Selected quad for the lemma: mercy_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
mercy_n lord_n multitude_n psal_n 2,055 5 7.5039 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A93917 A learned and very usefull commentary upon the whole prophesie of Malachy, by that late Reverend, Godly and Learned Divine, Mr. Richard Stock, sometime Rector of Alhallowes Breadstreet, London, and now according to the originall copy left by him, published for the common good. Whereunto is added, An exercitation vpon the same prophesie of Malachy / by Samuel Torshell. Stock, Richard, 1569?-1626.; Torshell, Samuel, 1604-1650. Exercitation upon the prophecie of Malachy. 1641 (1641) Wing S5692A; ESTC R184700 652,388 677

There are 25 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

justice of God and so cannot be unlesse he can cease to be God for the instance of David 2 Sam. 12.13.14 and some other of Gods children whose sinne remitted the affliction remained is not against this because in him it was not a punishment but a clearing of the justice of God before the wicked as the place sheweth and in others they are but purgers or preventers To teach the Church and every particular Vse 2 to acknowledge it to be the mercy of God that they live and are not consumed when they see many others are and know themselves to have deserved the like The Church wherein we live and we our selves here present have beene delivered from many and strange dangers and confusions whom shall we ascribe this unto shall we sacrifice to the wisedome of our state to the valor of Marshall men to the power of armes to the multitude of our people to our owne workes and worthinesse to our profession of his truth or practise of piety our justice and equity and such like so may we provoke the Lords anger indeed to consume us Whither else must we ascribe it but to this being taught every where it is the mercy of God that we are not consumed whose compassions failed not and so as the Church begunne her prayer we may our prayses Psal 115.1 Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy name give the glory for thy loving mercy and for thy truthes sake For considering the height of our sinnes the greatnesse of our iniquities and rebellions whereto else can it be ascribed And his mercy hath drawne him to spare us partly for our selves and partly for posterity and those who shall come of us As Saint Chrysostome hom 80. ad popul Antioch for our selves that his mercy might draw us to repentance and to fear him for posterity * Parcit frequenter radici ut fructus conservet qualiter audi Terah pater Abrahae fuit Idolorum cultor sed in hoc mundo impietatis poenas non dedit merito Nam si Deus praeveniens cadicem praecidisset unde tantus fidei fructus exortus fuisset Sic Esau fornicator fuit immundus matricida patricida fratricida quantum in ipsius fuit proposito Deo exosus Mal. 1.2 Quarè non perditur quarè non exciditur Bonum est verâ dilectissimi causâ dicere si succisus fuisset maximam eleemosynae fructum justitiae mundus amisisset qualem audi Esau genuit Raguel hic Zara hic Iob. Vides quantus tolerantiae fructus esset perditus si praeveniens Deus à radice poenas exigisset Chrysost hom 8. ad popul Antioch He spares oftimes the roote that he may preserve the fruit And heare how Terah Abrahams father was a worshipper of Idolls yet in this life God punisht not his impiety for if God had cut downe the roote then whence had we had such great fruit of faith as in his sonne So Esau was a fornicator and uncleane and as much as in him lay a murtherer of father mother and brother and of God hated Mal. 1.2 Why is he not destroyed why is he not cut downe Truely beloved to tell you the cause t was good to be so Esau begat Raguel he Zara and he Iob you see what plentifull fruit of patience had been lost if God preventing had stricken the roote So of us that we might leave the seede of the Church and piety behinde us This is mercy but the former the greater else we have as little profit of it as Terah and Esau And it is to be acknowledged the speciall mercy of God when others perish and their workes like that they escape As Saint August de Nat grat 8. c. 5. of the great salvation Vniversa massa poenas debet Qui ergò inde per gratiam liber antur non vasa meritorum suorum sed vasa misericordiae nominantur To teach men when destruction and calamity is at hand Vse 3 and Gods judgements are threatned the way how they may escape and not be confounded is they have Gods mercy towards them and upon them therefore for this must they pray and labour their flying truely to this will be like the City of refuge where the avenger of blood could not slay a man-slayer Then shall they be sure either to be kept from them or delivered from them kept in them or taken out of them for when as Gods mercy doth bring remission of sinne it must needs bring the removall or change of the punishment either it will be gone or if it abide the nature will be changed for sinne taken away that cannot continue or not in the former nature and a man shall be safer and more comfortable with this in divers afflictions then without it though he be never so free * Verius acjucundius gaude bis de bona conscieutia inter molestias quam de mala inter delicias August you shal rejoyce more cheerefully and more truely with a good conscience in the midst of troubles then with an evill in the midst of many pleasures Now thus it is from the feeling of the mercy of God and remission of sinne * Si Deum benevolū habeas licet in furnacem cadas ne desperes sicut si succenseat licet in paradiso sis ne confidas Adae peccanti nihil profuit paradisus pueris benè agentibus nihil obfuit fornax Chry. ho. 4 adpo A. If you have Gods favour despaire not though you fall into a fornace whereas if he be angry you may not be bold in Paradice Paradice did no good to Adam sinning and the hot fornace could doe no harme to the three Children that were innocent And if they obtaine this it shall not onely be their sanctuary thus but it shall be to them as a fountaine whence all blessings as rivers shal rise and spring It will be like the Philosophers stone that will turne all mettall into gold so this all miseries into happy comforts Even like the Arke brought into the house of Obed Edom 2 Sam. 6.11 that brought a blessing upon the house and al that he had So Gods mercy brought into the heart will be the cause that they and their house and all that they have shall prosper and be preserved for ever to his glory and their eternall comfort VERS VII From the dayes of your fathers ye are gone away from mine ordinances and have not kept them returne unto me and I will returne unto you saith the Lord of hostes but ye said wherein shall we returne FRom the dayes of your fathers are you gone away In this verse beginnes the second part of the Chapter containing an expostulation with this people as touching their sins mixt with an exhortation to repentance which of some is accounted the third part of this Chapter Now in this verse are both these a reasoning with them as concerning their sinnes and an exhortation to repentance the
as they think God will deale farre better with them than the other If he care for servants more for sonnes so to think he will no lesse spare them than servants because they thinke he loves them his judgments then must they especially look upon and consider As children are specially affected with their fathers anger when it is but against servants or others then they feare and tremble seeke to please him and to avoid such things by which he is provoked especially when there is any good nature in them at all so ought they that as it is written of the Lion that he trembles to see a Dog beaten before him so if they have any alliance to the Lion of the Tribe of Judah they must see and feare feare and flee when the wicked are smitten more when it is upon his owne who are in the Church and of the Church as David Psal 119.120 My flesh trembleth for feare of thee and I am affraid of thy judgments And 2 Sam. 6.9 And David was affraid of the Lord that day and said How shall the Arke of the Lord come to me And Act. 5.5 11. And Ananias hearing these words fell downe and gave up the Ghost and great feare came on all them that heard these things And great feare came upon all the Church and upon as many as heard those things not on as many as take no notice of the judgments of God at all as not of other of his workes but as they thinke all things fall out by naturall course or common skill and providing and fore-cast of men for good so they thinke for evill and as they are not affected with Gods blessings to love him because they are common so not with his judgments but onely when they feele them Your eyes shall see it Edom hated Israel enemy unto her whose destruction as they sought and had rejoyced at so Israel would have beene glad to have seene Edom's and for feare was ready to faint as if they should never see it The Lord descends to her infirmity and assures her she shall see it The Lord he often descends to the infirmities of his Doctr. to let them see their desires upon their enemies and to see their destruction as here so Psal 37.8 9.10 Cease from anger and forsake wrath fret not thy selfe in any wise to doe evill for evill-doers shall be cut off but those that waite upon the Lord they shall inherit the earth for yet a litle while and the wicked shall not be yea thou shalt diligently consider his place and it shall not be Psal 59.10 The God of my mercy shall prevent me God shall let me see my desire upon mine enemies And Psal 54.7 For he hath delivered me out of all trouble and mine eye hath seene his desire upon mine enemies Israel saw Egypts ruine the Jewes Hamans and their enemies Daniel his accusers Dan. 6. Peter Herods Act. 12. Because he might strengthen and confirme the weake faith of his children Reas 1 which would often stagger in this kind without these stayes as the best have done upon the sight of the prosperity of the wicked as Davids Psal 37. and their suffering at their hands Therefore God deales with them as Parents with their children when they are not able to goe alone and of themselves they have tressels and formes to goe along by so God affords these helps Because he would asswage and appease their impatient minds that can hardly be perswaded God is appeased towards them Reas 2 and at one with them after he had scourged and afflicted them by the hand of the wicked till they see his hand turned upon the wicked the rather because God saith Psal 81.13.14 O that my people had hearkened unto me and Israel had walked in my waies I should soone have subdued their enemies and turned my hand against their adversaries As then a father to shew his child he is friends with him againe is content to throw the rod into the fire and to burne it before his eyes and face so God to shew him pacified againe towards his people is content in their sight to plague those he hath punished them by before But this must be understood not as a thing that God alwayes doth but as it is said of signes that he gave some though not many and usuall lest men should depend on them and be out of heart when they want them yet some for the confirming of the feeble and converting of the unbeleevers so he doth not alwayes shew them the confusion of the wicked their enemies in this life because he would not have them to looke for it and to inure them to goe without a stay and to swim as it were without helpe without blathers and yet sometimes lest they should faint when they see the rod of the wicked rest upon the lot of the righteous and never turne againe upon their oppressors but if ever he deny it he gives them another prop to assure them they shall see it though not now when they shall judge with him the world and Angels To admonish the wicked enemies of Gods people Vse 1 if they would take notice of it that oppose themselves and persecute the people of God to give over in time and not to doe it with such despight and malice as usually they doe lest God comfort his servants in their confusion and recompence unto them that they have done unto the Church and measure to them as they have meted and having beene fire to them that is to purge them he extinguish them for though they have them never so sure as they suppose in their clutches yet God can free them as a bird out of the snare of the Fowler and take them in their net they thought to have taken others his people in who would have believed it at least Haman himselfe would never have given credit to it that Mordecai should ever have seene him hang upon the tree that he had prepared in his owne house for Mordecai or that the Jewes that he had enclosed by vertue of the Kings Letters as Deere in a toyle should ever have had their will upon his house and see that end of his sonnes that after they came unto yet so it was a thing so unlikely God brought to passe even he 2 Pet. 2.9 He knows how to deliver his out of trouble yea and how to lay trouble upon those that trouble them to the refreshing and comfort of his who would have believed at least not our Nobles Knights and Esquires with their dependants who are now forth comming with hundreths more of the said associates If the day before it had beene told them that the Church and people of God should have seene them in hold and see them come to their just reward to the ruine of themselves and their houses when they intended all their destructions and to have subverted Church and Common-wealth Or if it had beene told the Pope at Rome whence this
obsecro inimici dolos ut omnino à Deo averter is consulere non audet novit enim hoc grave admodum Christianis verùm artibus insidiosis aggreditur intelligit autem quemadmodum nos praesens tempus libenter recipimus omnisque actio humana in praesens contendit spectat Quamobrem hodiernum tempus nobis furatur astutè spem facit crastini postquam crastinum venerit rursus malus divisor sibi hodiernum crastinum verò Domino dari petit Basil Exhortatio ad Bapt. saith Basil exhort ad Bapt. who saith Serve me to day and God to morrow I beseech you be acquainted with the craft of the Enemy he dares not advise thee altogether and presently to forsake God for he knows Christians would not endure that but he deales craftily being a Serpent and subtle to beguile hee steales upon us for the present and puts off the next day for God and when that day comes still he puts it off to the next Therefore the Lord to meet with that comes thus calling upon us to day partly quia qui non est hodie cras minùs aptus erit Because hee that is unfit to day to morrow will be more unfit and partly for that this is the time lest judgment doe come upon us and we have no evasion for wee cannot tell what to morrow may bring forth Before God Though he deride these yet he directs others and teacheth them that in prayer they are before the Lord. They who pray Doctrine are before Gods face and in his preence If they who heare be as Cornelius said Hee and his company were Acts 10.33 before the Lord to heare one speake in his Name and him speaking mediately to them more when they speake immediately to himselfe Therefore was the Arke of Gods presence ever in the Temple before which they prayed and from which they received answer Psal 84.7 That he may have mercy upon us It is that they were commanded to pray for before and to require for the people In prayer men must not aske what they list Doctrine but that for which they have a commandment to aske and a promise to recive To reprove all those praiers Vse 1 those who frame their praiers not according to Gods will but their owne lusts and fancies whatsoever their vaine hearts desire that they utter before the Lord and make their requests unto him for it never regarding whether good or evill how agreeable or disagreeable to the word having their owne affections the rules of their prayers such prayers they would be ashamed to put up to men as they preferre to God making Christ a mediator for them if hee will doe it for them for things they would blush to desire the helpe of man in some praying as Saint Augustine who confesseth of himselfe that hee prayed to God to let him live a little longer in his sinnes so they in their corruptions desiring still meanes and opportunities to fulfill their lusts and desires Some aske temporall things simply as they Psal 78.18 who asked meate for their lust who importune the Lord to prosper their journey endeavour for honours as Balaam be the means what may be who have their prayers sometimes in mercy denyed as Jam. 4.3 and sometimes in wrath granted to them as Psal 79.29 30 31. Mercy That is be gracious and favourable unto us and lift up his gracious countenance upon us In prayer men ought especially to pray for Gods favour Doctr. the chiefest thing they ought to desire is his mercy and loving kindnesse 2 Cor. 7.14 this is called seeking Gods face Because this is the fountain from whence all things else come Reas 1 all good things we receive for Rom. 8.32 He who spared not his owne sonne but gave him for us all to death how shall he not with him give us all things also And the cause of that was his favor and love Joh. 3.16 For God so loved the world that he hath given his only begotten sonne that whosoever beleeveth in him should not perish but have everlasting life Because no temporall blessing asked neverso earnestly Reas 2 nay though it be sought with teares as Esan his blessing can be obtained till a man have his sinnes forgiven Hence Math. 6.11 12. the petitions are joyned with a copula as inseparable This reproveth their folly and error Vse 1 who pray more for the things of this life then for the favor of God or remission of their sinnes 2 Chron. 7.14 To teach us to pray for temporall things Vse 2 but specially Gods favor and the remission of our sinnes For us Both Prophet and People he would bee prayed for as well as the people acknowledging as it seemeth those things in himselfe which he reproved in them the better to affect them No man is so excellent in the Church of God Doctrine so indued or abounding with gifts and graces that needeth not the prayers of the rest This the Prophet sheweth that he exempteth not himselfe but would be prayed for as others So Hosea 14. sure including himselfe This our Saviour Christ shewed when teaching his Church in the person of his disciples to pray hee taught them to pray one for another and taught them they had need of the prayers one of another Math. 6. This is shewed by Saint Pauls earnest request unto them Rom. chap. 15.30 repeated to the Corinthians 2 Cor. 1.7 so Col. 4.3 2 Thes 3.1 and for the Saints Ephes 6.18 Because his excellency excludeth him not from the communion of Saints Reas 1 as the excellency beauty or proportion of any part doth not exclude it from the fellowship of other members Now one part of this communion is prayer one for another Because his excellency is imperfect Reas 2 for here all things are but in part 1 Cor. 13.9 Therefore he hath need of prayers as his owne so others many prevailing more with God then one Because the excellency and goodnesse a man hath is as Basil exhort ad Bapt. brings in some making the objection The saurus servatu difficilis Reas 3 a treasure hard to be kept Therefore as he said Opus est vigilia wee had need to be more watchfull and he adviseth to take three adjutors Orationem Jejunium Psalmodiam Prayer Fasting and singing Psalmes Now as for keeping of treasures a man will use other meanes and helpes and all little enough so in this should he be carefull This reproveth those who think they have no need of the prayers of others Vse 1 but can pray well enough for themselves their owne private prayer is sufficient they need not the prayers of others or the publique congregations as some men thinke they have no need of publique teaching they can instruct themselves well enough with reading of good books at home so for prayer they can inrich themselves of themselves and need not the helpes of others If any thinke I wrong men in judging thus of them I answer no because I judge
