy a perpetuall rest from all troubles and be fully replenished with all ioy and happinesse Thirdly we here learne that the Lord bestoweth his temporall Gods temporall benefits are to the faithful earnest penies of those which are eternall benefits corporall and spiritual vpon the faithfull not only for their present vse and comfort but also for the confirming and increasing of their faith and hope in the assurance of farre more excellent gifts euen the vnualuable treasures of his eternall kingdome for hee giueth the valley of Achor for the doore of hope that is the benefits of this life that they may be pledges and earnest penies to assure vs of all his benefits belonging to the life to come The which as it may be vnderstood of all Gods gifts bestowed vpon the faithfull so especially of the inward graces of Gods sanctifying Spirit namely charitie zeale patience humilitie loue to the Gospell sanctification of life and the rest so that whosoeuer finde themselues indued therewith they may be assured that they haue so many pledges and earnest penies of their eternall happinesse and that it is not possible that their hope should become void and frustrate which the Lord hath confirmed with so many seales The consideration whereof should make vs to labour aboue all things for these spiritual gifts and graces whereby this doore of hope may be opened vnto vs and wee confirmed in the assurance of our election and saluation vnto which dutie the Apostle exhorteth vs 2. Pet. 1. 10. especially let vs by all meanes seeke to obtaine 2. Pet. 1. 10. the gift of Gods Spirit which giueth vnto vs an assured testimonie that wee are his children and heires of eternall life Rom. 8. 16. 17. sealeth vp this assurance in our harts and consciences Rom. 8. 16. 17. Eph. 1. 13. Eph. 1. 13. and also is the pledge and earnest penie of our heauenly inheritance 2. Cor. 1. 22. 2. Cor. 1. 22. We must meditate vpon Gods blessings new and old to increase our thankfulnes Fourthly whereas the Lord making new promises doth shadow them out vnder the allegorie of ancient benefits to the end that our assurance of future blessings by experience of his former goodnesse and truth may be ratified and confirmed and that in remembrance of pasted benefits in the fruition of his present blessings and in assured hope of his future goodnesse wee may be stirred vp to true thankfulnesse and obedience let vs learne hereby seeing we stand in need of all these helpes to make this profitable vse of them that is first let vs call to minde Gods mercies of old of which our selues haue had experience as also his goodnesse truth and power which he hath shewed towards others in preseruing sustaining and defending them and so shall we with greater affiance and confidence depend vpon his neuer failing promises and all ruling prouidence in the middest of all extremities And secondly let vs not only thinke vpon those benefits which we presently enioy but let them serue also to call to our remembrance Gods former goodnes towards vs as also those more excellent blessings and rich treasures of his heauenly kingdome wherof all these are but pledges and earnest penies that so this threefold cable of Gods gratious benefits being as it were twisted together in our memories may more strongly draw vs to true thankfulnes and obedience and that this infinite flame of his loue towards vs may at least kindle in our hearts some sparks of loue towards him againe And these are the doctrines to be obserued out of the benefits Whosoeuer haue part in spirituall blessings are filled also with ioy gladnesse and thankfulnesse here promised Now out of the Churches dutie wee may further obserue that whosoeuer are made partakers of the former benefits they are also hereby filled with ioy and gladnes the which they expresse by singing Gods praises not only with the voice but also with the heart and by glorifying Gods name not only with verball thankfulnes but also with the fruits of holy obedience in the whole course of their liues for as certainly as God promiseth our reconciliation conuersion and all other his benefits so doth hee likewise promise that those that are possessed of them shall laud and magnifie his name And therefore whosoeuer haue not this inward ioy gladnes in their harts nor expresse the same by lauding and magnifying Gods name it is certaine they haue no true taste of Gods spirituall benefits For this inward fire of ioy and thankfulnes will not be smothered in the heart but the flame thereof wil burst out into praises and thanksgiuing Now because euery one may say that he is filled with inward ioy and may faine and straine out a verball thankfulnes therefore we must labour to approue them by our outward actions and a continuall course of holy obedience to be true and sincere and so they will giue vs assurance that we haue indeed our part in al the former benefits which otherwise we cannot haue seeing the Lord giueth the one as well as the other and to this end bestoweth his benefits that we may glorifie his name by thankfulnes and obedience as appeareth 1. Pet. 2. 