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A15408 Hexapla in Genesin & Exodum: that is, a sixfold commentary upon the two first bookes of Moses, being Genesis and Exodus Wherein these translations are compared together: 1. The Chalde. 2. The Septuagint. 3. The vulgar Latine. 4. Pagnine. 5. Montanus. 6. Iunius. 7. Vatablus. 8. The great English Bible. 9. The Geneva edition. And 10. The Hebrew originall. Together with a sixfold vse of every chapter, shewing 1. The method or argument: 2. The divers readings: 3. The explanation of difficult questions and doubtfull places: 4. The places of doctrine: 5. Places of confutation: 6. Morall observations. In which worke, about three thousand theologicall questions are discussed: above forty authors old and new abridged: and together comprised whatsoever worthy of note, either Mercerus out of the Rabbines, Pererius out of the fathers, or Marloran out of the new writers, have in their learned commentaries collected. By Andrew Willet, minister of the gospell of Iesus Christ. Willet, Andrew, 1562-1621.; Willet, Andrew, 1562-1621. Hexapla in Genesin. aut; Willet, Andrew, 1562-1621. Hexapla in Exodum. aut 1633 (1633) STC 25685; ESTC S114193 2,366,144 1,184

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the patterne of these worthy examples we doubt not but that our Christian Soveraigne is resolved to take away all mixture of religion not to admit any toleration of contrary worship but with Iosias to expell all Idolatrous Chemarims and Masse-Priests with Asa to put all such from places of government and with Zerubbabel to reject their service and imployment either in Church or common wealth And we assuredly trust that the presence of Gods Arke among us shall cause that Dagon of Rome to lose both his hands and head for ever in this our famous and thrice renowned Countrey of Britaine CHAP. XVIII 1. The Method THis Chapter hath two parts 〈◊〉 The entertainment of the Angells in Abrahams tent and such things as there were done to vers 17. ● The purpose of God concerning the destruction of Sodome with Abrahams deprecation for the same to the end of the Chapter In the first part 1. There is the apparition of the Angels both in what place and at what time vers 1. and in what manner vers 2. 2. Their entertainment offered by Abraham vers 3 4. accepted by the Angels vers 5. performed by Abraham ver 6 7 8. 3. The promise is renewed concerning Abraham and Saraes sonne vers 10. and Sara for her infirmity reproved both for her laughter 12 13 14. and for her deniall vers 15. In the second part 1. The Lord sheweth a reason why he will impart his counsell to Abraham concerning the overthrow of Sodome vers 18 19. 2. The Lord propoundeth his resolution with the cause thereof vers 20 21. 3. Abraham intreateth where first is set downe the ground of his prayers the justice of God 23 25. then his particular request six times repeated from fifty persons to bee found in Sodome to ten The divers readings v. 1. At the Oake of Mamre S. Plaine or valley of Mamre caet colon signifieth both a Plaine and an Oake it is most like it was a Plaine set with Oakes v. 2. He worshipped in or upon the ground S.C.H. bowed himselfe toward the ground T.P.B.G. shachah to bow so is it taken Isa. 15.23 bow downe that we may goe over v. 4. Let your feet be washed H. let them wash your feet S. wash your feet caet sic etiam hebr v. 5. You shall cat S. comfort or strengthen your heart caet v. 8. He ministred unto them C. stood by them caet v. 10. I will come to thee according to this time at the very houre S. in this time vita comite life being present H. or wherein ye shall be alive C. according to the time of life B.G.P. heb when this time shall flourish or revive againe T. v. 12. It was not so with me till now S. shall I have youth C. shall I have lust caet heb gnadan to take pleasure v. 15. Sarah deniall caet she lying denied T. cacash signifieth both v. 21. I will appeare and judge C. I will goe downe and see I will make an end of them if they repent not if they repent I will not revenge them Ch. the others have not these words v. 22. Abraham stood in prayer before God Ch. stood yet before God caet v. 28. Wilt thou destroy for forty five the whole City S. caet for five The Explanation of doubts QVEST. I. Of the vision and apparition made to Abraham in Mamre Vers. 1. AGaine the Lord appeared c. 1. This was the sixth apparition of God to Abraham taking those two in the fifteenth Chapter for one which herein is preferred before the rest because this apparition is made in an humane shape which is not expressed in the rest and this is the third vision of this kinde as Cajetane noteth when the Lord shewed himselfe in some visible forme 1. to Adam in Paradise 2. to Agar in the wildernesse Gen. 16.13 3. to Abraham in this place 2. This apparition was not long after the other in the former Chapter for in both after a yeare a sonne is promised to Abraham Rupertus and the promise is renewed for Sarahs cause Calvin 3. It was now in the heat of the day that is noone-tide Septuag the usuall time of rest and repast Iun. when Abraham sate at his doore to take shade and to espie what travellers passed by to give them entertainment Muscul. QVEST. II. Who the three Angels were that appeared to Abraham Vers. 2. THree men stood by him 1. They were not three men but so appeared Iun. They stood not hard by him for he needed not then have gone to meet them but they stood before him or over against him for so the word gnal signifieth Muscul. 2. Abraham at the first did not know them to be Angels for he received them unawares Heb. 13.1 yet there appeared some extraordinary excellencie in them in that Abraham useth them so reverently for otherwise to every common passenger hee would not have given such reverence Calvin 3. Neither can it bee certainly affirmed that these three men were the three Angels Michael Gabriel Raphael as some of the Hebrewes the first the messenger to Abraham the other appointed for the destruction of Sodome and Raphael for Lots deliverance for both the Angels that went toward Sodome were in equall commission to destroy the City chap. 19.13 The Lord hath sent us to destroy it and to deliver Lot vers 16. they caught Lot and his wife by the hand c. Abraham doth reverence to one above the rest calling him Lord v. 3. who also is called Jehovah v. 17. their opinion may safely bee received that thinke this eminent person with whom Abraham talked to be Christ. But it is a collection without ground by the apparition of these three Angels to conclude the Trinitie as Pererius seemeth to insinuate Calvin QVEST. 