are feare and humility Though men be bound to doe and suffer whatsoever God shall lay upon them and when they have done all both are Doctrine and must confesse they are unprofitable servants Luke 17.10 yet the Lord in his great mercy and goodnesse propoundeth promiseth and performeth a reward unto them here and Gen. 22.16.17 Mat. 6.4.6.18 Mat. 10.42 Marke 10.29.30 Hebrewes 6.10 Because of the imperfection and corruption of men Reason 1 therefore hath he propounded them Because he is faithfull and having promised must Reason 2 and will performe This is to encourage and hearten us to obey in all things with chearefulnesse and to beare all things with patience by the hope and expectation of these things Heb. 10.32 ad 38. and 11.24.25.26 Mat. 5.11.12 2 Cor. 7.1 Indeed the most ingenuous filiall acceptable service is to obey for the love of God and that simply without respect of reward but because of our infirmity that cannot and Gods mercie who hath so provided for our weaknesse For as S. Chrysostome speakes * Oportet in rebus gravibus molestis non labores sed praemia considerare ut Mercatores non marst pericula sed lucrum spectant Ita nos caelum Dei praesentiam Chrylost ●n Iob. Hom. 7. We ought in grievous and irksome things to consider not the labours but the rewards as Merchants minde the gaine not the dangers of the sea so must we looke at heaven and the presence of God For the feare These blessings of life and peace are promised for Gods feare and this is the condition he required of them for them He that would have the blessings of God performed to him Doctrine which he hath promised must have this condition of his feare and must feare him for that he commends here in Levi he commends to posterity and commands the performance for the obtaining of the other Deuter. 5.29 Oh that there were such an heart in them to feare me and to keepe all my commandements always that it might goe well with them and with their children for ever Psalm 115.11.13 Prov. 14.26.27 Luke 1.50 This feare of God is a continuall reverent awe of him rising partly on consideration of his power and partly of his mercy First it is a reverent awe serve the Lord in feare and rejoyce in trembling Secondly continued not onely for a brunt or in some judgement as those in Jonah 1.16 but Prov. 28.14 Blessed is the man that feareth alway but he that hardeneth his heart shall fall into evill Thirdly the grounds 1. Gods power though there be no expectation of evill as we reverence a man of authority though he bear no evil will unto us but good even for his authorities sake 1 Kings 19.13 Heb. 12.21.2 his mercy because he hath shewed them mercy and goodnesse both in soule and body Psal 130.4 Hos 3.5 Job 1.9 Because onely they must have them to whom they belong Reason 1 now as Christ of one health Mat. 15.26 And he answered and said it is not good to take the childrens bread to cast it to whelps So of all they are childrens bread onely their portion which are Gods Now they are onely his which feare him Mal. 1.6 Honour is filiall feare Because in covenants no man may expect anothers promise Reason 2 but he that performes that he undertooke so in this And though the mercy of God be great it is to be expected and found not when men performe no conditions but in passing by their infirmities when they performe them It is matter of comfort to as many as live in the feare and continuall awe of God Vse 1 to them belong the promises and they shall have the performance of them for the performing their condition he cannot nor will not but performe his They may happily be in reproach and scorne in the time and age they live in for the feare of God which they professe the righteous being an abomination to the wicked and restraining themselves from evill be made a prey to the wicked Isaiah 59.15 yet against these must this comfort them thinking that these things are but as sower sawce to make sweet and delicious meate more toothsome and more wholesome neither must it trouble them to see others in abundance greater then they and happily when they are such as performe no condition with God at all but are Atheists and prophane blasphemers and wicked miscreants and such like for this should rather comfort them if he do so in his generall providence to those who have no promise what will he do to those who have the promise And if he feed the swine will he starve the children If the doggers be full and corn-fed will he destitute the children when the bread is theirs He will not sure It may be they shall not have things superfluous to abuse unto wantonnesse and so to grow worse but they shall have that which is necessary and fitting for them And that little is beter then the others much To stirre up every man that hath not this feare Vse 2 to labour and use all meanes to come by it It is the condition that makes him capable of the blessings of God and the lawfull heire of them He that knew a meanes to make himselfe capable of some rich mans goods and to be his heir or executor after his death would desire it seeke for it and strive to attaine it by all meanes Admit it were the reverencing and honouring and pleasing of him in all things would he not be double diligent about it So in this every man should pray earnestly for it and long after it Nehem. 1.11 Psal 86.11 But because many take the comfort to them who have no part in it and perswade themselves they have this feare when they have no portion of it we may not unprofitably call to minde the five effects as five notes to know this childelike feare by handled Chap. 1.6 He was humbled before me The second thing God commendeth in these as the thing he delights in and approved and as the condition on their parts for which he gave them his blessings is humility He that is humble and lowly in minde shall receive the blessings of God Doctrine to him hath God promised them and will performe them James 4.6 But the Scripture offereth more grace and therefore saith God resisteth the proud and giveth grace to the humble Psal 138.6 Prov. 3.34 and 29.23 VERS VI. The law of truth was in his mouth and there was no iniquity found in his lips he walked with me in peace and equity and did turn many away from iniquity THe law of truth was in his mouth Here begins the second reason given of the Lord why he would bring these judgements upon these Priests namely their dissimilitude with the former and first Priests with whom he made the covenant and to whom he did performe it Aaron Eleazar Phineas And in this the order observed is he setteth downe
provoked to anger and heavy displeasure by their sinnes the Monarch of the whole world Wherefore he being thus displeased sent against them Nebuchadnezar who tooke them and carried the King his Princes and the whole people into Babel after that he had spoyled their stately Temple destroy'd their strong Walls and laid waste Jerusalem it selfe where they endured 70. yeares exile and banishment which yeares expired they were againe brought to their Countrey when and where better things were expected from them both in way of thankefulnesse and in remembrance of their former Captivity lest a worse thing should afterwards befall them But they forgetfull of former things both beatings benefits as children are returned to their sinnes polluted the Divine worship gave themselves to divers vices began to make marriages with Infidels againe embraced Polygamy took up the custome of giving bills of divorce committed sacriledges cast out strange contempts against God and blasphemies By all which the Lord being againe provoked sent the Prophet Malachy to reprove them sharply and to threaten them severely with certaine new judgments and to the impenitent certaine finall destruction yet in the meane time cheering up the good with comforts provoking them to Repentance perswading them to faith in Christ refreshing them with many sweet promises Now it is no hard thing to make the Comparison and apply these things to our times that it may appeare the handling of this is no unfit thing but apt to the time For the sinnes of the Land God was displeased and gave over the people to captivity though in their owne Land somewhat lesse than this yet it was both of body and soule to a new Nebuchadnezar which makes it the greater the Church and spirituall Jerusalem much defaced the Reliques of it partly put to flight partly to the fire But see how good God was after a time he brought againe our Captivity After which he looked for better things from us and haply had them while the benefit was fresh and the bondage yet felt But see these are worne out of minde and we againe have committed great sins against God by which we justly have provoked Gods indignation against us yea and alas we cease not to provoke it for how great contempt of the service of God is there in every place what prophanenesse what corruption of manners what unfaithfulnesse in covenant breaking what uncleanenesse in marriage what horrible oaths what fearefull perjuries what execrable blasphemies against the Highest not in meane persons but of the highest rankes not in Countries only but in famous Cities not in meane mens Cottages onely but in noble mens places and Palaces in Church and Common-wealth so that the Lord may say to us as he said to Israel by Malachy Chap. 16. because neither honour nor feare be performed to him So that not onely just are those plagues that are come upon us pestilence to the body now almost three yeares and famine to the soule begun and threatned more but also particular generall judgments Whatsoever is in this Prophesie may justly both be threatned and executed upon us when it is just with God where like sins are to bring upon them like punishments This is the reason of my choyse as also the summe and argument of this Prophesie The parts of it are divers After the Inscription or Preface we have 1. Expostulations with the people and Priests touching their great and grievous sins 2. Threatnings of punishments deserved by them 3. Prophesies of the calling of the Gentiles and the comming of Christ 4. Exhortations to Repentance and exercise of the duties of piety All which are to be found promiscuously and intermixed one with another the particular resolution of which is better in their place and more profitable than now to spend time in pointing out every particular where it is to be found The time when this Prophesie was written is in generall after they were returned from their captivity more speciall after Hagge and Zachary the two Prophets of the Church and yet more after the building and finishing the Temple about some 24. Ezra 6. yeares for it was built in the sixt yeare of Darius King of Persia Hagge and Zachary the second yeare of Darius after some 41. yeares interruption of the worke all the time of Artashashte or Artaxerxes Longimanus prophesied and perswaded the people to build it who by the favour and exhibition of the King did finish the worke in his sixth yeare who reigned in all 30 after the finishing of the Temple 24. After whose dayes in the time of Artaxerxes Darius his successour our Prophet began to prophesie being the last of all such as did prophesie till the fore-runner of Christ John the Baptist AN EXPOSITION UPON THE WHOLE Booke of the Prophesie of Malachy delivered in certaine Sermons CHAP. I. THE burden of the word of the Lord to Israel by the ministery of Malachy 2 I have loved you sayth the Lord yet yee say Wherein hast thou loved us Was not Esau Jacobs brother saith the Lord yet I loved Jacob 3 And I hated Esau and made his mountaines waste and his heritage a wildernesse for dragons 4 Though Edom say We are impoverished but we will returne and build the desolate places yet saith the Lord of Hostes They shall build but I will destroy it and they shall call them The border of wickednesse and the people with whom the Lord is angry for ever 5 And your eyes shall see it and ye shall say The Lord will be magnified upon the border of Israel 6 A sonne honoureth his father and a servant his master If then I be a father where is mine honour and if I be a master where is my feare saith the Lord of Hostes unto you O Priests that despise my Name and ye say Wherein have we despised thy Name 7 Ye offer uncleane bread upon mine Altar and you say wherein have we polluted thee In that ye say The Table of the Lord is not to be regarded 8 And if ye offer the blind for sacrifice it is not evill and if ye offer the lame and sick it is not evill offer it now unto thy Prince will he be content with thee or accept thy person saith the Lord of Hostes 9 And now I pray you pray before God that he may have mercy upon us this hath beene by your meanes will he reward your persons saith the Lord of Hostes 10 Who is there even among you that would shut the doores and kindle not fire on mine Altar in vaine I have no pleasure in you saith the Lord of Hostes neither will I accept an offering at your hand 11 For from the rising of the Sunne unto the going downe of the same my Name is great among the Gentiles and in every place incense shall be offered unto my Name and a pure offering for my Name is great among the Heathen saith the Lord of Hostes 12 But ye have polluted it in that ye say
adeò est quod obduret mentes hominum quàm simplicitas divinorum operum quae in actu videntur magnificentia quae in effectu repromittitur Tertul. De bapt lib. cap. 2. Ipsi miramur quia credimus caeterùm incredulit as miratur non credit miratur simplicia quasi vana magnifica quasi impossibilia Idem There 's nothing that so much hardens mens minds as the simplicity of Gods workes that are seene and the greatnesse of the efficacy which is promised when as to the godly it is farre otherwise They are marvellously wrought upon by them because they look to him who workes by them here is the difference of faith and infidelity beleevers and infidels We wonder because we beleeve incredulity wonders but beleeves not it wonders at simple things as if they were vaine at great things as if impossible Wee are the Ministers of God Vse 3 and your servants for Jesus sake that we bring to you is the message and commandement of God Looke that ye receive not us if ye can dis-joyne us and our message but that we bring heare it beleeve it obey it That we have delivered that we doe and shall deliver as his commandement his will Looke therefore to it that you receive it for it both you and I must give an account I for the faithfull delivery of it you for the fruitfull receiving of it both of us for the carefull obeying of it Let no man thinke much I call so much for hearing and obeying when there is in the most still performance with the least and scarce with the least Tell me when you lend your money doe you not put your Debtor in minde of it when you meet him so doe we and so must I doe for I feare lest in that day I heare that Matth. 25.26 Thou wicked and slothfull servant thou oughtest to have put my money to the exchangers that at my comming I might have received mine owne with usury I have often put forth Gods stock unto you you must pay usury Vsura vero est auditae monitionis per opera exhibitio Your usury is to witnesse your profitable hearing by your workes See then that you obey and doe that as Nathan said to David 2 Sam. 24.13 so I may to you Now advise and see what answer I shall returne to him that sent me The burden by the ministery of Malachy Malachy must carry to this people a burden not onely things acceptable but displeasing and grievous The Ministers of God must not onely serve him in preaching the Gospell and comforts but also threatnings and judgments VERSE II. I have loved you saith the Lord yet yee say Wherein hast thou loved us Was not Esau Jacobs brother saith the Lord yet I loved Jacob. I Have loved you saith the Lord The second part of the Chapter is the matter and Prophesies consisting in two parts on Gods expostulation with the people and Priest for their sinnes and his judgments against them for those sinnes The first is hence to the 9. verse Their sinnes are two ingratitude contempt of him and corruption of his worship The 1. to the 6. verse Their ingratitude is expressed that they did not acknowledge nor account of his love nor yet of his benefits the fruit of his love which hee had from time to time bestowed upon them that they might by the greatnesse of the one or by the weight of the other be drawne to performe the duties of Piety unto him their God and King who had deserved so well at their hands and of them First for his love I have loved you A speech spoken with affection specially by valuing his love and disdaining to have it so neglected of those upon whom he had bestowed it Some thinke it is a speech imperfect broken off and interrupted with griefe when he would have added more I have loved you griefe not suffering him to speake more The supply may be I have loved you alwayes but you acknowledge it not neither answered me with love againe but for this repayed me with sinnes Love given to God signifies not a passion nor affection for there is no such thing in God Ira Dei non perturbatio animi ejus sed judicium quo irrogatur poena peccato August of the anger of God De civitate Dei lib. 15. cap. 25. So of this it is no passion but his free election to bestow yea an actuall giving to them the adoption of sonnes and eternall life For God is said to be angry when he doth that which commonly men doe when they are angry and to love when he doth that which men doe when they love Now this cannot be understood of his generall love of which all are partakers men and Angels blessing preserving sustaining them for then were it no great matter that he affirmes here to his But of a speciall love that is his choosing of them to be sonnes and to bestow on them eternall life I have loved you that is I have chosen you to be my people and I will be your God to be my children and I will be your Father and to give you the inheritance of sonnes than which what can be greater Hierome thinkes he denies now to love them because he useth the preter-tense But it is no rule when as the pretertense doth often include the present Rom. 1.24 Psal 1.1 The first sinne reproved is unthankfulnesse the reproofe being covertly insinuated rather than openly set downe under the recording and recalling of Gods love and the fruits of it whereof they had beene partakers Hierome observeth here lest the punishment should seeme unjust and God should without cause afflict them and lay the burden upon them he addeth the reproofe of their sinnes Hence we may observe The punishing and afflictions comming to men Doctr. 1 are caused by their sinnes Hosea 14.1 Thou hast fallen by thine iniquity Now to the sinne here reproved in particular Doctr. 2 which is unthankfulnesse Ingratitude and unthankfulnesse unto God for his love and the fruits of it the blessings men receive either spirituall or temporall is a very great sinne So the Lord shews it here by his Prophet when he puts it in the foremost of all other sinnes in this people and as the principall which makes him threaten this burden unto them So Isaiah 1.2 sets it before all other sinnes It is by the Apostle put among the sinnes of the last dayes when iniquity shall get the upper hand and must abound 2 Tim. 3.2 This sinne is committed five waies or there are five kinds or degrees of unthankfull men First when men doe not acknowledge God as the Authour and giver of their benefits and blessings but finde out others as Hosea 2.8 9. Shee knew not that the Lord gave her Corne. Secondly when men doe forget him and his benefits against which David laboured Psal 103.2 Blesse the Lord oh my soule forget not all his benefits And confessed among sinnes Psal 106.7 our Fathers