9. 1. Cor. 6. 20. 1. Pet. 2. 9. 1. Cor. 6. 20. We must not deferre our thankfulnesse Secondly we may obserue that this our thankfulnesse is not to be deferred but presently to be expressed euen whilest we are in the vineyards that is whilest our hearts are replenished with ioy in regard of the comfortable vse of Gods present benefits and our assured hope of those greater mercies in the time to come for negligent delaies cause forgetfulnes which is also the mother of the grossest kinde of vnthankfulnes But contrariwise then will our praises and thanksgiuings be most zealous and feruent when they issue from a hart presently inflamed with the ioyful sense of Gods benefits An example hereof we haue in Dauid 2. Sam. 7. 18. 2 Sam. 7. 8. Exod. 15. 1. Luk. 1. 46. in the Israelites Exod. 15. 1. in the Virgin Marie Luk. 1. 46. Thirdly we may here obserue that as the ioy so the praises The praises of the faithfull must not be slight but great and feruent Esay 9. 3. and thanksgiuings of Gods people are not slight and ordinarie but exceeding great and feruent not only like vnto the ioy in haruest that is in the fruition of Gods common benefits but like the ioy wherewith men reioyce after some famous victory obtained against their enemies yea and such enemies as haue in former times held them in most seruile and slauish seruitude for this was the ioy of the Israelites vnto which the Prophet compareth here the ioy and
in the end their patient abiding shall be gladnesse as it is Pro. 10. 28. Pro. 10. 28. The second thing to be obserued is that the Lord will not presently be reconciled with his people and shew vnto God trieth our Repentance by afflictions before he restoreth vs to fauour them the wonted signes of his fauour till he hath taken tryall of their repentance by manifold afflictions and this he doth not so much to approue their vnfayned repentance to himselfe for hee searcheth the heart and raignes and therefore needeth not these outward signes but first that by these signes their owne faith may be assured that they are truely conuerted seeing they endure the tryall with patience because they haue sinned Secondly that he may shew his detestation of sinne in that he will not easily be reconciled euen with those whom hee dearely loueth when they haue grieuously offended Thirdly that by these corrections he may make them carefull for the time to come that they doe not againe by their sinnes prouoke his displeasure for hee that with a wounded conscience and broken spirit hath long sought and sued for mercie and hath spent many a bitter sigh and grieuous grone before hee could attaine vnto the assurance of gods fauour hauing obtained it will not easily be allured againe by his sinnes to hazard and loose it Fourthly that hereby he may glorifie his name by approuing his iustice and righteous iudgements euen to those that are with out when as they see that he will not winke at sinne no not in his dearest children who otherwise would take occasion vpon their sinne and impunitie to blaspheme 2 Sam. 12. 14. 2 Sam. 12. 14. Lastly that hee may hereby teach the wicked what they are to expect for if the Lord so correcteth those sinnes in his children which of infirmitie they haue committed how will hee punish the sinnes of wicked men which they commit with full consent of will If he be displeased with the faithfull and will not presently assure them of his fauour after they haue repented then what can they looke for that continue in their sinnes without repentance but that he will poure vpon them the full viols of his wrath If he so seuerely chastiseth sinne in his sonnes and friends how grieuously will he punish it in slaues and enimies examples hereof we haue in Adam Dauid Ezechias the people of Israell and Christ himselfe The vse hereof is that we carefully take heede that wee doe not wound our Consciences by committing against our knowledge grieuous sinnes seeing we are assured if wee belong vnto God that hee will sharply chastise vs for it and will not suffer the beames of his loue comfortably to shine vpon vs till wee haue approued our repentance by many tryals and haue indured much more griefe and sorrow through our crosses and the restraint of his loue then our pleasure and delight was in the committing of our sinnes and therefore let vs not to please the flesh wound the spirit nor purchase a dram of carnall delight with a pound of sorrow Secondly this may serue to comfort and refresh vs when as we are ready to sincke vnder the waight of sinne and heauie burthen of affliction and in regard hereof are readie to conclude that we are cast out of Gods fauour for then wee are to remember that the Lord oftentimes restrayneth the signes of his fauour and continueth the afflictions of those whom notwithstanding he dearely loueth for the causes aboue said c. Thirdly whereas the Lord saith that shee shall stay for God afflicteth vs for sin that we may learne to hate it him in her afflicted estate and shall not play the harlot c. hence we learne that the reason why the Lord continueth to restraine his fauour and to afflict his people is not because he hateth them but that hereby they may bee moued more seriously to repent and to flye from their sinnes with greater detestation when they see these miserable effects that follow them If our heauenly father when wee grieuously offend should cocker vs and shew no signe of his displeasure or being somewhat offended should presently be reconciled vs we finding no bitternesse neyther of Gods anger nor of affliction which might cause vs to distast the sweet pleasures of sin would neuer soundly and seriously repent of them but when we apprehend his heauie displeasure and cannot with much entreaty be assured of reconciliation when wee feele the smart of sharp afflictions and can by no meanes find ease then we call our sinnes to remembrance and are grieued at the heart that we haue committed them then we hate and detest them as being the fountaine from which doe flow these waters of bitternes and then we resolue with our selues that if our heauenly father will but this once forgiue and be reconciled vnto vs if he will but cause the wonted beames of his fauour to shine vpon vs and ease vs of the heauie burthen of our afflictions we will neuer againe be perswaded so by our sins to prouoke his displeasure though all the profit pleasures and preferment of the world were offred vnto vs. The vse which we are to make hereof is that when the Lord doth exercise vs with afflictions we exercise our selues in repentance and make the day of tribulation the day of humiliation for this is the maine end why the Lord afflicteth vs which when he hath attained hee will put an end to our afflictions and therefore the way to ease our selues of the burthen of punishment is to cast away the burthen of our transgressions the best meanes to lighten our soules with sauing comfort is to loade them with bitter sorrow for sinne if we would haue God well pleased with vs we must be displeased with our selues and if euer we meane to come vnto the pallace of ioy wee must trauaile vnto it by the path of mourning For blessed are they that mourne for they shall bee Mat. 5. 4. Luke 6. 21. comforted Blessed are they that weepe for they shall laugh Fourthly whereas the Lord saith Thou shalt not play the God onely restraineth vs frō running headlong into sinne Harlot not so much by way of prohibition teaching them what he would not haue them doe as by actuall restraint shewing what he would cause and inable them to refraine notwithstanding their pronenesse thereunto through their naturall corruption hence we learne what is the chiefe cause whereby we are with-held from running headlong into all manner of sinne namely Gods powerfull word which as it saith Thou shalt not sinne so it enableth vs through the secret operation of his spirit to yeeld obedience For in our owne naturall disposition we are ready to draw sinne vnto vs as with Cart-ropes and to drincke iniquitie like water Esay 5. 18. our thoughts are onely euill and that continually Gen. 6. 5 Gen. 6. 5. We are not able so much as to will that which is
mind times of old wherein the Lord gaue vs sure testimonies of his loue and so from the immutabilitie of his loue mercy and goodnesse wee may receiue comfort So Dauid Psal 77. 11. Psal 77. 11. Secondly we may obserue how the Church behaueth her selfe when shee seemeth left and forsaken of God namely she sits downe like a desolate widdow and spendeth her time That we must not be carelesse and sencelesse in the time of affliction in mourning and lamentation whence we learne not to make light of this heauie affliction nor to walk vnder this waighty burthen with stiffe and stretched out necks but when God in the time of affliction seemeth to estrange and absent himselfe we must humble our soules with mourning and lamentation watch and waite for his returne and continually cry and call vpon him by hearty prayer desiring nothing in the world so much as that hee will hasten his comming and re-assure vs of his fauour And if we thus behaue our selues then shall we finde Gods promise verified Esa 54. 8. For a Esay 54. 