remembred not the multitude of thy mercies Thirdly when they doe not give him praise in word and affection doe not utter it before men Such were the nine Lepers Fourthly when not onely these but recompense him evill for good as that Isaiah 1.2 I have brought up children and they have rebelled against me Deut. 32.5 6. Fiftly not faulty in any of these but doe not walke worthy of such mercies when he doth not render according to the benefit done unto him as it was said of Hezekiah 2 Chro. 32.25 Because the contrary is a duty so often commanded Reas 1 and so earnestly call'd for in Scripture even in every thing 1 Thess 5.18 In all things give thankes for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus towards you Then the other must needs be a sinne Because the Saints of God have much laboured against it in themselves and others Reas 2 which they doe not but that which is evill and sinne Because the contrary is the honouring of God Reas 3 the crowning of him and the araying of him with honour and glory Psal 50.23 Who so offereth praise glorifieth me Then this is a great dishonour and then 't is evill That which is against the Crown and dignity specially immediately of a Prince is heinous and grievous This being such a sinne thus committed Vse 1 argues our age guilty before the Almighty some one way some after another yea who can say I am free Many and the most receive and devoure daily the blessings of God and know not or acknowledge not that he gave them but thinke they come naturally or by friends or by their owne labour and so as Habacuck 1.16 Therefore they sacrifice unto their net and burne incense unto their yarne because by them their portion is fat and their meate plenteous and so commit Idolatry with their friends with the earth and heavens with their labours and hands But say they be so farre instructed that they confesse him the giver yet how some have forgotten him and his benefits A second brings the oblivion of the first a third of that c. As one naile drives out another but an affliction makes all to be forgotten as with men one injury they doe us makes us forget they ever did us good But say benefits be remembred and oftentimes spoken of yet not so much as the afflictions and troubles or if at one time many words to expresse the passion in suffering few in receiving or if of them yet as Courtiers bragge of the Kings favour as Haman Ester 5.11 12. more to magnifie himselfe than the Kings liberality for a long story they will tell you of their wealth and honour and children and such like but a few words and that very unsavourily will they drop out of praise to God They make not their Song or Psalmes of thankesgiving as the faithfull have done But if any can plead not guilty here and be culpable in none of these yet his unthankfulnesse appeares that he still remaines in his sinne and rebells against the Lord not onely offending him but by those things he hath received from him more than any married and modest woman will doe to her husband by the Rings Chaines Bracelets Apparrell and ornaments he gave her to adorne her so she might be acceptable to him not that shee should give to an adulterer to entice him to folly And yet what else doe many but by their riches and honours their health and beautie by their strength and valour and such like dishonour him By their riches they waxe proud against God by their honours and high places they oppresse others without feare health makes them study the adorning and trimming of the body by their beautie they entice others by their valour they contemne others and like mighty Nimrods they tyrannize in peace and warre so that God for all his cost hath not Grapes but sower Grapes as Isaiah 5. But say that herein they are not to be charged yet are they ungratefull because they have not walked worthy of such benefits because they have not rendered according to their reward and every benefit hath not beene answered with obedience and more care to please God To teach every man to labour to see and know himselfe guilty of this sinne Vse 2 to humble himselfe for it and repent of it as of one of the greatest sinnes he hath and the greater as in the degrees he finds himselfe guilty of it Now because there neither is nor can be true repentance where there is perseverance in it nor unlesse it be forsaken and the former good acted for he is ungratefull that is not thankfull as he is wicked that is not just the contrary evill is ever where the good is not where and when it ought to be Therefore must every one labour for the good and strive to be thankefull to acknowledge to remember to praise to abstaine from evill to reward with all good offices for such great kindnesse Hee must stirre up the best instrument that he hath to praise the Lord whose nature as one saith is such In conferendis beneficiis est liberalissima ita in gratiarum actionibus reposcendis est avarissima that in conferring of benefits hee is most liberall and most covetous in requiring acknowledgment This is most acceptable to him like the scent of all sacrifices Levit. 3.16 17. Let it repent us that we have deprived him of so much as is due to him and now strive to it singing the songs of thankesgiving with cheerefull hearts when hee calls us to it not loving him otherwise than hee hath done us both in word and deed ceasing to grieve him seeking to please him and to recompence as he hath rewarded us Et si gravia praeterierunt tamen gravium memoria ne praetereat non ut doleamus sed ut gratias agamus Chrysost Hom. 12. ad popul Ant. But Hom. 25. Vera gratiarum relatio haec est cum haec agamus unde Deus glorificari debet cum ea fugiamus à quibus jam fuimus liberati Nam cum Rege contumeliis affecto cum poenas luere deberemus honorati fuissemus mox iterum affecissemus contumelia tanquam ingratitudinis extremae rei maximam merito poenam priore multo graviorem dare deberemus Whereas on the contrary to be truely thankefull is a great treasure it is the way to more riches because a man doth anew draw at the Well of Gods bounty for to him that hath shall be given if hee use it for his Maisters glory and the evill avoided which else would come upon them I have loved thee This is understood not of his generall love but his speciall and that after a speciall manner not such as he loves whole mankind by but such as he loves his Church by The love of a whole Family of his Spouse and children is different one more excellent than other and so both more speciall and more excellent God hee loves
it were nothing or teach him to cover it till it so fester that the part must be cut off before he discover it to a Chirurgian what a guide is nature then To teach every one to see and acknowledge the corruption of his nature Vse 2 when he finds in himselfe all willingnesse and endeavour to cover his sinne whether by accusing God or man or any other creature specially when he is reproved by the Word of God in the mouth of the Minister then to seeke excuses and pretences argues a marvellous obstinacy and resolution to continue in their sinnes besides the hurt they doe unto themselves The hurt is first that sinne is the greater he increases his sinne who judging God to be like a man beleeves he may escape the punishment of his fault Plus imo delinquit quisecundùm Deum cogitans evadere se paenam criminis credit si palam non crimen admisit Cypr. de laps if he committed it not openly and so if he cover it Secondly he brings more and greater sinnes upon himselfe * Vt in corporibus qui vulnera neglexerunt febres gignunt putrifactiones mortem denique itidem in animis qui pusilla dissimulant majora invitant Chrysost ad Gal. cap. 1. As in our bodies the neglect of wounds may cause Fevers and putrifactions and at length death so in our soules the hiding of small is to invite greater for both Satan is emboldened to suggest more and their conscience hardened they easily receive more Thirdly they bring more shame and punishment upon themselves If the smothering of it here were the burning of it for ever their policy were not amisse But when for all this it must come to judgment their cunning is but cruelty to themselves What profit is it to a malefactor obstinately to deny his fact to the Judge in his private Chamber or before some few when he hath favour promised him and be made to confesse it at the Barre before the whole Countrey when his owne hand and his fellows in the fact shall be brought against him without all hope of receiving any thing but severity of judgment where every excuse and cover he hath had shall increase both his shame and punishment Vse 3. If this be the corruption of nature and the sinne of this people let us learne to cast from us the cloakes of shame and reproved for our sinnes and threatned let us with the people at Johns preaching Matth. 3. confesse our sinnes that we may escape the wrath to come What else is required of us than that the Church of God hath usually done as Ezra 10. and 1 Sam. 7.6 what but that wherein we may glorifie God Joshua 7.19 for in confessing our sinnes we give him the glory of his justice as punishing where he was provoked What but that we may disburden our selves and get a wholesome and soveraigne medicine to our wounds Our wounds have beene grievous as Isaiah 1.6 Our sinnes as the infection have beene declared unto us our pride covetousnesse c. let us not cover them either by impudency or infirmity let not our proud women say their husbands would have it so nor the covetous men our wives and children must be maintained so let not the swearer say he cannot be believed or utter his wares or any such cover of state and condition accusing sometime God sometime men for he that threatneth thus the greene tree what will he doe to the dry the naturall Olive what will he doe to the wild Olive Certainely it shall not be so easie to us as to them but if all will not let me speak to as many as feare the Word of the Lord Thou and thy house thou and thy wife and children doe not hide them but confesse Remember that Prov. 28.13 He that hideth his sinnes shall not prosper but he that confesseth and forsaketh them shall have mercy so common in experience that it is a Proverb Wherein hast thou loved us This they speake because of their late captivity as if for that one crosse they were not bound to be thankfull unto him for the other mercies or shewing their blindnesse and corruption of nature that for one crosse or affliction they acknowledged not nor account of other mercies It is the blindnesse of mans nature and his corruption Doctr. in an affliction and trouble not to account and esteeme all other the former blessings of God so in this people It is manifest not onely in the wicked where corruption is in the strength but in the good where it is abated and yet creeps where it cannot goe In Haman Est 5.11 12 13. In Rebeckah Gen. 27.46 Jonah 4.3 9. in David Psal 77.7 8 9. in a multitude of both kinds Psal 78.19 20. Because men usually live by sight and sence not by faith Reas 1 and so they onely see and conceive of things present and before them as beasts doe and doe not looke to things past Because the children of God howsoever they have true faith Reas 2 yet in most weake and in best often full of doubts that when troubles and afflictions come though they forget not their former blessings yet make question whether the former were of love or no. This teacheth us whence are so many strange practices of the wicked Vse 1 and passions of Gods owne in some troubles and disquietnesse the wicked offering violent hands to themselves hanging stabbing drowning themselves though they be in the middest of many blessings that a man would thinke they wanted nothing that heart could thinke or desire It is not onely from the things themselves which give no comfort when there is none within like cloaths that warme none but them who have naturall heat but from the blindnesse of the minde and their corruption which cannot account nor rejoyce in them but doth often so transport them and carry them out of themselves that they know not they have any such comfort to delight in and for ease of one trouble deprive themselves of all The godly upon some losse or other trouble fall into such passions as Rebeckah and others their lives irkesome and tedious unto them and find no comforts in all for one discomfort like children who if they have one of their trifles they play withall taken from them cast away all the rest in great discontent and can find no pleasure in it like to men who having an hundred Acres of ground if one be gained from them by Sea or wreaked from them by title of Law take no pleasure nor joy in all the rest So they in the losse of a Child take no pleasure at least in their passion nor account not of many other of Gods blessings which many of Gods as deare to him as they have not or not in that abundance All this is from the corruption of their nature If this be the corruption of nature Vse 2 and the sinne of this people let us see our selves in them and examine
a mans private enemies so of rejoycing against the enemies of God and his truth not their owne Therefore saith Solomon Prov. 24.17 Rejoyce not when thine enemy falleth and let not thine heart be glad when he stumbleth Then may men expect for this retribution from the Lord Vse 1 upon many whom they see oppressing undermining disgracing and triumphing over others when they have wrought their fall often by indirect and vile meanes Histories of all times are full of examples besides the Scripture one we may observe of Constantine sonne of the Empresse Irene who put out the eyes of Nicephorus and by retribution from God had his owne eyes put out by the cruelty of his Mother the very same day sixe yeares or there abouts The like of the destruction of Jerusalem that it was as in the same day that they crucified Christ Lege Euseb l. 3. c. 5. fine so it was by the same men that put him to death the Romans as Basil observes They are living who can remember in former Princes times Henry 8 Edward 6 Qu. Mary how justly God did repay our Nobility when they cut off one anothers heads The like may be expected in future time as they have done shall be done unto them nay the like we have a comfortable aspect or may have to see how God justly doth make that true 1 King 21.19 And thou shalt speake unto him saying Thus saith the Lord thy God Hast thou killed and also taken possession and thou shalt speak unto him thus saith the Lord In the place where dogs lickt the blood of Naboth shall dogs lick thy blood even thine When our Papists had thought our blood should have beene licked up theirs shall be God holding his owne law doing to them as they would have done to us or seeing that is not done in the strict justice that God requireth we may fearefully expect for this sinne of ours this retribution from the Lord as in 1 King 20.42 And he said unto him Thus saith the Lord Because thou hast let goe out of thine hand a man whom I appointed for utter destruction therefore thy life shall goe for his life and thy people for his people To teach every man to take heed how he carries himselfe to others Vse 2 how he injures and oppresseth them and to doe but that to others the like he would have others to doe and receive from them The rule of nature is Quod tibi non vis alteri ne feceris and that of Christ Matth. 7.12 All things whatsoever ye would that men should doe to you doe ye even so to them for this is the Law and the Prophets Of which Tertul. God hath measured out my actions by my will that I should not doe that unto others which I would not have done unto my selfe and should doe to others as I would have others to doe to me And if that of James will and shall be true Jam. 2.13 He shall have judgement without mercy that sheweth no mercy and mercy rejoyceth against judgment how much more extream cruelty shall be inflicted upon them who carry themselves cruelly to others men should take heed then how they abuse their power and authority to the oppressing and wronging of the weak their skill and cunning to circumvent and beguile the simple their countenance and credit to use men at their pleasure lest God meet with them as he did the Edomites In the particular Vse 3 to take heed how that he insult not over the fall of his enemy lesse of another lest God give them the like occasion by so casting us downe It is that which Solomon advised Prov. 24.17 18. It is a crime which Job laboureth to cleare himselfe of Job 31.29 30. If I rejoyced at the destruction of him that hated mee or lift up my self when evill found him neither have I suffered my mouth to sin by wishing a curse to his soule Teaching that a man should be free not onely from outward shew but from inward touch of joy the first is easie partly by nature and partly by cunning and hypocrisie to cover it at least from a multitude or many but the other is hard and the harder more commendable more to be laboured for the outward odious to man so the inward to God which look not in facie but in corde as Cyprian And a speciall meanes to make him turne his hands upon us Avoyd it labor against it if it steale upon us check it repell and cast it out And yee shall say the Lord will be magnified The second thing in this verse the magnifying of God the thing is a speciall effect which Gods judgments work in his people Church differing from the wicked and Gentiles for they see it and but jibe and jest onely at the Edomites as they had at Israel but Israel sees it and magnifies God for it the words are originally somewhat otherwise the Lord doth magnifie himselfe true for so he doth in destroying these magnifies and honors himselfe and they religiously so confesse it and celebrate his magnificence and greatnesse for delivering themselves his Church and people and destroying their enemies hence we may observe two things and lessons It is the glory of God to deliver his people Doct. and destroy their enemyes it is that which doth honor and magnifie him much and spreadeth his fame farre and nigh So it is here and Isay 30.18 And therefore will the Lord wait that he may be gracious unto you and therefore will he be exalted that he may have mercy upon you for the Lord is a God of judgment blessed are all they that waite for him Dan. 9.15 19. And now O Lord our God that hast brought the people forth out of the Land of Aegypt with a mightty hand and hast gotten thee renowne as at this day we have sinned we have done wickedly O Lord heare O Lord forgive O Lord hearken and doe deferre not for thine own sake O my God for thy City and thy people are called by thy name Psalm 74.10 11. O God how long shall the adversary reproach shall the enemy blaspheme thy name for ever Why withdrawest thou thy hand even thy right hand pluck it out of thy bosome Because he is their God and King these his people and subjects Reas 1 Psal 74.12 For God is my King of old working salvation in the midst of the earth It were a shame and dishonour for a Prince to suffer his subjects to lye in misery distresse specially if he be able to releeve them è contra it spreads his fame farre and neare when he succoreth and saveth them Because they are rebels Reas 2 't is the princes honor to overthrow them They shall say the Lord doth magnifie himselfe That is they shall give the honor of their deliverance and the glory of their preservation to God when the enemy is destroyed and they safe The people of God in all deliverance and preservation from what danger soever