8. little while haue I forsaken thee but with great compassion will I gather thee And by this meanes also shall we gather vnto our selues assurance that we are indeed espoused vnto God when as the Lord our husband hauing absented himselfe in some displeasure we doe not like strumpets rejoyce in his absence or if there be any little griefe seeke to put it off by haunting the company of vaine persons and by passing the time in sports and pastimes but like loyall and louing wiues bewayle his absence and displeasure taking delight in nothing till wee enjoy his loue againe in whom our soule delighteth Here therefore two extreames are to be auoyded for as we must not sincke and fall downe flat vnder the burthen of Gods displeasure so we must not stand vpright with stiffe and stretched out necks casting it aside without care or sorrow but we must take the middle course that is we must stoupe and buckle vnder our burthen as being weary of bearing it we must sit downe and mourne like a widdow forsaken and desolate delighting in nothing till wee feele and finde that God deligheth in vs and is reconciled vnto vs. An example hereof we haue in the Church Psal 137. 2. 3. Psal 237. 2. 3. Thirdly we are to obserue Gods wise mixture of Mercy and Iudgement that the Church might neyther be secure Gods wise mixture of Mercy and Iudgement and carelesse nor yet comfortlesse and without hope for whereas he saith that she shall sit mourning for many dayes herein is implyed that her afflictions should neyther bee very short nor very long First hee sheweth that they should not be very short for they should last for many dayes and then that they should not be very long for they should not last for many ages or many yeares but onely for many dayes He doth not reckon the time by minutes or houres for then they would haue beene secure and wretchlesse and so taking no care to arme themselues with patience they would haue beene altogether vnprepared when contrary to their hope their afflictions were tediously continued nor yet by yeares or ages least whilest he sought to arme them with patience he should disarme them of hope vvhich is our chiefe stay to keepe vs from sincking vnder affliction The vse which we are to make hereof is that vvhen vvee are in affliction vve doe neither expect present deliuerance nor yet imagine that God will forsake vs for euer For if our hopes be frustrate vve shall grow impatient and if vve haue no hope at all we shall grow desperate Fourthly vve may obserue that he saith the Israelits should That our afflictions are momentanie howsoeuer they seeme tedious to the flesh continue in their afflicted estate many dayes vvhereas in truth they continued diuers ages euen sixe hundred fourescore yeeres So hee saith that the Church of the Smirnians should haue tribulation for ten dayes Apoc. 2. 10. And that the Church should be fed in the vvildernesse of affliction a thousand two hundred and threescore dayes Chap. 11. 6. By vvhich computation hee teacheth vs how vve are to accompt of the time of affliction namely howsoeuer to the flesh it seeme long and tedious yet it is to be judged short momentanie in comparison of that eternall glory vvhich attendeth for vs after vve haue finished the short skirmish of afflictions When as therefore our troubles and crosses seeme so tedious as though they would neuer end let vs comfort our selues with this consideration that they are in truth but light short and momentanie in respect of that superexcellent and eternall waight of glorie which is reserued for vs. 2 Cor. 4. 17. 2 Cor. 4. 17. Fiftly whereas the Lord describing the widdowhood of the Church of Israell and the seperation betweene him and her doth after-wards expound himselfe and sheweth that it consisteth in the taking away of their King Magistrates The Magistracie and Ministerie signes of gods presence ciuill gouernment and the meanes of his publicke worship and seruice hence wee learne that Princes wisely ruling in the common wealth and godly and faithfull Ministers publickly executing their functions which concerne gods pure and sincere worship in the Church are notable signes representing vnto vs Gods owne presence So that where the Lord hath established a lawfull and vvise Magistracie and a godly learned and faithful Ministerie there himselfe is present ioyned in a neere communion with that church common-wealth where these are wanting from thence the Lord may be said to haue withdrawne himselfe and to haue made a seperation leauing such a people in the estate of an afflicted vviddow And this appeareth not onely in this but also in diuers other places of scripture For first for Kings and Magistrates they are said to be breathing and mortall gods and the children of the most high vvho in their gouernment after a more peculiar manner resemble their heauenly father Psal 82. 6. 7. In vvhose assemblies God standeth and Psal 82. 6. 7. judgeth righteous judgement ver 1. God standeth in the assemblie of gods he iudgeth among gods And for the ministery and publicke seruice of God vvee haue Christs promise That where two or three are gathered together in his name there is hee in the middest of them Mat. 18. 20. And howsoeuer Mat. 18. 20. being infinite he filleth heauen and earth vvith his presence yet after a more peculiar manner he walketh in the middest of the seauen golden candlestickes Apoc. 1. 13. that is he is present in his Church to rule defend and preserue it And hence it is that vvhen Dauid vvas banished from the Temple and debarred of the publike meanes of Gods worship hee complayneth that he vvas banished from Gods presence and cast Psal 42. 2. and 84. 1. 2. out of his sight Psal 42. 2. and 84. 1. 2. The vse hereof is first
what agreement hath the Temple of God with idols Secondly because the Lord is not capable of any copartnership for whereas there are three sorts of men who can abide no sharing nor partnership a King in his kingdome a master in his familie a husband in his mariage bed the Lord is both our King master and husband Hee is a King yea a glorious King Psal 24. and last verse and he will not giue his Psal 24. 10. Esay 42. 8. glorie to another Esay 42. 8. and therefore he will rule vs alone by the scepter of his word or he will thrust vs from vnder his gouernment and giue vs ouer to be ruled by the tyrannie of Satan and our owne corrupt wils He is our master Malac. 1. 6. who requireth all our seruice or else will haue Malac. 1. 6. none of it at all because we cannot performe faithfull seruice to two masters especially being of a contratie disposition Matth. 6. 24. He is the husband of the Church Esa 54. 5. Matth. 6. 24. Esay 54. 5. yea a iealous husband who can endure no cotriuals in his loue and therefore if she will needs play the harlot with others the Lord will diuorce her from him as being altogether vnworthie to enioy his loue The vse of this doctrine serueth to admonish vs that wee Wee must make no mixture betweene Christs true religion and Popish superstition carefully beware of making a mixture betweene that true religion which we professe and Popish superstition that is the religion of Christ and the religion of Antichrist for seeing they match yea and far exceed euen the Gentiles themselues in their multitude of idols they hauing for euery day in the yeare for euery little village in a whole kingdome and for euery occasion and imployment a seuerall Saint to whom they giue diuine honor by praying vnto them by erecting statues images and temples for their honor by dedicating and setting apart holy daies for their seruice by making vowes and offering oblations vnto them seeing they worship the Idoll of the Masse and creepe to the crosse and to magnifie their owne merits extenuate the al-sufficient merits of Iesus Christ therefore it is as possible to reconcile truth and falshood light and darknesse God and Belial as Christian religion with Popish superstition And therfore let those whom God hath in mercie seuered from this Romish synagogue hearken to the Prophets admonitiō Come yee not at Gilgal nor go vp to Beth-auen and let those who are alreadie amongst them hearken to that voice which came downe from heauen Go out of her my people and bee not pantakers in her sinnes that yee receiue not of her plagues Apocal. Apoc. 18. 4. 18. 4. ANd thus much cōcerning the admonition Now follow the reasons wherby it is inforced the which are of two sorts the first are taken from their sinnes the other from their punishments Their sinnes are first generally propounded namely that they were vndutiful stubborne and rebellious vers 16. And then they are more specially expounded to wit that they had grieuously transgressed the first table by their grosse idolatrie vers 17. and the second also both by intemperancie against themselues and by their adultery and extorsion against their neighbours vers 18. Their punishments which should discourage Iuda from imitating their sinnes were two the first was captiuitie vers 16. the other ignominie and confusion vers 19. And these are the particular branches of this last part of the Chapter Now we will entreate of them as they lie in order Vers 16. For Israel is rebellious as an vnrulie heyfer now the Vers 16 Lord wil feed thē as a lambe in a large place In which words are The exposition contained two reasons to disswade Iuda frō associating thēselues in too neere familiaritie and friendship with the Israelites especially frō ioyning with them in their idolatrous worship The first whereof is taken from their sin the other from their punishment Their sinne is contained in these words For Israel is rebellious as an vnrulie heyfer The meaning is that the Israelites were exceedingly contumacious and stubborne and euen wanton in their rebellion and that they were become like out-lawes who had shaked off the yoke of Gods gouernment for so the word Sorerah which is heere translated rebellious is taken elsewhere as Deut. 21. 