but this bindes more as a twofold cord the law because of our creation the Gospell for our election and redemption we are no more servants but sonnes Galat. 4.5 6. But must we the lesse serve him or not this were a gallant Gospell indeed Nay we must the rather because sonnes Mala. 3.16 we must not change our service but the manner of our service for he hath made us to serve him Luke 1.74 75. that hee would grant unto us that we being delivered out of the hands of our enemies might serve him without feare in holinesse and righteousnesse before him all the dayes of our life Not as servants for wages but as sonnes in a more honourable kinde of service with a free affection in no mercenarie manner In primo dedit me mihi in secundo dedit se mihi cui debeo me propter me debeo plusquam me propter se Ber. otherwise this bindes us more then before and to doe more if it were possible then the law requires If the other though free yet not so rare doe bind how much more this so rare a benefit should bind us In the first he gave me to my selfe In the other he gave himselfe to me To whom I owe my selfe for my being to him I am more indebted for giving himself to mee more is then due unto him and more must we endeavour if our being and being men require it of us what this being sonnes without which it had beene better wee had never been yea a thousand times If his bounty in creating us what his mercy and love in electing us The world though peevishly and corruptly it upbraids those that are Gods and in some sinister and corrupt affection challenges more of them then of others towards themselves then towards God yet those who are indeed Gods must thinke such speeches are goades to pricke them forwards to more For God hath done more for them therefore more is required of them yea more then they thinke they ought to performe Every one must argue as David see 2 Sam. 6.21 And David said unto Michal it was before the Lord which chose me before thy father and before all his house to appoint me ruler over the people of the Lord over Israel therefore will I play before the Lord It will not serve and goe for currant if Gods children elected be not more diligent to honour him then others Where is my honour wee have seene by what right God requires this we must see now the thing it is honour which is indeed childelike and filiall feare to obey and serve him for love rather then feare as sonnes doe their father and of this I will thus speak first that men must give it to God the sonnes to the father Secondly how it differs from the servile feare Thirdly the effects of it that it may be known whether had or no and if not it may be sought if had it may be joyed in First that Men must give it unto God Doctrine The Children of God that is his sonnes and daughters ought to honour him that is to serve and obey him to doe the good he commands not for feare of punishment or hope of reward but for the love of good and righteousnesse and his goodnesse and mercy willingly and of conscience hereto may we apply that Psal 130.4 and Rom. 12.1 and 1 John 2.1 inferred upon the second Reas 1 Because else they can not be sonnes and daughters Servilis est timor quamdiu ab amore non manat qui de amore non venit honor non honor sed adulatio Bern. Cant. 83. whose nature is to obey their parents and doe them all service of love feare is servile if it flow not from love and the honour which comes not from love is not honour but flattery a formall fawning Because if they obey him and honour him for hope of good Reas 2 and feare of evill and punishment it is self love that moves them not God love nor the love of righteousnesse now if men require more nor account not of this when selfe love hath the sway and men seeke themselves how should God and why should men expect it from him * One blesses God because he is powerfull Est qui confitetur Deo quia potms est est quoniam sibi bonus est est quia simplicitèr bonus est Psal 118.1.19 primus servus est timet secundus mercenarius cupit sibi tertius filius est diligit patrem another because he is good to him another because he is simple good in himselfe Psal 118.1 The first is a servant and feares The second is an hireling and lookes for gaine The third is a sonne and loves his father There are many promises of good things for obedience Object and threats of evill for disobedience are they made to servants or written for them alone or also for sonnes If Sonnes why may not they look to them and for them doe service Without question whatsoever is written is for sonnes not servants Sol. or principally for them yet is it not acceptable to God when it is done for these for nothing proceeding from hirelings or slaves can be acceptable why then are these written Namely to helpe them in it not to be the principall mover of it vide James 2.8 This proves that many mens workes and obedience are not the honour of God Vse 1 nor things acceptable though according to the law and things commanded which in another are his honour and accepted of him the end or motive not being good and right as it should The second thing to be observed is how this child-like and filiall feare differs from the other servile feare and that it doth in divers things The first difference is in respect of the object that is of that which is feared that is sinne the one feares sinne as it is sinne and because it is sinne the other onely the punishment of sin and not sinne at all but in regard of the punishment the former curbs the action onely Hosea 3.5 the other the affection the one liketh and loveth sinne but he dare not commit it in regard of the danger that may ensue of it the other hateth and abhorreth sinne and would not commit it though he might doe it without danger at all as Prov. 8.13 The feare of the Lord is to hate evill Psal 97.10 And because it deales with the affection it is called a pure feare Psal 19.9 The feare of the Lord is cleane or pure for it purgeth the heart as faith is said to doe Acts 15.9 The other is a melting feare but this is a purging and refining feare The second difference is in their grounds the one is grounded onely uon the wrath of God and for his justice the other regardeth them but specially his mercy and goodnesse Psal 130.4 Hosea 3.5 The filiall feare to offend God in regard of benefits past the servile for evill to come Se
striving against it for the future time ever taking this as a rule for so God intends it for reproving their corruption by this he intends it should be their rule to measure out duties to him by that duty which they owe unto man and performe unto him because they are naturally more prone to the one than to the other As he made the love of a mans selfe the rule of his love to others because it is more naturall unto him by much so in this when any man is then about duties to God if not otherwise he have a heart to doe them in all simplicity yet as Chrysost Hom. 16. in 1 Tim. if not otherwise yet as servants obey us so let us the Lord. So as wee would doe duties to men doe them to God if not otherwise and thinke whether the Prince or a man of any worth would accept such things from us If God send his messengers and Ministers to us bringing glad tidings of peace thinke wee if the Prince should send an Ambassadour unto us with good comforts and great promises how would we heare him and strive to it how use him with reverence and respect by no meanes deny him any obedience much lesse abuse him in word or deed So for the Ministers if they were sent from men to men what faithfulnesse care and diligence would they use Thinke when thou art to pray to God how thou wouldest put up a petition to the Prince with what submission reverence attention and humility If thou art to come to his Table and called to it thinke how if the Prince called thee to his thou wouldest remove impediments set aside excuses come with all preparation as a guest fitting his Table God requires service of thee as his servant thinke if thou wert the Kings servant in ordinary what wouldest thou doe for the time thy service is required doe that and wholly that and little of thy owne the most of the day spent in his So thinke if thou beest Gods servant what is required of all the dayes of thy life the chiefest and greatest part of it God requires almes and reliefe of thee a portion for his servants and houshold his Levites and Ministers and the poore Doe not use them as men doe the Kings takers hide the best things from them and thinke every thing too good thou knowest he will not then accept thy person but be angry with thee So in this Thou wilt say many Ministers are wicked and unworthy so thou maist say of many takers and purveyours yet if thou deny to them the Kings due though they shall be punished yet shalt thou be checked So in this looke to God and not them VERSE IX And now I pray you pray before God that he may have mercy upon us this hath beene by your meanes will he reward your persons saith the Lord of Hostes AND now I pray you pray before God After the Prophet had reproved their sinnes he comes to threaten them for them in the rest of this Chapter and these judgments or punishments threatened may be reduced to these two heads they are either privative that is a withdrawing of Gods mencies vers 9. ad 14. or they are positive an inflicting of a curse vers 14. The first is double a rejecting of their prayers and sacrifices vers 9. and a rejecting of them who did pray or sacrifice vers 10. secondly a removing of his worship from them to the Gentiles vers 11 12 13. In this Verse is the rejecting of their prayers And now pray This some take to be an exhortation to Repentance and to seeke the Lord as Zephan 2.3 but some and the most understand this Ironicè by an Ironia and thinke it is spoken in derision like Isaiah 47.12 1 King 22.15 So here he commands nothing but derides them who thought thus to reconcile God by such sacrifices As if he had said Long may ye doe thus but prevaile nothing at all Pray before the Lord Some read entreate the face of God that is the favor of God for so is face taken for favor Psal 31.16 some read Pray to turne away the face of God that is his anger as Psal 34.16 some before the Lord to the Lord himself or in the place where he sheweth himself seeking unto him by prayer Psal 27.8 And of these this is the most probable That be may have mercy upon us He alludeth as it is thought to that Numb 6.35 .i. that he would be gracious and mercifull unto us forgive us our sinnes and multiply his mercies and blessings upon us upon us Prophet and people the Prophet putteth himselfe amongst the rest as partaker of the same miseries and troubles This hath been by your means Now the Prophet laieth upon the Priests the cause of this curse that is befallen the people some referre this to the former part shewing that they should pray because they had been in fault It is true that they ought chiefest to seeke to turne to God that are authors of his wrath But then should this be taken by way of exhortation not upbrayding But this is referred of some to the latter shewing the reason why God will not heare nor accept because they are authors of this evill and therefore unfit to pray to God for the rest This hath been by your meanes by your fault hath this evill happened untous for it is not so much the fault of the people who bring such imperfect sacrifice to the Temple as yours who receive them for gaine and neither reprove the impiety of the people nor instruct their ignorance as by your office you ought Will he That is he will not the Interrogation denies more strongly Regard your persons will he accept your persons and faces To accept ones face is to shew himselfe courteous and gracious to any He will give to none of you nor accept your prayers That which was spoken closely by an Ironie and carried the face of a permission or command that is now plainly and without figures spoken shewing that he rejected both them and their sacrifices Saith the Lord of Hosts He that made all in Heaven and Earth and is ruler over all creatures the mighty Lord. As it were to meete with the bse conceit they had of God preferring every meane man before him In the first place of this covert rejecting of their prayers and first of the manner then the matter The manner is an ironicall speech or speech of derision It is lawfull for the Ministers of God Doctrine and for holy men to use Ironies that is scoffing speeches deriding taunts against the wicked For so is it here by the Prophet So Elijah 1 Kings 18.27 And at noone Eliiah mocked them and said cry aloud for he is a God either he talketh or pursueth his Enemies or is in his journey or it may be that he sleepeth and must be awaked Eccles 11.9 Isaiah 44.12 13 c. 1 Kings 22.15 Now examples are warrants where precepts
be not against them Because this is a speciall meanes Reas as to shew a mans deresting of such things so to draw them to the disliking of such things as they are affected with or dote upon such speeches often more prevaile then greater matters men being more impatient of ascoffe then many serious reproofes This refelleth their conceit who deny any use of these things Vse 1 they deny there are any such things in the Scripture they say they are lyes they say that the Apostle forbids them Object Ephe. 5.4 neither jesting I answer that there is an use of them and that in the Scripture as the former examples prove Answ Neither are they supposed unfitting the Majesty of the Scripture For though it be true that a man speakes one thing and thinkes another yet the manner of his words and speech doth bewray his minde and that indeed there is no contrariety for the hearer may easily discern his minde As in that of Michaiah 1 Kings 22.15 for verse 16. Ahab discerned well his meaning that he did but scoffe at him and his false Prophets so that he speakes as he thinkes not for the very words but for the matter of the words Neither makes the place in the Ephesians against this because it forbids scurrility when men scoffe and reproach others rashly when there can be no edifying of others or good to the party but their malice and disdaine shewed and as well the modest and temperate hearers as the sufferers are offended which is that which differeth farre from these things we can not bring these within compasse of a lye unlesse we make the Spirit of truth a lying Spirit And in these a man hath no intent to have his words otherwise taken then he meaneth them This warranteth the use of them Vse 2 as sometimes our men have done in deriding and scoffing at the folly of Papists at their Idols and Idolatrous service and foolish superstitions and ever are lawfull to be used when a man doth it not for revenge or to wreck his anger wrath upon some person that is his particular enemie but to reprove and condemn impious and idolatrous worship and such like Now for the matter and first for that which is general here in the whole God will not accept their prayers that is the thing threatened It is a heavy thing Doctr. and fearefull judgement that men should pray and not be heard that they make long prayers to God but he will be as though he heard not but reject their supplications and they be as men beating the ayre It is threatned here So Isaiah 1.15 And when you shall stretch out your hands I will hide mine eyes from you and though you make many prayers I will not heare for your hand are full of blood Proverb 1.28 Then shall they call on me but I will not answer they shall seeke me earely but they shall not finde mee Hosea 8.13 The contrary is promised as a blessing and performed as a blessing and acknowledged as a blessing Isaiah 30.19 Surely a people shall dwell in Lion and in Jerusalem thou shalt weep'no more he will certainly have mercy upon thee at the voyce of thy cry when hee speaketh he will answer thee 2 Chron 7.14 Psal 116.1 2. Because it is a manifest signe that the persons are out of favor and he is dispeased with them Reas 1 for the accepting of their prayer is a proofe of the acceptation of person because he first looks to the person In sacrificiis quae Abel Cain primi obtulerunt non munera corum Deus sed corda intuebatur ut ille placeret in munere qui placebat in corde Cypr. de Orat Dom. 11. then the prayer as first Abel was accepted then his sacrifice And what can bee more fearefull though it is not alwaies felt then to live out of favor with God If in the displeasure of a Prince there be danger more of Gods to carry Gods marke about with him as Cain that he is out of favor Because this is the meanes by which all blessings are obtained Reas 2 the key that opens and shuts Heaven Oratio justi clavis est coeli ascendit precatio descendit Dei miseratio Aug. ut nihil sanctū nisi illo sanctificante nihil potens nisi illo roborante Prayer the wall of the City Ita nihil faelix nihil anspicatum nisi illo prosper ante Cipr. as Elijah it opens the right hand of God for blessings shuts the left hand from cursings Now when a man can receive no blessing neither escape any curse hath no meanes for it because as good be without the meanes as when they are not regarded must it not be a heavy thing Many things befall many men without prayer if that be no prayer which is without understanding and affection yet are they but common blessings such as are common to them and other men yea creatures unreasonable and senselesse Because as one saith verè novit rectè vivere Reas 3 qui rectè novit orare so he can only live well who can pray well For as St. Augustine out of Saint Cyprian Quae implenda jubentur in lege in oratione poscenda sunt but if they can not or shall not be heard in praying where shall they have strength to performe This noteth the senselessenes of many men Vse 1 who though they pray often and prevaile seldome or never yet never mourne under it as under a judgement sorrow not much for it It may be they can mourne that they have not that they desire for want of the thing it self but not that their prayers are not heard It is that they grieve for because they receive not from God but never that their prayers are not received of God like him that puts up a Petition to the Prince and is little or not at all troubled that he reads it not but gives it over to another that will smother it but his griefe is that he relieves him not and this appeares because their hearts desire any meanes else though never so unlawfull to supply that they want and to give that which God will not grant and if the opportunity be offered they will not stick to use them as Saul did the witches things condemned by him before Secondly because if those meanes be of force and by them they prevaile their hearts are cheared up well enough little or not at all sorrowing that he heard them not not much caring though he did not Thirdly if they prevaile not by those meanes yet never will they returne again to God nor seeke from him if not the things yet patience and comfort in the want of them To teach the whole Church and particulars of it Vse 2 to groane under this as under a judgement of God that their prayers are not heard they aske and receive not they seeke and find not they knock and it is not opened unto them And yet they asked things
irasci 't is a signe of greater displeasure The master that respects his servant corrects him for a small fault if he let him alone Chrysost in Mat. ho. 17. it may be thought he doth it till great faults bee joyned to it land he may either punish more or cast him out of his house so in this Neither will I accept an offering at your hand Because he is displeased with them therefore he will not accept their offerings nor their service and prayers The person of a man must first please God before his prayers Doctrine his offerings or any worke that he doth can be pleasing or acceptable to him That is before reconciliation just sication they are unaccepted It is hence manifest because he rejecteth their offerings being displeased with their persons hereto belongs that Ge. 4.4 that Prov. 15.8 The sacrifice of the wicked is abomination to the Lord but the prayer of the righteous is acceptable unto him Hence Isaiah 1.13 19. 1 Pet. 2.5 And yee as lively stones hee made a spirituall house an holy priesthood to offer up spirituall sacrifices acceptable to God by Christ Jesus Hebr. 13.16 Because all workes are made acceptable to God by faith Reas 1 as all things are made pleasing to men by the light so Chrysost and without it nothing is Hebr. 11.16 Now faith is that which makes the person accepted for by it we are justified Rom. 5.1 and made the sonnes of God Rom. 3.26 Because before they are strangers Ephe. 2.19 yea and enemyes Reas 2 Rom. 5.10 now things done by strangers are not greatly gratefull but by enemies they altogether distaste us This confuteth the Papists who make good workes the cause of our justification and reconciliation to God when Vse 1 as they can not be good so they cannot be acceptable before we be reconciled and acceptable in his sight How doe they then justifie us and reconcile us for that which must justifie and reconcile another must needs it selfe be in favor for as that is true of S. Augustine Opera non praecedunt justificandum sed sequuntur justificatum So that is as true whensoever they come they are not acceptable in themselves because they are imperfect our evill works are perfectly evill and so deserve to be cast out of favour but our good works are not perfectly good and so cannot procure favor of themselves Object If any object as some of our Papists sticke not to doe that we are justified by works because by faith for faith is a worke I anser faith is not our worke but Gods in us John 6.29 Againe Answ though having received faith we doe beleeve yet it is not faith or the worke of it that doth justifie us but the righteousnes of Jesus Christ apprehended by faith for as a hand that hath taken a treasure doth not inrich us but the treasure and it is not the mouth receiving the meat but the meat that doth nourish us so in this And being thus justified then we work and our works are acceptable because we are first accepted in Christ To stirre up every man to the tryall of his estate and himselfe whether he be indeed reconciled to God or no Vse 2 whether justified or no that if he be not he may labor and endevor to be because while he is in that condition whatsoever things he doe as they are but splendida peccata August so they are altogether unacceptable to God whether he heare or give or receive or pay a heavy condition of a servant that doe what he can yet he can not please But happily thou art desirous to know whether thou art reconciled or not Quest and if not how to come by it I answer thee Answ if thou hast true faith then shall this be like the fait 2 Kings 2.21 which healed the spring of waters and of it may be said as there This comforts God children Vse 3 who are justified in Jesus Christ and so accepted in his sight their works their sacrifice and worship liketh him howsoever they are done in imperfections and in many great weaknesses and are not so fully with their whole foule minde and heart as they should be but carry the touch of mans corruption and are not able to abide the strict and streight judgment of God yet because they proceed from them who are accepted in Christ they please him and the imperfections are pardoned in Christ and they taken for pure and holy Prov. 15.8 1 Pet. 2.5 As a little thing done of a child is more acceptable then much done by a servant VERSE XI For from the rising of the sunne unto the going downe of the same my Name is great among the Gentiles and in every place incense shall bee offered unto my Name and a pure offering for my Name is great among the heathen saith the Lord of Hosts FRom the rising of the sunne Here is the second part of withdrawing Gods mercy from these Jewes And this is the removing of his worship word from Jewes to Gentiles set down by a comparison of dissimilitude betwixt Jewes and Gentiles The proposition of the Gentiles and their great care and respect of his worship verse 11. the reddition of the Jewes and their corruption and carelesnesse of his worship renewing the former expostulation verse 12 13. In this we are to consider the worship of God the circumstances of it In it we consider 1. the ground of it my name is great repeated in the beginning and ending of the verse for more certainty of the thing 2. the matter incense and oblation 3. the manner and quality of it pure opposit to the Jewes prophane and polluted service of God The circumstances 1. persons Gentiles 2. place everywhere Now for the meaning The Papists have wrested this place to establish the doctrine of their Masse but how absurdly shall appeare before we have ended with the Verse in the meane time we will search the true meaning of them as they ly in order For from the rising of the Sunne These words expresse the place some expound them in the time present and these either take them absolutely thus The Gentiles though they have no knowledge of God but by nature as much as they may learne out of the great bookes the Heavens and the Earth and the revolutions and changes of them by the rising of the Sunne and the going downe of the same yet they offer unto God oblations in their kind Thus Montanus But this cannot b e because of the quality of the sacrifice following for it is said to be pure which could not come from them in that dimme light they had Or conditionally that the Gentiles would offer a pure sacrifice if God did reveale himselfe to them as he hath to the Jewes But the words are so absolutely spoken they cannot thus be taken Others with more generall consent on all sides take them in the future tense or time to come that the time should come when
the Lord should translate his worship from the Jewes to the Gentiles and then should they bring holy offerings And this is after the comming of Christ who should take away the Ceremonies and abrogate the forme of the Jewish worship and bring in pure and spirituall sacrifices Now by this is noted the place that is through all the whole world Psal 113.3 The Lords Name is praised from the rising of the Sunne unto the going downe of the same Not that it should be at one time in all places of the world for that never was nor shall be but as among the Jewes so in the whole world before Christs comming the greater part of them were wicked Idolaters and prophane men Isaiah 17.6 and 6.13 but successively now in one place now in another it shall be spoken and preached in all the parts of the world before Christs second comming Matth. 26.13 Psal 2.8 Aske of me and I shall give thee the Heathen for thine inheritance and the ends of the earth for thy possession My name shall be great Here is the ground of Gods worship The Name of God signitying diverse things in this place may be taken either for himselfe as a mans name is put for his person Acts 2.21 or for his excellency majesty and glory as Name for fame Exod. 34.5 6. Phil. 2.9 Gen. 11.4 Is great Not that God is great or lesse Magnum parvum sunt ex iis quae sunt ad aliquid Aristot but shewed or declared or acknowledged to be great as the word sanctified is used Math. 6.9 and the word justified Math. 11.19 Jam. 2.21 Among the Gentiles The persons by condition Gentiles or Nations taken sometime generally for a company of People consisting of many families gathered together Isaiah 1.4 Ioh. 11.52 Secondly more particularly for all people besides the Iewes all Infidels Gods people being taken from among them only Isaiah 49.6 And so it is amongst those who were not Gods people before amongst them whom the Iewes accounted fooles and did extreamely hate spoken as it were to provoke them to make more care of the worship of God according to the denouncing Deuter. 32.21 And in every place incense shal be offered unto me The matter of this offering or worship is first said to be incense by which is understood prayer invocation and thanksgiving as Psal 141.2 Let my Prayer be directed in thy sight as incense and the lifting up of my hands as an evening sacrifice Revel 5.8 Secondly It is said to be an oblation or offering by which is not understood the Leviticall offering abrogated by Christ neither the sacrifice of Christ upon the crosse which none can offer but he and which only was to be performed and offered upon the crosse before the gate of Jerusalem nor the sacrifice of the Masse as shall after appeare but by this is understood a mans selfe every faithfull man with all that he hath for every one of Gods ought both to consecrate himselfe to the spirituall worship of God and as it were sacrifice himselfe and also offer up the sacrifice of prayer and praise and of repenting justice almes and other things pleasing to God Rom. 13.1 1 Pet. 2.5 Heb. 13.15 16. Psal 4.6 and 5.19 And of this Irenaeus Tertullian and diverse other understand this place Pure not simply without spot Isaiah 64.6 but as the Church is called holy and without spot Cant. 6.9 first in regard the person offering it is in Christ and as his person hath his obedience and righteousnesse applyed and imputed to it so his obedience hath Christ to cover the wants of it Heb. 13.15 1 Pet. 2.5 Secondly In regard of inward sanctification the ground of it the party being regenarate by the worke of his spirit and so every action in him part holy and good and well pleasing to God as comming and proceeding from his Spirit though having a taste and sent of our infirmities as water passing by a Pipe or Chanell Rom. 8.26 and 15.16 Acts. 15.9 This though a threatning yet is according to that Deuter. 32.21 and so a kind of provocation to the Israelites provoking them from the example of the Gentiles with a holy emulation in piety and the worship of God The Iewes embraced not sincerely the worship of God but putting it as it were from them the Gentiles received it When one Church maketh not account of the truth and worship of God or doth reject it another shall embrace it Doctrine From the rising of the Sunne unto the going down of the same The Lord though he had shewed much mercy and goodnesse upon the Jewes he is not emptyed by it but hath the like in store for others the Gentiles The Lord is marvelous rich in mercy and liberall in giving his goodnesse to the sonnes of men neither weary in giving Doctr. nor ever wasted with giving manifest from this example and I am 1.5 If any of you lack wisdome let him aske of God which giveth to all men liberally and reproacheth no man and it shall be given him Rom. 10.12 for there is no difference betweene the Jew and the Grecian for he that is Lord over all is rich unto all that call upon him he gives at all times Luke 22.12 his ability is great Ephe. 3.20 the effects prove it giving more then they aske to to Abraham for one sonne desired he gave a seed as the starres in the heavens To Isaac Gen. 25.21 22. to Jaacob Gen. 48.11 To Solomon Kings 3.11 Vberior est gloria quam precatio Ambrose in loc Because he is creator and Lord of all Reas 1 and by creation they are his sonnes he their father Therefore as a father he will provide for all his their portions as Abraham did Gen. 25.6 yea and such is his care that he cannot endure their want Now they are in themselves continually wanting though he give one thing they have need of another as a ship and a net that must still bee mending Because it is agreeable to his magnificency and greatnesse to deale thus liberally Reas 2 as it is agreeable and becommeth a Prince to deale according to his magnificence and greatnesse Because it might be manifest the things they receive come to them not for their deserts or the merit of their prayers Reas 3 or any things else but of his love and mercy when he dealeth so bountifully Vse 1 Prayers are not meritorious I am 1.5 Vse 2 If any want he himself is cause of it Ibidem to all men Vse 3 An encouragement to aske To learne to be liberall and not weary of well doing Vse 4 Gallat 6.9.10 From sunne rising to the sun setting in all places and nations is the worship and word of God propagated The Church under the times of the Gospell Doctrine and since Christ is not as it hath been limited to one Nation as to the Jewes Psal 147.19 20. Iohn 4.22 but those limits are plucked up and it is inlarged to all the Gentiles
my body for the sinne of my soule when they could not endure what is told them Verse 8. hee hath shewed thee O man what is good and what doth the Lord require of thee surely to doe justly and to love mercy and to humble thy self to walke with thy God Any thing but that they should doe they pretend to be willing to doe like children who like any manner of education but that their parents would bring them up in If in a trade oh if they might follow their book any thing but that they should and their Parents would have So with these they know not or will not know their owne heart which is naturally irreligious and never will like that is commanded but would goe a whoring with their owne imaginations and ever will like that they may not have or will not be accepted when they contemne that they have and not respecting these they cannot but contemne that is otherwise enjoyned as Luke 16.30 31. he said Nay father Abraham but if one come unto them from the dead they will amend their lives Then he said unto him if they heare not Moses and the Prophets neither will they be perswaded though one rise from the dead againe They are like to a woman to whom one making love and desiring her person she disliking his answers him she will give him any thing but her selfe her riches jewels bracelets and such like onely to put him off because she sees he desires her person onely and the other if he would desire she would soone deny him To teach us how wee ought now with all diligence and frequency performe these Vse 3 and offer these sacrifices more than they these were common to us and them they were burdened with others of which we are eased which were chargeable and toylesome Acts 15.10 As 2 Kings 5.13 it was with Namaan his servants came and spake unto him and said Father if the Prophet had commanded thee a great thing wouldest thou not have done it how much rather then when hee saith to thee Wash and be cleane So say I if he had laid that burden also upon us ought we not to have done both how much more when he hath eased our shoulders And if we should not how should we be justly condemned of unthankfulnesse The Wife that newly married had a wise and strait Husband knowing her frailty and infirmities and therefore set a watch over her and appointed servants to observe her till her affection and faith were setled when she ought and did honour and obey and love him If he free her from them and set her at liberty from that grievous bondage and tedious thing will she then honour him the lesse Questionlesse she ought not but if she doe as the corruption of all is to waxe worse by liberty then is she condemned of unthankfulnesse the more So 't is with us Incense The worship prayers and service of the Gentiles is resembled by this not onely familiarly to shew to them of that age but to teach that their service works and worship is acceptable unto God as such things are acceptable to the smell and sences of men for in them God tooke no delight at all neither could doe his nature being spirituall The works of Gods children Doctrine their worship service and spirituall sacrifice is delightfull and acceptable to him as sweet perfumes are to the smell of men And a pure offering It is opposed to the Jewes sinnes who offered unto God polluted and unperfect sacrifices not such as they ought and such as were according to the Law But now their offering shall be pure The works actions Doctrine and worship of such are truely called and converted are holy and pure Thus prophesieth Malachy that the Gentiles converted unto God their workes and worship of him shall be a pure offering Thus St. Paul speakes of the offering of the Romans Chap. 12.1 that it is holy Jude calls their faith most holy vers 20. There were a few in Sardi truely religious and converted their garments were undefiled Revel 3.4 Because they are done according to his Word Reas 1 now they walke by that rule things before they did at randome now they know his Will and after that they doe And it is a rule that worship performed according to the Word in themselves are good and pure as the sacrifices which were according to the Law were pure and cleane for the matter of them Because the parties are holy they are a holy Priesthood Reas 2 1 Pet. 2.5 now a good thing done in matter by holy men must needs be holy But how can they be holy when there is eadem ratio totius partis And the Church for spots is compared to the Moon Object Cant. 6.9 This is answered that he is so because he is in Christ Answ and hath his righteousnesse imputed to him both to his person and his obedience 1 Cor. 1.30 non radiis solaribus sed ipso sole amictus Revel 12.1 as the Church is said to be cloathed with the Sunne Hebr. 13.15 1 Pet. 2.5 Thirdly because of his inward sanctification Reas 3 the ground of it the party being regenerated by the works of the Spirit and so every action is in him part holy and good and well pleasing to God as comming and proceeding from his Spirit though having a tang and tast of his infirmities as water passing through a pipe or channell Rom. 8.26 and 15.16 This teacheth what to judge of the works and worship of all that are uncalled and unconverted Vse 2 not onely of Heathen and Infidels but of unbeleevers in the Church they must needs be impure and unholy else were it nothing that is here affirmed of these after their calling And indeed needs must it be for Tit. 1.15 Vnto them that are defiled and unbeleeving is nothing pure but even their mind and conscience is defiled So farre is it that they should be merita praeparatoria as some Papists speake of them for unholy things cannot please him lesse procure or deserve good things from him though they doe the things for matter good yet a good thing is oftentimes marred in the handling and more when they are done by some men and such men Secondly Vse 2 this proves that mens callings are free without deserts when the things that they doe before even their best are impure and unholy such as God shewed his great patience in that he did not confound them for them and more the riches of his mercy that for all them yet he called them This comforteth every one that is truely converted unto God Vse 3 his works and worship is pure and holy and so accepted of God even then when he carryeth the body of sinne about with him Rom. 7.21 when in himselfe he finds many infirmities yea and when his heart tells him that his best work is not without the taint of his corruption yea and when his heart may misdeeme him as Jacobs did
Lord with your words The Prophet proceedeth now unto the last sin reproved in this Chapter which was in this people the former was touching men this is concerning God the former dishonesty and unfaithfulnesse towards men this impietie against God Before he accused them as some speake of felony now of treason before for their deeds now for their words and speeches contumeliously uttered against God denying the providence of God both over the good and bad not providing for the one and not punishing the other It is thought that the Jewes being now returned out of Babylon from their captivity and saw both the Babylonians and divers other Nations and people to abound with wealth ease and glory though they served their Idols and themselves the onely worshippers of the true God to be in want and poverty they thought and spake that God he regarded not them that worshipped him but the wicked were good in his sight and he delighted in them Or at least if it be not so where is God that judgeth uprightly Yee have wearied the Lord with your words Some thinke the wearinesse here spoken of is a fainting which commeth from too much striving and labouring whence commeth a remitting of the care and indevour which he tooke before time And so the meaning they would have to be You say the Lord who is mercifull and aboundeth with mercy and hath been ever constant in it and prone to it he is now wearyed in descending and providing for and in doing good unto those that serve him And so it should not be a wearinesse imposed upon him but one that is imputed unto him And so onely in opinion it should be so and not in truth but how this will agree with the Prophets answer to their demand I cannot see neither can it possibly for then he would have said In that ye say the Lord hath no care or hath cast of the respect of his but he speaketh otherwise The meaning is then you have grieved and vexed the Lord with your speeches and reproaches and blashemies against him It is spoken after the manner of men because they are so with the speeches of others like that Isaiah 43.24 Thou hast wearied me with thine imquities Yet ye say wherein c. Their answer for themselves putting him to his proofe and to make good that he had spoken and shew wherein else would they not confesse their faults When ye say Though not in his hearing who was able and would reproove them but amongst the ignorant people in companies where they came still inculcating and repeating such things and so make them cast off all feare of God and care of honesty and piety He that doth evill Not the good nor the righteous is respected of God but the wicked for they flourish and prosper and he is good in his sight that is approved of God From men they proceed to approach to God and to impeach and disgrace him and cast reproaches upon him and being unfaithfull injurious and unjust to men they are irreligious towards God They who are unfaithfull and unjust towards men Doctrine will be irreligious towards God such as have no care of honesty will have no care of piety not of charity not of religion and ècontra So much this insinuates and that 1 John 4.20 If any man say I love God and hate his brother he is a lyer for how can he that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen love God whom he hath not seen And James 1.27 Pure religion and undefiled before God even the father is this to visite the fatherlesse and widowes in their adversity and to keepe himselfe unspotted of the world Tit. 2.12 Matth. 25.42 Not that men shall not be condemned for irreligion but that this is manifest to others and shewes that there can be no religion Because men they see Reason 1 and converse withall daily and so not with God Now if they have no care of the present what is expected towards the absent not of visible none of the invisible As 1 John 4.20 Because care of religion proceedeth from the love of God Reason 2 which makes Christ Math. 22.27 include the whole first table which is concerning God and religion under the title of love Now there can be no love of God but where there is love to man for that 1 John 4.20 Men love not the person if not the picture love to man is naturall to God spirituall that as naturall men this as spirituall and regenerate If any be unnaturall is it not like he will and must needs be irreligious To teach us not to wonder Vse 1 as many men doe that there is so much impiety and prophanenesse in our age so little or no care of the Lords day little or no love of the word zeale for Gods glory care of his worship hatred of idolatry and such like but ècontra much and great prophaning of the Lords day c. Wee are in the age wherein charity is growne cold and iniquity hath gotten the upper hand It is true which August saith Euchi 1. ad Laur. 117. Regnat carnalis cupiditas ubt non est Dei charitas And it will be as true if ubi be placed before regnat for there can be never any true and constant love to religion where there is not true love to God that cannot be unlesse men be sanctified and regenerated Now sanctification is as some say of hearts ease that growes not in every mans garden lesse is it in every mans house so not sanctification it is few mens hearts and manifest not to be there where there is injustice dishonesty no love of God would we marvaile to see men performe no duties to those they are knowne not to love Love and affection being the ground of all duty if not why this Nay rather seeing the wickednesse injustice and oppression of the time is such we should rather wonder there is any religion at all then that there is no more that there is any love to the truth c. then so little To teach us what to judge of many men who seeme religious Vse 2 who will sit at Gamaliels feet have Christ to teach in their streets and Churches he shall eat at their tables and houses and yet they are workers of iniquity live in some one grosse sinne or another of injustice and oppression deceit or unfaithfulnesse and uncleannesse yea after they have beene convinced by the word remaine still in them know them to be but hypocrites they may talke of religion but they have no truth of it they may have the shew of goodlinesse but not the power of it They honor the word Ministers onely as Saul would have Samuel to accompany him for his owne honor before the people or some other sinister respect It is not a sure consequent a man is carefull of the duties of the second table and therefore religious because hitherto by nature he hath beene so there