18. If any man haue a sonne that is Sorer stubborne and rebellious 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Deut. 21. 18. that is to say who will not submit himselfe to his fathers gouernment c. Now this their rebellious stubbornnesse is in liuely manner expressed by a similitude taken from an vnruly heifer the which is here contracted but may be thus explicated as the heifer which is well fatted by running in a fruitfull pasture groweth in time so wanton that she contemneth her master shaketh off the yoke gaddeth abroad and skippeth ouer hedge and ditch into other pastures rather for wantonnesse then for hunger so the Israelites being fatted by Gods manifold benefits grew thereby so wanton and rebellious that they despised the Lord who sed them shooke off the yoke of his gouernment denying to submit themselues to be ruled by his holy word forsooke the Temple which was appointed by the Lord to be their pasture wherein hee would feede them with his word and Sacraments and broke into forbidden places euen the hils groues and idolatrous Temples where for wantonnesse and not for hunger they fedde themselues with the poysonous hemlocke of idolatrie and Heathenish superstition refusing in the meane time the wholesome food of their soules Gods pure and sincere worship whereby they should haue been fed to eternall life In which similitude diuers things are implied first that the Israelites were contumatious and rebellious against the Lord and that beyond all bounds and limits of humanitie and therefore they are compared in their rebellion not with reasonable men but with vnreasonable beasts to shew their stupiditie and brutishnes in this their sinne Secondly hee intimateth their audacious stubbornnesse whereby they were readie to resist God to his face in that he compareth them not to such beasts as shew their contempt of their master by their flight and running away but to a stubborne and vnruly heifer which will not only shake off the yoke but also put at her master with her hornes Thirdly here is implied their vnruly wantonnesse which would not suffer them to continue in one and the same Church with the Iewes as it were in one heard and one pasture but caused them after a wilde fashion to seuer themselues from the rest and to leape as it were ouer Gods fence to associate themselues with the Gentiles in their more then brutish idolatrie and damnable superstitions Lastly hee heere intimateth their wicked abuse of Gods blessings wherewith being as it were fatted and pampered to the full they did not only vngratefully forget and forsake the Lord but also rebelliously cast
yeare of Ezechias wherein the Israelites were led captiue into Assiria by Salmanaser was 680. yeares Thirdly he implyeth the sorrow and mourning of the people by this phrase of sitting which vsually in the Scriptures is ascribed to those who are in griefe and heauinesse for not knowing which way to ease themselues nor hauing any appetite when they are oppressed with sorrow to go about any thing they sit down bewaile their miserie So it is said of Iobs friends that they sate downe to mourne with him when they could not help him Iob. 2. 13. Of Nehemiah that Iob. 2. 13. he sate downe and wept and mourned for certaine dayes Nehe. Nehe. 1. 4. 1. 4. Of Ierusalem that she sate solitarie like a widdow mourning and lamenting her afflictions Lamen 1. 1. 2. And Babilon Lamen 1. 1. 2. sayeth of her selfe that shee would not sit as a Widdow Esa 47. 8. Esay 47. 8. Fourthly hee sheweth wherein her widdow-hood consisteth namely in being depriued of the outward signes of her communion with God both in regard of Ciuill and Ecclesiasticall gouernement and of the meanes of Gods pure and publike worship as also in being restrained from worshipping and seruing Idols false Gods All which are expressed in these particulars Without a King and without a Prince that is without any Magistrate of their owne nation or any publike forme of gouernement whereby Gods presence is represented in the common wealth And without an Offring that is they should not offer Sacrifices and Oblations for neyther was it lawfull to erect an Altar or offer a Deut. 12. 13. 14. Sacrifice any where sauing at Ierusalem the place appointed for Gods publike worship And without an Image namely made to represent Gods presence such as were the Images erected by Ieroboam in Dan and Bethell 1 King 12. 28 29. 