will certainely as he heareth every oath so judge them for it and lay heavy plagues upon them Me thinkes this should be like the Ship-masters voyce Jonah 1.6 What meanest thou O swearer call upon God that thou perish not And so to be carefull to avoid them themselves to reforme them in theirs not swearing for gaine lesse for pleasure or vanity not for curtesie as in sitting down and taking places not in passion and such like but remembring the law thinking of the judgement not forgetting the Judge and so not alleadging excuses Jam. 5.12 But before all things my brethren sweare not neither by heaven nor by earth nor by any other oath but let your yea be yea and your nay nay least ye fall into condemnation And against those who wrong fully keep back the hirelings wages The fourth particular is oppression and the particulars of this are severall this the first that when a man hath hired and used another and had his labour and sweat whether he were hired by day weeke or yeare whether by day or by whole if they retaine their wages from them unjustly deny it them directly or under some colour or diminish it or defer it which is an injury unto them he will judge them The Lord he will judge and condemne and destroy all such as keepe backe their hirelings wages Doctrine which for his living worketh with him either by day moneth or yeare and such are here threatned Like to this that Jer. 22.13 We unto him that buildeth his house by unrighteousnesse and his chambers without equity he useth his neighbour without wages and giveth him not for his worke Jam. 5.4 Behold the hire of the labourers which have reaped your fields which is of you kept backe by fraud crieth and the cries of them that have reaped are entered into the eares of the Lord of Hoasts Because they transgresse the law of justice Reason 1 which requires they should give to every man his owne and not withhold the right from the owner of it but they having had their labour their wages is then the others right and due so that to withhold it is injustice but all unjust men he will judge and destroy Because they are cruell and unmercifull Reason 2 for a mercifull man will not defraud his beast but gives him his due when he laboureth for him regarding that Deut. 25.4 Thou shalt not muzell the Oxe that treadeth out the Corne. God speakes not for oxen but for men and if mercy be not shewed here then Jam. 2.13 There shall be judgement mercilesse to him that sheweth no mercy and mercy rejoyceth against judgement Then are there many in this City many I fear nay Vse 1 it is without feare hearers of the word whom the Lord will judge because they keep backe the hire of the labourer and are the labourers pursebearers and cofferers whether they will or no verily Christ shall judge them for it will they nill they To teach those who have servants or use hirelings Vse 2 to take the Apostles rule Collo 4.1 Do not detaine and defraud them of their wages it is equall it is right you should give it them know you else you have a Master in Heaven give it them chearefully fully readily not fraudulently else this Master shall be your Judge and he is the witnesse of all your fraud if you have done it do it no more and for that is done make them restitution search your bookes and see wherein you have defrauded them Deut. 24.14.15 Thou shalt not oppresse an hired servant that is needy and poore neither of thy brethren nor of the stranger that is in the land within thy gates thou shalt give him his hire for his day neither shall the sunne go downe upon it for he is poore and therewith sustaineth his life lest he crie against thee unto the Lord and it be sin unto thee And vex the widowes The second particular of the fourth kind of sinners whom the Lord will judge namely such as vex injure and oppresse widowes howsoever this with those which follow are usually joyned together in the Scripture yet because he that doth any one of these though he do them not all shall be judged of Christ I will speake of them briefely and severally The Lord he will come neer to judgement to punishment Doctrine and destruction against all those who vex oppresse and injure the widowes So is it here And that Exod. 22.22.23.24 Ye shall not trouble any widow nor fatherlesse child If thou vex or trouble such and so he call and crie unto me I will surely heare his cry Then shall my wrath be kindled and I will kill you with the sword and your wives shall be widowes and your children fatherlesse Deuter. 27.19 Cursed be he that hindereth the right of the stranger the fatherlesse and the widow and all the people shall say so be it Jer. 22.3.5 Matth. 23.14 We be unto you Scribes and Pharises hypocrites for ye devoure widowes houses even under a colour of long prayers wherefore ye shall receive the greater damnation The sinne is made the greater because it is coloured and the punishment threatned to be heavier but a wo is denounced against them because of the simple sin Because they are guilty Reason 1 not onely of injustice but cruelty of cruell injustice for to injure and vex any is injustice but to vex widowes and such as are weake and helplesse is cruelty and then Iam. 2.13 There shall be judgement mercilesse to him that sheweth no mercy and mercy rejoyceth against judgement Because God he professeth himselfe Reason 2 the helper of the helplesse and the patron of such as are without succour and friends therefore as he must right their wrongs so must he relieve them oppressed and revenge their oppressions This may admonish those Vse 1 who are in authority and place of justice This will make them like unto the Lord to defend the widowes cause when it comes before them or what power soever they have in their hands as Isaial 1.17 Plead for the widow whether she be rich or poore for if rich it is but justice but if poore it is both justice and mercy That many will do and it is lesse thanke worthy because they are able to recompence them by some gratefullnesse and other meanes In whom there is a shew of justice but no justice indeed and in truth but a desire of gaine The other is the harder and as just so mercifull and hath the promise of good from God as in the generall Luke 14.14 And thou shalt be blessed because they cannot recompence thee for thou shalt be recompenced at the resurrection of the just Those shall be recompenced of men these of God This they ought then to doe chearefully and not as the unrighteous Judge unwillingly but as Iob 31.16 who would not suffer the eies of the widow to faile Then may all those who are vexers oppressors Vse 2 and injurers of
and so helplesse As Samael to Agag 1. Sam. 15.33 But besides all this he will fearefully destroy all such To perswade all guilty persons though not before men Vse 3 yet before God to enter into themselves and examine their owne lives and former practise and see that they repent of this sinne as well as others and if they do truly let them make restitution to such else that may we use Mich. 6.10 Are yet the treasures of wickednesse in the house of the wicked and the scant measure that is abhominable and set it on with verses 11.12.13 shall I justifie the wicked balances and the bag of deceitfull waights for the rich men thereof are full of cruelty the inhabitants thereof have spoken lies and their tongue is deceitfull in their mouth therefore also will I make thee sicke in smiting thee and in making thee desolate because of thy sinnes For no restitution no repentance Chrysost ho. 5. de paeni tent To. 5. p 734 a.b.c. 2. where there is knowledge and ability of all without a man do it And oppresse the stranger The fourth particular injuring and oppressing of strangers some were strangers by nature but proselites to the religion of the Jewes and these I take it are not accounted strangers nor so called they had happily a note given them and signification of it that they were of some other country As 2 Sam. 11.6 Vriah the Hittite and 1 Sam. 26.6 Abimelech the Hittite but they were as if they had beene borne in the Land and of these I take it he speaketh not here but others were onely peaceable in the Land and State living or trading with them and though not professours yet not persecuters or open opposers and disturbers of their religion The Lord will judge Doctrine punish and condemne those who injure and oppresse strangers such as being borne in another country doe professe the same religion or live peaceably among them Manifest as here so by Exod. 22.22.23 Deuter. 27.19 Jer. 22.3.5 Ezek. 22.29.30.31 2 Sam. 12.9.10 and Cap. 21.1 Reasons first and second as in the former Because no man ought to oppresse his neighbour Reason 1 or brother if he doe God will judge him for it this will be granted of all but a stranger and such an one as this is as his brother and his neighbour as is manifest Luke 10.30 Levit. 19.33 Because the Lord he loves the strangers Reason 2 Deut. 10.18 Now to injure and oppresse such strangers as he loves or such as he loveth he will revenge and judge To instruct all in authority to use their authority in the defence of the strangers right Vse 1 as well as those who are home borne and to relieve them oppressed as we may understand that Isaiah 1.17 not to accept his person no more then his who is home borne but doe him right against him that is home borne as well as this against a stranger If he must preserve a servant in the cruelty of his Master Deut. 23.15.16 Thou shalt not deliver the servant unto his master which is escaped from his master unto thee he shall dwell with thee even among you in what place he shall chuse in one of thy Cities where it liketh him best thou shalt not vex him It was not a refuge for every wicked man but for him that was knowne to be cruelly used and fled to them for the name of the Lord. Then must also be Sanctuaries to strangers distressed To teach us what their portion shall be from the Lord who grieve and vex strangers Vse 2 that is all such as murmure that our Church should be like to a Hen which doth not onely nourish up her owne Chickens Chrysost ho. 46. operis imperfecti but also strange ones that are excluded from their owne damme So doth the true Church and so hath ours which these men hate and would have them excluded onely for their owne profit and gaine and therefore are they ready to favor any against them as much as in them is to hinder their right and to pervert their justice They tell us they grow rich amongst us and get the wealth when many are impoverished but is their eye evill because the Lords is good or doe they hate them because he prospers them So did the Egyptians the Israelites But by what meanes grow they rich otherwise then by following a lawfull calling and labouring as thou dost and if thou be poorer it is because thou art idler or more wicked The Lord taught the contrary by that Law Levit. 25.47 c. And by that which he allowes unto them one and the same Law as to him that was born in the Land as is often shewed and repeated save in the matter of remitting debts in the seventh yeare Deut. 15.1.2.3 And feare not me The fith sort of sinners that the Lord will judge are in a more generall kinde such as feare not him that is such as have no continuall awe of him in respect of his power and mercy for these and the fruits of them to avoyde evill and flye from finnes Now in the conjunction of these is noted by some that this is the roote and cause of others i. such and such have they done and this is the cause hence it comes because they feare not me The want of Gods feare wheresoever it is Doctrine is the cause and roote of all sinne many and great as the feare of God is the cause of mens flying and avoyding of sinne The later is manifest Prov. 8.13 The feare of the Lord is to hate evill Deu. 5.29 Deut. 42.18 39.9 Then the contrary where it is not for take away the cause take away the effect And so the latter is proved and by that Gen. 20.10.11 Then Abimelech said unto Abraham what sawest thou that thou hast done this thing Then Abraham answered because I thought thus surely the feare of God is not in this place and they will slay me for my wives sake Exod. 1.17 Psal 36.1 Amos 6.3 Rom. 3.18 Reason Because as August in Psal 79. * Omnia peccata duae res faciunt cupiditas timor proponitur praemium ut pecces facis propter quod cupis terreris minis facis propter quod times August in Psalm 79. Two things cause all sinnes desire and feare there is a reward proposed that thou maiest sinne thou dost it because thou desirest the reward thou art terrified with threatnings thou dost it for feare of smart Now where the feare of Gods power is it will expell all such desire of pleasure or profit for feare is the strongest affection and stoppeth the passage of desires as in a coward and one condemned And the lesse feare will be overcome of a greater as a strong and great naile drives out a small one Luke 12.4.5 And I say unto you my friends be not affrayd of them that kill the body and after that are not able to doe any more but I will forewarne you
whom you shall feare feare him which after he hath killed hath power to cast into hell yea I say unto you him fear Now where this feare is wanting no marvaile if they fall either for desire or pleasure into many and strange sinnes This may teach us what to expect from men who want the feare of the Lord They will sinne for a peece of bread Vse 1 a small matter of pleasure or profit a little feare if they have the occasion and opportunity will draw them to any thing for take away the bankes from the sea and the bridle from the horse whither will not that flow and whereinto will not he breake such and so unruly is the corruption of man if it have not this banke and this bridle to keepe it from outrage murther adultery perjury oppression and injustice or any sinne will be nothing in their hands What will they not dare to doe If Kings command they will murther innocents not as the Midwives If Queenes enjoine they will accuse judge condemne and execute the guiltlesse as those wicked Judges 1 Kings 21. did innocent Naboath upon Iezebels letters We learne what to judge of men Vse 2 whom we see living either in these sinnes or any other the like they are men destitute of the feare of God even a servile feare for this will prove it vide Cap. 1.6 first effect of feare That we may be free from these sins Vse 3 let us labour for this feare vide ibid. Saith the Lord of hoasts This is added for confirmation that none should promise to themselves safety for any outward respects as if he could not punish them vide Cap. 1.4 VERS VI. For J am the Lord I change not and ye sons of Iaakob are not consumed FOR I am the Lord I change not This some take as a reason to confirme the former judgement threatned that as he was the Lord of hoasts able to doe all what he would so is he in himselfe and in his decrees immutable as he cannot change no more can they be changed Quod est 9. Be ye well assured of this that as I am Lord and Jehovah eternall and without change so are all my judgements and whatsoever I have spoken that know you they shal come to passe in their time and not one thing shal come to the ground howsoever they are not so speedily as you thinke executed yet they shall for they cannot but be accomplished And ye sonnes of Iaakob And that you are not consumed and destroyed already for these sinnes doe not thinke me mutable or your selves without merit that you should be spared but this is meerely from my mercy and love and long suffering I have not dealt with you according to your sinnes God is immutable Doctrine 1 and without change both in himselfe and his nature Jam. 1.17 He is immutable in his will and his decrees Doctrine 2 And ye sonnes of Iaakob are not consumed I change not therefore are you not consumed for being in my selfe mercifull and long suffering yea mercy and patience it selfe I have spared you when you deserved long since to have beene confounded and destroyed by my judgements and this by resemblance may we interpret out of Lam. 3.22 It is the Lords mercies that we are not consumed because his compassions faile not That men escape destruction Doctrine and are not consumed with Gods judgements for their sinnes it is onely the mercy and goodnesse of God So much is here And that Lam. 3.22 Gen. 19.19 2 Sam. 24.14 2 Chron. 30.9 Therefore is that Isaiah 30.19 and 54.7 8. and Matth. 15.22 and 20.30 God hath two feet whereby he walketh towards men so hath he two hands whereby he handleth or dealeth with men mercy and justice and these are both infinite What City upheld when an infinite hand will cast downe nothing but an infinite hand and power Because sinne deserving Gods anger Reason 1 which anger is as God himselfe infinite cannot be satisfied nor appeased by any that is no more then a finite creature or a finite thing for this cannot ballance with that but onely his infinite mercy with his infinite wrath And this Lam. 3.22 his great mercies are infinite for measure and continuance i. Such are our sinnes that if he should deale righteously with us we miserable wretches had beene ten thousand times utterly undone but we are preserved in the middest of our distresses Ergo Not from us but his infinite mercy Isaiah 1.9 Except the Lord of hoastes had restored unto us a small remnant we should have beene as Sodom and should have beene like unto Gomorrah Because without the pardon of those sinnes the wrath cannot be avoided nor destruction escaped Reason 2 seeing God will not justifie the wicked Now pardon of sinne is onely from the mercy of God Luk. 1.77.78 Ps 32.1 Al sin is against God Ps 51.4 Tibi soli cu● soli reddenda est ratie de peccate qui solus es sine peccate Ruff. He onely can pardon sinne against whom onely it is Now he pardoneth sinnes in mercy and so David prayeth there for mercy Gratiae tuae deputo misericordiae quod peccata mea tanquaem glaciem solvisti gratiae tuae deputo quaecunque non feci mals August confess 7.2 cap 7. This will confute the doctrine of Popery Vse 1 who hold by their workes and satisfactions to have if not remission of great sinnes yet of veniall or if not of sinne yet deliverance from the punishment wherein they are the flat enemies of the mercy of God and rob him of his honour to give it to themselves as if finite workes and satisfactions could deliver from infinite wrath But when they see this will not hold water then they flye to this that it is onely from temporall punishments and the fire of purgatory but first for this that it is but a new coyned shift I manifest from their prayers for the dead whereby they thought to bring them remission of sinne Breviar secund usum Sarum in vigil mortuorum O God of the faithfull the maker and redeemer of all men give to the soules of all the faithfull deceased remission of all their sins that by godly prayers they may obtaine the pardon which they alwaies desired through Christ our Lord. And againe Lord we beseech thee let the prayers of thy humble servants be helpfull to the soules of al the faithful deceased that thou mayest both relieve them from all their sinnes and make them partakers of thy redemption who livest c. Now hence I reason that if by their prayers they would helpe the faithfull whom they presumed to be free from purgatory to bring them remission of sinne can they make us believe that they intend onely deliverance from the paines of purgatory for such as are there and not from the guilt of sinne by their sacrifices and masses Againe it is manifestly false that the sinne pardoned yet the punishment should remaine yea it is against the
and man requires all to be done and nothing omitted that may glorifie and honour him and be helpfull and profitable to them for so it is said to be bountifull that is helpfull 1. Cor. 13.4 But specially if we consider Peccatum est cum vel non est charitas quae esse debet vel minor est quam debet August de perfect justitiae Cit. coelest Ra. 15. that every man must love God above himselfe and man as himselfe now to omit any thing that is good for himselfe is a breach of charity to himselfe then so of these Sin is an action but the omission is onely a privation that is an omitting of that which ought to be done how can it then be a sin and they sin who omit it There is an action in sinnes of omission thus It is a sin of omission not to love his neighbour not to come to the congregation to heare the word and receive the sacrament in these there is an action for sometimes they are done upon purpose and deliberation and so he that offends will not love his neighbour will not go to the assembly and here is a plaine action of his will but sometimes they are omitted because a man thinkes not of them not of any purpose or contempt now here though there be not an action of the same kinde yet there is an action repugnant to the law he thinks not of the assembly because he would walke or take his recreation and these actions are repugnant to that good worke and sometimes the action is not at the same time but went a little before As a man gives himselfe to excesse and drunkennesse overnight and after cannot rise in the morning to be present there here is an action though not at the same time and of the same kinde yet that which is the cause of that omission All sinne is not an action it is onely true of sinne of commission which is some positive act done which the will should not consent to do sin of omission is but a privation of good As the Schoole and Basil Malum boni privatio est caelitas ex oculorum perditione provenit serm quod D. non est author peccati Facere cordis cogitare est quia corporis est cogitata proficere Chrysost ser de levium criminum periculis Then many men if they wil look upon their reckonings Vse 1 are guilty of a multitude of sinnes more then ever they thought themselves to be seeing they have onely accounted sinnes of commission to be theirs and never of omission Many have thought they were bound to avoid the evill yet not to do the good and so account their sinnes Many who account it a sinne to have other Gods have never accounted it a sin not to know the true God to believe him and feare him not to pray unto him which they did only in respect of their own necessities never of any duty to him nor of avoiding of sin so in the rest of the commandments These must know that they have to account with God for these if they have already for the other nay he never accounted nor repented of any one who doth not for these for he can have no true conscience of sin that hath not right science knowledge of these for sins who if they reckon not againe with God bring not true repentance must not looke to have peace but a controversie with God And if Judg. 5.23 Meroz was cursed not for fighting against Gods people but not assisting them in the battell against the mighty If Moses was punished with deprivation of the possession or fortage of the Land of Canaan not for dishonouring of God but not sanctifying him in the presence of the children of Israel Num. 20.12 If the rich man was cast into the torments of Hel not for taking away food from Lazarus but because he did not relieve his wants Luke 16. How shall they escape the curse inherit the Kingdome the spirituall Canaan how not be tormented in Hel Then let not men thinke much Vse 2 if they be censured as men who have gone astray from their birth while all their piety and honesty is but a negative piety and a negative honesty and not an affirmative but in little and slender sort here is all they can say for themselves they are not Idolaters and open prophane persons scoffers of piety they are not swearers they are no adulterers theeves or oppressors But in the mean time they are not zealous for his worship nor conscionable professors nor such as hunger after righteousnesse nor such as feare the dreadfull and great name of the Lord nor love of mercy and the like They may be judged as wicked men and as those who are in the displeasure of God As Tertul. nusquam nunquam excusatur quod Deus damnat So it cannot be but sinne which God is displeased withall Return unto me In this exhortation following the reproofe there may be noted from the Coherence two points First the patience of God towards sinners waiting for their returne Secondly that none is so desperately sinfull but there is hope he may returne and be converted And I will return unto you Here is the promise annexed to the former exhortation to draw them to hearken to it and obey it a promise of remooving or mitigating of their calamities and plagues and first in the generall observe they must performe and do their parts else he will not do his God is not bound Doctr. 1 to give man any thing he hath promised or covenanted unlesse he performe his covenant and conditions Vide Cap. 2.4 I sent this commandment that my Covenant might stand Againe if they repent he will returne remove or mitigate their plagues and punishments Repentance is the most certaine means Doctr. 2 and soveraigne medicine to mitigate and remoove to prevent and keep away judgements and plagues of God from the persons of men or the things that belong unto them Manifest as here so by that 2. Chro. 7.13.14 If I shut the Heaven that there be no raine or if I command the Grashopper to devoure the Land or if I send pestilence among my people If my people among whom my name is called upon doe humble themselves and pray and seeke my presence and turne from their wicked waies then will I heare in heaven and be mercifull to their sinne and will heale their Land Jer. 18.7.8 I will speake suddenly against a nation or against a kingdome to plucke it up and to roote it out and to destroy it But if this nation against whom I have pronounced turne from their wickednesse I will repent of the plague that I thought to bring upon them And 26.3 If so be they will hear ken and turne every man from his evill way that I may repent me of the plague which I have determined to bring upon them because of the wickednesse of their workes Luke 13.3.5 We have examples David
and Ministers all their due that is a competent maintenance among them Vse 2 if not for any love to them yet for the love of themselves if for no other reason yet for their owne gaine If all the things spoken before can move if not that which Chrysostome speaketh in 2 Psal ho. 9. that any man would be ashamed to be the disciple of a beggarly master and so while they are kept too too bare the credit and honour of their Ministry yea the fruit is hindered If thy father of thy body and flesh should be so bare wouldest thou not be ashamed at it and if thy spirituall father be driven unto it doest thou not for very shame hide thy selfe or else put to thy hand to take that shame both from him and thee Or if this move thee not will not that which he speakes in Tim. 2. See I pray you how great absurdity there is of these things should the Pastor not be able to keepe a man to tend upon him so that he must make his owne fire himselfe and fetch water breake his stickes for his fire and goe often to the market for things necessary can there be a greater perversity or greater disorder Those holy men the Apostles thought it an unmee●e thing that he which should attend upon the word should be imployed so much as to the service of the poore widowes Finally if this doe not move thee the good of thy soule and the spirituall and heavenly things such rich treasures these earthen vessels doe bring unto thee yet let this that if thou wilt give God his tenth he will encrease and multiply thy ninth even in abundant measure As August speaketh that thou shalt not onely reape by them better things spirituall things for a few earthly but for them from God abundance of earthly things for that shall be true Prov. 11.25 The liberall person shall have plenty and he that watereth shall also have raine And that 2 Cor. 9.6.7 This yet remember that he which soweth sparingly shall reape also sparingly and he that soweth liberally shall reape also liberally As every man wisheth in his heart so let him give nt grudgingly or of necesity for God loveth a cheerfull giver Neither let them answer as the widow did to Eliah 1 Kings 17.12 And she said as the Lord thy God liveth I have not a cake but even a handfull of meale in a barrell and a little oyle in a cruse and behold I am gathering a few stickes for to goe in and dresse it for me and my sonne that we may eate it and dye Or if thou dost distrustfully so a while yet seeing thou hast the word of God here more then she had verse 14. The barrell of meale shall not waste neither shall the cruse of oyle fatle Then beleeve and give Verily if this be true the Prophet saith here many men might have more then they have if they had for the glory of God for the service of the Church and the worke of the Ministery more liberall hearts then they have Verily it is an evill spared penny that loseth a man a pound and that which men think they have spared to themselves and gained in keeping it from God and his Ministers either the Prophet saith not true or it loseth them much more Nay that they give though they may seem to have cast it away yet they shall finde it and with advantage and if they had eies to see it nothing more gainfull then this and that is given to the poore Then as Chrysost for one let me apply it and speake of both ho. 53. ad pop Antioch so use thy riches or that which thou hast that they may bring encrease let God then be thy Creditor not other humane things bestow them upon the Ministers and the poore not upon thy belly upon the humble not honourable upon liberality not covetousnesse upon sobriety not intemperance What will thy belly afford and recompence thee with that spendeth most Dung and corruption What vain glory Envy and hatred What covetousnesse Care and griefe What intemperance Hell and the unsatiable worme Let God then be your Creditor which promiseth and will performe such great things And as Paul exhorteth the Corinthians for the matter of the poore so I for the Levite and Minister 2. Cor. 8.7 Therefore as ye abound in every thing in faith and word and knowledge and all diligence and in your love toward us even so see that ye abound in this grace also I will open the windowes of Heaven and powre you out c. It is the raine that is the means but God is the Author of the blessing Whatsoever the meanes may be that God doth use convey his blessings of peace Doctrine plenty health liberty yet he is the author and giver Isaiah 38.6 And powre you out a blessing You that shall obey me and sear me and walke in my waies Plenty Doctrine and a liberall and prosperous estate the Lord promiseth and will perform to those who feare him and are carefull to obey him and walke in his waies Vide Mal. 2.5 Without measure In marveilous great abundance and very liberally The Lord when he gives to his Doctrine he gives very liberally and abundantly Jam. 1.5 If any of you lacke wisdome let him aske of God which giveth to all men liberally and reproacheth no man and it shall be given him And I will rebuke the devourer for your sakes If the Lord should give raine in abundance and by it should rise weeds that should either choake the corne or other creatures which commonly arise of wet or by any other meanes and so devoure their fruit and their hopes be cut off they should but have little profit or benefit that what was given one way was taken away another therefore the Lord promiseth to take away such devourers such creatures as might destroy the fruit of the earth when it was sprung up Every creature is at Gods command at his becke to be restrained or set on to helpe or hurt to punish or preserve Doctrine those who are his Vide Cap. 1.4 Lord of Hoasts And they shall not destroy the fruit of your ground For their sins and iniquities they had destroied it but now that they are received into favour and mercy they shall not but receiving them to mercy will withdraw his judgements from these things he smote for them As God often punisheth men Doctrine punisheth them not onely in themselves but in things that belong unto them so when he withdraweth his hand and sheweth mercy towards them it is not only in themselves but in things which belong unto them Isaiah 38.6 Mich. 7.11 Because that as his hand was against them for mans cause only seeing they in themselves deserved no such thing Reason 1 as being not subject to nor capable of sin which only falleth into a reasonable creature so he receiving them to mercy for whose sake they were afflicted reason that they also should
be received and afflicted no more that as the former might humble them so this might joy them the more in the mercy of God Because as by smiting and cursing of them Reason 2 he testified his anger the more and displeasure against them for their sinnes for as in policy when justice reacheth further then the person of the offendor to his goods and possessions it argues the greater displeasure of the Lawyer against such an offence and offendor So in this So he might now shew his love more in blessing of them for when men have their possessions and lands restored besides their pardon it is a greater favour of the Prince Then hath the Popish Purgatory Vse 1 but an uncertaing ground to stand upon and is builded upon no sure rocke but upon the sand seeing it is onely for a temporall punishment in their doctrine upon those who have their sinnes sorgiven them already but may we suppose in any reason that God will take from their goods and lands and cattell his judgements for their sakes and not from them their owne persons specially their soules such as are only punished in Purgatory their punishments But they will say that God doth often continue punishments to men and upon their persons whom he hath received to mercy As they will tell us of David who had the punishment continued when his sinne was pardoned But we deny that or any other to be a punishment for that hath ever reference to sinne for all afflictions are not punishments but may for many other causes be laid upon men Chrysost ho 1 ad popul Antioch hath numbred to us eight causes yet are they not all * 1. Quod cum facile in ariogantiam propter meritorum magnitudi nem miraculorum tollantur ipsos sinit affligi 2. Ne caeteri majorem habeant de ipsis opinionem quam humana patitur natura insos deos non autem homines esse arbitrentur 3. Vt Dei virtus apparet per aegretantes compeditos exuperans prodicationem augens 4. Vt illorum pati entia manifesta fiat 5. Vt de resurrectione cegitemus cum enim virum justum multa plenum virtute innumera passum mala sic hinc digressum videris oportetex hoc omnino aliquid de illo judicio cogitare si enim homo pro se laborantes sine praemiis retributione abire non permittit Multo magis eos qui tantum laboraverunt nunquam in coronatos remanere Deus decerneret 6. Vt omnes in gravia incidentes sufficientem consolationem mitigationem habeat in eos respicientes malorum quae ipsis accidere recordantes 7. Ne quando exhortamus eos adillorum virtutem cuique dicimus imitare Paulum imitare Petrum propter gestorum excessum alterius ipsos naturae participes fuisse cogitantes adimitationem torpeatis 8. Ve quando beatos vel miseros censere oportet discamus quos quidem beatos quos quidem miseres aerumnosos putare debeamus Chrysost ho. 1. ad popul Antioch First God suffers holy men to be afflicted because otherwise they soone grow proud of the greatnesse of their merits and miracles Secondly Lest others might have a greater opinion of them then is fit and count them Gods rather then men Thirdly That Gods power may appeare more abundantly and beyond words through the weake and unable Fourthly That their patience also may be manifest Fiftly That we may be put in mind of the resurrection for when we see a righteous and vertuous man suffer many evils and so die this must offer us some thoughts of the day of judement for if a man suffer not any that have taken pains for him to go away without recompence and reward much lesse wil God suffer such as have indured so much for him to remaine uncrowned Sixtly That all that fall into calamities may have sufficient consolation and mitigation looking on them and remembring what they indured Seventhly That when we exhort you to their vertues and say to you imitate Paul imitate Peter you may not be slothfull to imitate them thinking because of their great actions they were partakers of some other nature then you are of Eightly That we may be able to judge aright who are indeed happy and who truly calamitous and miserable To these may be added Ninthly for clearing of his own justice as in David Tenthly For purging yet corruption from them the rod of correction Eleventhly To draw them from the world the nurses teate as the prodigall sonne was Twelfly To prevent sinne like Hoseahs hedge Hoseah 2.6 Thirteenthly To make them fly to God and to love him as the child to his mother when feared of passengers And many other such causes any one whereof if they can shew in Purgatory to be incident to the soules departed it were something to strengthen their exception but nothing to prove the thing when as the paines of Purgatory are satisfactory And if God in shewing mercy and pardoning sinne doth remove the punishment from the creatures he smote for their sinne he will much more from themselves their bodies but especially from their soules Neither shall their vine be barren in the field This is added as some thinke to amplifie the goodnesse of God to his people when they had returned and he had received them to mercy because the year which was commodious for the field and the corne was incommodious for the trees and the vines Therefore when all things should prosper well it was a speciall proof of the goodnesse of God and his good providence over them The Lord to shew his goodnesse and mercy Doctrine his good and mercifull providence to his will not only work ordinary things ordinarily but often extraordinarily to do them good and to profit them Manifested here that he will make both the harvest and vintage good which in ordinary times fell not out and all for the good of his so he made the sea as a wall and dry land for his people to passe over Exod. 14.21 So the Sunne was staied in his course Iosh 10.12.13 Nay made to go backe Isaiah 38.8 So he fed the Prophet by a raven and for his good increased the widowes meal and oile 1. Kings 17.6.14 So for the relieving of the famin of his 2. Kings 7.6 c. For some he quenched the violence of the fire Dan. 3. For some stopped the mouths of the Lions Dan. 6. For others he raised their dead to life as in Lazarus and the Shunamite 2. Kings 4.36 How many wonders wrought he in Egypt for his people how wonderfully did he sustaine them in the Wildernesse And hereto I apply that Isa 59.16 Because it maketh his goodnesse and mercy more sensible to his owne who being compassed with infirmities Reason 1 as they have lesse sense feeling of it in small things then in great matters so in ordinary then in extraordinary when as without question as his power was no