1 King 12. 28. and those spoken of 2 King 17. 10. And without an Ephod 2 King 17. 10. of which there were two kinds the one made of Gold blew Silke Purple Scarlet and twined Linnen in which were the two Onix stones wherein were graued the name of the twelue Tribes and the Vrim and the Thummin and this was proper to the high Priest of which we may read Exod. Exod. 28. 6. 28. 6. c. The other made of Linnen of which wee may read 1 Sam. 2. 18. 2 Sam. 6. 14. The meaning is that they 1 Sam. 2. 28. should bee without a Priest-hood which should instruct 2 Sam. 6. 14. them and aske counsell for them of the Lord. Lastly hee saith that they should be without a Teraphim that is they should haue nothing to doe with the Idoll Gods of the heathen for the Teraphims were Images which the Idolatrous Heathens worshipped of which kinde were those Teraphims or Images which Rachell stole from her Idolatrous father Laban Gen. 31. 19. and that Teraphim in Michaes Gen. 31. 19. house Iudg. 17. 5. Iudg. 17. 5. So that hereby it appeareth in what the widdow-hood of the Church of Israell consisted namely that she should haue no signe of Gods presence in the ciuell gouernment for she should haue no King nor Magistrate nor yet in the Church for she should haue no offring nor Ephod that is no Priesthood nor publike meanes of worshipping God according to his word Neither yet should shee follow her louers and commit Idolatrie with them for she should not worship the true God after a false manner as Ieroboam did in images nor the heathen idols for she should be without a Teraphim Now the Lords end in all this was that he might weane the elect Israelites from their vaine hopes by withdrawing from them all those things wherein they trusted that so hauing no other hope of being deliuered out of their miserie they might turne to the Lord by true repentance and so expect from him alone freedome from their afflictions For as long as they had any Kings and gouernment or any forme of a common wealth whilest they had any shew of Religion or any outward meanes of worshipping God though they were neuer so much depraued and corrupted they rested nay they boasted in it as though they were in good estate and therefore to beate them from this vaine conceipt the Lord threatneth to bring vpon them a confused anarchie to depriue them of all shew outward appearance of a Church that so being humbled in the sight and sense hereof they might be moued laying aside all other hopes to expect saluation in Iesus Christ and be the better fitted to receiue him when he was exhibited as their onely King Priest Prophet and Redeemer And this is the meaning of the words from whence we That the beames of Gods fauour are often clouded with afflictions may obserue these instructions First whereas he saith that the people of Israel shal sit waiting in heauines without any outward signes of gods comfortable presence hence we learn that euen Gods dearest children oftentimes haue the beames of Gods fauour so clouded from them in their afflictions that they seeme vnto themselues desolate and vtterly forsaken of God as appeareth in this place So Iob complayneth Chap. Iob. 13. 24. 13. 24. Wherefore hydest thou thy face and takest mee for thine enimie And Dauid Psal 13. 1. How long wilt thou forget mee O Lord for euer how long wilt thou hide thy face from me Psal 13. 1. And 88. 14. Lord why doest thou reiect my soule and hidest Psal 88. 14. and 46. 89. thy face from me 89. 46. So Esay complaineth in the name of the faithfull Chapter 45. 15. Verely thou O God hidest thy Esa 45. 15. selfe The Church likewise Lamen 5. 20. Wherefore doest Lamen 5. 20. thou forget vs for euer and forsake vs so long time Yea this was the complaint of the sonne of God himselfe when as he bore our iniquities Math. 27. 46. Not that indeede the Lord Math. 27. 46. doth euer forsake those whom he hath once chosen but onely for a time with-houldeth the outward signes and inward feeling of his comfortable presence that hee may moue them more seriously to sorrow for sinne more earnestly to beg and pray for the returne of his fauour and more preciously to esteeme of it being restored vnto them when they perceiue how barraine of all comfort and ioy their soules are as soone as the Sun-shine of Gods fauour is ecclipsed from them The vse hereof is that if euer the Lord seeme thus to withdraw himselfe from vs in our afflictions wee be so humbled hereby as that in the meane time we sincke not into desperation as though we were vtterly rejected and to this end let vs remember that this hath beene the lot of the dearest of Gods children and therefore let this comfort vs that the same afflictions haue beene accomplished in other of the faithfull 1 Cor. 10. 13. 1 Pet. 5. 9. Secondly let vs call to