receive the sacrament be diligent in the works of Gods worship but he is unjust covetous unchast c. we say his religion is in vain and this will every one subscribe to we see men just and chast and liberall in almes c. but he is irreligious he regards not Gods day he neglects the word the sacrament prayer and such like we say his righteousnesse is vaine But this will not all subscribe to but they shall know it at one time or other that it is in vaine not onely so farre as Chrysost speakes of workes without faith comparing them with the reliques of the dead * Cadavera enim etsi c. Chrysost carcases though they be covered with pretious and rich cloaths yet have no heate for them so such as want faith though they shine with glorious workes yet they do them no good now where there is not knowledge nor conscience of religion there cannot be faith But further Orig. in Job goes * Omnia quae faciant homines c. Orig. All things which men doe whether in keeping their virginity or in abstinence or in the chastnes of their bodies or in the mortifying of the flesh or in the distributing of their goods they are all to no purpose and to their losse if they do them not of faith And I infer they cannot be of faith where there is not care and conscience of religion In vaine then shall it be unto them for it shall bring them no fruit no profit For of whom should they have their reward Shall they receive from him whom they have not sought Whom they have not knowne Whom they have not believed Verily they shall not receive from him any reward but judgement and anger and condemnation This may admonish every one to adde to their righteousnesse Vse 3 religion to lay hold of that and not to withdraw their hand from this or rather to make their works of righteousnesse to be righteousnesse by labouring to be teligious to have knowledge and faith to have the fear of God and to serve him without which the other is nothing nothing profitable to the doer for as preaching being so excellent a worke as the power of God to salvation to the hearers profits not the preacher if he be unjust unchast impious but it shall be with him as with those who built Noahs Arke so as he that gives almes if he be without knowledge religion and faith he may profit the receiver not himselfe For if the Apostles rule be good Jam. 2.26 faith without works is dead then why not much more saith Chrysost are works without faith which works must needs be where there is not religion and so he shall not have his reward that doth them but they will be unprofitable to him for as he that builds without a foundation loseth his worke and hath only his labour travaile and griefe so is he that would build up works of righteousnesse without faith and religion Orig. And as he saith all the whole year that Noah was preserved in the Arke and the Sun shewed not her selfe nor sent her beames upon the earth the earth gave no fruit for without the Sun it can bring forth no fruit So unlesse the truth of God shine in the hearts of men they can bring forth no fruit of good works or righteousnesse Then must every one endeavour that is just upright chast c. not to rest there but labour to be religious and have knowledge and faith which must sanctifie and make acceptable and so profitable to the other as the Temple the gold and the Altar the offering lest they be to us as Ciprian ser dezelo livore or rather as the spirit of God saith Rom. 14.23 Sin because not of faith THE FOVRTH CHAPTER OF THE PROPHET MALACHY FOR behold the day commeth that shall burne as an oven and all the proud yea and all that doe wickedly shall be stubble and the day that commeth shall burne them up saith the Lord of hostes and shall leave them neither root nor branch 2 But unto you that feare my Name shall the sunne of righteousnesse arise and health shall be under his wings and ye shall goe forth and grow up as fat calves 3 And ye shall tread downe the wicked for they shall be dust under the soles of your feete in the day that I shall doe this saith the Lord of hosts 4 Remember the Law of Moses my servant which I commanded unto him in Horeb in all Israel with the slatutes and judgements 5 Behold I will send you Elijah the Prophet before the comming of the great and fearefull day of the Lord. 6 And he shall turn the heart of the fathers to the children and the heart of the children to their fathers lest I come and smite the earth with cursing VERSE I. For behold the day commeth that shall burne as an oven and all the proud yea and all that doe wickedly shall be stubble and the day that commeth shall burne them up saith the Lord of hosts and shall leave them neither root nor branch FOR behold the day commeth that shall burne as an even In this fourth Chapter we may observe two principall parts First some predictions which are three First a prophesie of judgement to the wicked Verse 1. Secondly of mercy and goodnesse to the godly Verse 2.3 Thirdly of Iohn Baptist his comming and the fruit of it to the Church Verse 5.6 Secondly aprecept or exhortation to reade and remember the Law Verse 4. Now in this first verse is a prediction or denunciation of judgement even an utter destruction to the wicked by it opposing their former blasphemy who had affirmed that God did not respect the things that were done and had altogether cast off the duty and office of a Judge And in this the first word Behold shews the certainty of it poynting at it as if it were already come and present The judgement God threatens against the wicked he certainly performes Doctrine Vide Cap. 1.5 Doct. 1. The day commeth Many thinke this is to be understood of the day of the second comming of Christ when the wicked shall have their full doome and true it is till then this and the like are not fully accomplished the wicked have not their full portion yet doth God so execute his judgements here as may be to manifest his justice and to confirme the faith of his shewing by some few examples and small things that he doth that one day he will fully judge the wicked Therefore their opinion is the more probable and reasonable who think this was meant of the first comming of Christ that upon their ingratefull rejecting of mercy wheras they boasted of a redeemer and looked for a great day The day indeed should come but not such a day as they imagined but such as should consume them like that day Amos 5.20 a day of darkenes and not light And therfore he addeth it shall burne as an Oven
upon thee the garment taken for the man Thou shalt be openly punished Thus he from others for the Vulg. of which translation Steph. Menochius a latter Iesuite gives another sense The Iewes excuse themselves Why doe you reprehend us seeing the law permits us to put away our Wives If thou hate her put her away But which he makes the Prophets answer your iniquity shall thereby so abound and swell that no garment will be able to cover it The Law permitting it onely for the hardnesse of your hearts but not freeing you from sinne if rashly and without cause you put them away A better sense then that of A lapide but for which he is faine to take his farewell of the authorized Vulgar translation If thou put her away give her some part of thy garments to cover her something to live on So Luther occasionally expounds it which sense Osiander followes give her a good dowry that if she be put away shee may marry another Let him put her away for while hee keepes her he covers his injury and makes as if he loved her so the Geneva and Winkleman Much like to the Chalde paraphrase Put her away and cover not thy hatred with a pretense that thou lovest her and keepest her and makest her a drudge Vatablus is singular as if their fault were that they put away their Wives and covered their iniquity under a garment that is discovered not their fault as the Law required they should and so wanting a formall bill of divorce they were made uncapable of a second marriage and so they added to the injury Some take it for an Ironic Put her away doe so but thy sinne shall overtake thee All these mistake the sense I rest in that above The Lord hates needlesse divorces and the more when the Law is pretended for one that is the man that doth this doth but daube and colour and cloake his sin His iniquity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 oppression or injury or wrong So Genes 16.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 My wrong be upon thee 2. The dehortation is againe repeated Therefore take heed to your spirit that yee deale not treacherously of which before And thus much of the 4th Contestation V. The fifth Contestation Fiftly hee contests with them for their contumelie and blasphemy against God and his providence as if God were not just or tooke no notice of the affaires of men verse 17. to ver 7. of cap. 3. where observe 1. Their blasphemy ver 17. 2. The answer that is made unto it chap. 3. verse 12 3 4 5 6. First Vers 17 their blasphemy and unworthy contumelies against God verse 17. Yee have wearied the Lord with your words yet yee say wherein have wee wearied him When yee say every one that doth evill is good in the sight of the Lord and hee delighteth in him or Where is the God of Iudgment you have added this sinne to the rest that by your Atheisticall conceits and blasphemous speeches ye have wearied and vexed me saith the Lord in that you call in question my being and my justice and my providence Yee have wearied the Lord Lxx provoked Chald. Molested or cumbred The Tigur and Arias wearied and toyled Vatabl. Troubled Wee have the same word Esay 43.24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thou hast wearied me with thine iniquities Which is further set out in the words next before Thou hast made mee to serve with thy sins So here yee have wearied and toyld mee that I am weary I cannot beare your words Yee say he that doth evill is good in the sight of the Lord that is accepted and approved of him An usuall phrase among the Hebrews which is cleare by the next And he delighteth in him An high accusation of God for injustice that hee should justifie the wicked nay more take pleasure in him Or where c. Or is either a new accusation of God yee say thus he delights in the wicked or yee say thus where is the God c. Or else it is their proofe that they bring of their former accusation of Gods Justice he delights in the wicked or else where is the God of judgement or as the French Otherwise where is the God of judgment If hee did not delight in him he would punish him Where is the God of judgment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of that judgment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Demonstrative hath great Emphasis where is the God of that 1 of that great exact free just precise impartiall judgment which respects neither persons nor gifts but onely justice as his Character is usually given by the Prophets where is he Lxx the God of righteousnesse Chald. The God who doth judgment This was their sin their blasphemy against God We have in the next Chapter Secondly the answer that is made unto their blasphemy Vers 1 Chap. 3. ver 1. to the 7th Yee say where is the God of judgemēt It shal appeare sayth the Lord that I am the God of judgment when the Messiah shall come into the World as he shall come shortly who shall dispense mercy and comfort to the godly but judgment and evill to evillmen S. Hierom also and Theodoret allow of this context and resolution Wee have this layd downe in a prophecy of Christ and his Fore-runner the comming of them both 1. The comming of the Fore-runner the Baptist 2. The comming of the Messia I. The cōming of the Fore-runner Part of the 1. ver where 1. His comming 2. His worke 1. His comming Behold I will send my Messenger Behold to the question which it appeares by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the demonstrative they would have to bee taken notice of they receive an answer which carries with it a note of Pregnancy used by the Prophets concerning things eminent and certaine to make men attent I will send It may bee taken to bee the speach of Christ himselfe according to that of Luc. 1.76 Where Iohn Baptist is called his Prophet or the speech of God as it is Mat. 11 10. My messenger or Angel for so it is in the He. of which see before Ch. 1.1 Ch. 2.7 See also Dan. Heinsius his Exercit. Sacrae lib. 5. Cap. 4. in Act. 7.53 in which place and Gal. 3.19 and Heb. 2.2 by Angels hee understands the Prophets as hee doth also 1 Tim. 3.16 exercit lib. 14. cap. 3. To me I confesse a new exposition of those places having sometime heretofore In a briefe comment on some part to the Galatians given an other interpretation which the Reader if hee please may there see though I have there also noted that the exposition which is now offered by that most learned Heinsius was anciently St. Ambros his If any shall vouchsafe to see my reasons for interpreting the word Angels properly in that place of Gal. 3.19 Let him please also to correct an error in the same page 163. where whether it were through the mistake of the Printer or the transcriber of my Copy
inveterate trade of sinning From mine Ordinances Vulg. A legitimis meis that is as they tell us who being bound to receive the vulgar Latine as Authentick doe study to make the best sense of it a legibus meis You are gon from my lawes The Tigur My Statutes Pagn My institutes The things which I have described drawne out constituted of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. That they would not yet bee convinced which is urged I. By a declaration of Gods Grace in exhorting them and encouraging them to Repentance 1. Exhorting them Returne unto me saith the Lord that is by Repentance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 among many other uses that it is put unto signifies to repent as Deut. 30.2 1 Kings 8.33.35 Lam. 3.40 Hos 7.16 and in many Texts God though he might consume them offers them mercy and shewes them a meanes to prevent his wrath II. Encouraging them And I will returne unto you saith the Lord that is I will shew you favour This is another use and signification of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when it is applyed unto God So Zach. 1.3 2. By their stiffenesse and difficulty to be convinced But yee say wherein shall we returne As if they were righteous and needed no repentance This is the nature of man to make contradiction to Gods grace and resistance to the motions of Gods Spirit either convincing the world of sinne or perswading to obedience And this people did alwayes so as Saint Stephen testifies of them Act. 7.51 and the Apostle Rom. 10.21 To Israel he saith all day long I have stretched forth my hands 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unto the disobedient or unperswadeable and againsaying people So the translation of the Septuagint whom Saint Paul followed did with severall words expresse that which in the Hebrew text Esa 65.2 is delivered in one A rebellious people But thus much of the sixth Contestation VII The seventh Contestation Seventhly hee contests with them for their Sacriledge vers 8 9 10 11 12. both I. Arguing against their sinne vers 8. and 2. Expostulating with them that it were better for them yea even in their outward estates to deale righteously with God vers 9 10 11 12. I. He argues against their sinne vers Verse 8 8. 1. From a ground of equitie 2. By an application of their fact unto the ground 1. He argues from a generall ground of right and equitie Will a man rob God Yet ye have robbed mee Will fraile weake man Adam doe violence unto or defraud Elohim the great and mighty God Yet you have done so Robbe The French Pillage Geneva Spoile will a man spoile God So also Pagn and Vatab. Crucifie wound or pierce so the Vulgar and the Tigurine and that is indeed the first signification of the originall word So the Translator of the New Test into the Syriack useth the word Coloss 2.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And nayled or pierced it unto his Crosse But by a Metaphor it signifies to Oppresse or To rob or To spoile as Prov. 22.53 The Lxx. here taking 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by a Metathesis for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is To supplant or Deceive reade Will a man supplant his God But in the sense there is an agreement Will a man or is it fit that a man should grieve defraud pierce or spoile his God as you doe who rob his Priests and Ministers of their maintenance whereby you undermine and overthrow even Religion it selfe and Gods worship When the portions of the Levites were not given them the Levites and Singers that did the worke of Gods house fled every one to his field and so Gods work that is his worship was left undone as Nehemiah observed Neh. 13.10 The truth is When the Ministers of God are kept under the burden of Poverty The Lords work is either not done or done deceitfully when the Priests are forced to comply with their humors from whom they expect their maintenance and so serve not God but them flattering them that feed them as it is Micah 3.5 They bite with their teeth and cry peace which I interpret according to the Chalde Paraphrase He that maketh them a feast of flesh to him they preach peace But hee that putteth not into their mouths they even prepare war against him And so they make the people to erre And it cannot bee otherwise whiles as it is in the eleventh verse of that chapter The Priests teach for hire and the Prophets divine for money that is are faine to maintaine themselves with sordid and unworthy flatteries To prevent which it was a most pious and commendable care in King Hezekiah which is recorded 2. Chron. 31.4 He commanded the people that dwelt in Ierusalem to give the portion of the Priests and Levites that they might attend upon the Law of the Lord so the Vulg. That they might confirme themselves in executing the Law of the Lord. So Tremel but as we reade that they might be encouraged in the Law of the Lord. Dependancie and expectation of arbitrary maintenance is a great Alay to the purer temper and spirit and zeale that ought to be in them that serve at the Lords Altar in whom according to the usuall Apothegme of a reverend Divine of ours Innocencie and Independencie breeds the best courage And by such is God best served The scandals that are given by Ministers doe much diminish the reputation of Religion and undermine it but Scandalous livings are a great cause of Scandalous Ministers Which was the observation of a learned Gentleman and worthy member of the House of Commons in the Parliament Anno 1628. who also promised that he would never give over solliciting the cure and remedie of this while Parliaments and he should live together And well may he or some other effectually pursue it especially having so much encouragement in it by the pietie and tendernesse of our present Religious and most gracious Soveraigne who according to the example of his Royall Father for planting a setled competencie for the Churches throughout Scotland hath shewed so much readinesse and gracious disposition this way that as he deserves it I doubt not but such as shall deliver his reigne hereafter to posterity will among his other vertues give him this Title The Patron and Father of his poore and injuried Clergie and will mention that great Councellour of his in Ecclesiasticall matters with his due honour for promoving it in him with so much zeale to the welfare of this Church But of this obitèr and Currente calame 2. He argues against their sin by an application of their fact unto that ground of generall right Yet yee have robbed mee But yee say Wherein have we robbed thee In Tythes and in Offerings They deny the Assumption and he proves it That they robbed him because they dealt deceitfully about the portion of his Priests The Tythes he had of old assigned unto them There were three sorts of Tythes The first were given to the