3. Why Abraham speaketh to one of the 3. Angels in chiefe Vers. 3. LOrd if I have found favour c. Abraham seeth three men but speaketh as to one 1. whereby neither a three fold knowledge of God is shadowed forth of his nature by his benefits by his judgements as Philo 2. nor yet hereby is signified the mysterie of the Trinitie that one God in three persons is to be worshipped as Rupertus 3. Neither did Abraham speake unto every one of them particularly as Ramban 4. But Abraham saluteth the third person as more excellent either for the dignity of his person or for some respect which the other two had unto him Chrysost. but for such services as equally belonged to them all hee speaketh to them all in generall as the washing of their feet 5. as they were three persons so he offreth unto them three services to wash their feet to rest them under the tree to comfort their hearts with bread Perer. QVEST. IV. Of the Hebrew measure called a Seime Vers. 6. THree measures of fine meale c. The word is Seime which is the same in English a seime 1. which neither containeth so much as Epiphanius
against Levi but not against Christ. QVEST. XX. Of the lifting up of the hand how diversly it is taken in Scripture Vers. 22. I Have lift up my hand c. The learned have observed divers significations of this phrase in Scripture 1. It betokeneth prayer generally 1 Tim. 2.8 Saint Paul would have men lift up pure hands c. 2. It signifieth speciall suit and request for helpe Lament 2.19 Lift up thy hands for the lives of the young children 3. It is a gesture expressing thankfulnesse Nehem. 8.6 Ezra praised the Lord c. and the people lift up their hands c. and worshipped 4. It is used when any thing is done with a willing mind and glad heart Psa. 119. I have lift up my hand to the commandements which I have loved 5. As also it is a token and signe of calling Isay 49.22 I have l●ft and stretched my hands to the Gentiles 6. It betokeneth helpe and deliverance Ezech. 20. 5. I lift up my hand upon the seed of Iacob and was knowne unto them in the land of Egypt 7. To lift up the hand is to rise against one to vex and oppresse him Iob. 31.22 If I have lift up my hand against the fatherlesse c. Perer. 8. They used also to lift up their hands in giving of voyces which the Greekes call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Calvin 9. It was a gesture used in taking of an oath and therefore the Lord saith Num. 14.30 They shall not come into the land ever the which I lift up my hand to make them dwell in it This signification it hath here for Abraham before he went to battell had vowed unto God in his prayer as the Chalde interpret that if God would deliver the enemies into his hand he would not seeke to make himselfe rich thereby but give the praise to God QVEST. XXI Wherefore Abraham tooke an oath ABraham therefore tooke an oath swearing by the true God to professe his faith and religion that he onely worshipped the true God Perer. 2. That he might take occasion hereby to reprove the superstitious use of the King of Sodome in swearing by their Idols and instruct him concerning the worship of the true God Calvin 3. As also that they might know that Abraham did not this suddenly or of vaine-glory but of a religious minde having bound himselfe by an oath Muscul. 4. That by this oath as with a shield Abraham might be preserved from the baits of covetousnesse wherewith the King of Sodome might have tempted him if he had not beene firme Calvin QVEST. XXII Why Abraham refuseth to take ought of the King of Sodome Vers. 23. I Will not take of all that is thine so much as a threed or a shooe latchet 1. Abraham refuseth not to take of those things which belonged to the foure Kings whom he had conquered which now were his by reason of his just victory but not of any thing which was the Kings of Sodome 2. Which Abraham calleth his not as Ambrose thinketh because the spoyles of the enemie belong to the King for he was not Abrahams King but for that they had beene before appertaining to the King 3. Though Abraham might have challenged them by the right of his victory yet he would not take so much as a threed 1. Least he might have beene thought for his owne lucre to have waged that battell 2. He would doe justice to restore the goods to the first owners 3. That the heathen King should have no advantage to thinke Abraham bound unto him Neither would Abraham that any should have the honour and praise of enriching him but onely God of whose blessing hee onely depended Pererius 4. Abraham refused not the gifts which Pharao bestowed upon him Gen. 12.8.16 but he will take nothing of the King of Sodome the reasons may be yeelded to be these 1. There the King gave of his liberality and Abraham could not refuse without suspition here nothing was given but recovered in battell 2. There the King gave of his owne but these goods belonged to all the Sodomites Mercer 3. By that meanes it pleased God that Abraham should be then enriched but Abraham was now rich enough he needed no such helps 4. Here Abraham might have beene thought if he had taken any thing to himselfe of a covetous minde to have pursued the enemies and so God should not have had the honour of the victorie but here was no such feare 5. The King of Sodome and his people were ordained for a greater destruction and therefore God would not that Abraham should take any thing which was accursed But Pharao received mercy of God thus the case was much different betweene the gifts of the one and the other 6. Abraham excepteth those things which the young men had eaten making no mention of the tithe which he had given before because that was taken not out of the King of Sodomes substance but his owne neither doth he prejudice the other three by his example but that they notwithstanding might take their parts Muscul. 4. Places of doctrine 1. Doct. Of the custome of paying of tithes Vers. 10. GIve him tithe c. We see how ancient this custome of paying tithe to the Priests and Ministers is It was practised before the Law as appeareth here by the example of Abraham and the vow of Iacob Genes 28. yea such was the equity of it that from the Hebrewes the Gentiles borrowed that use the Romans paid tithes of their goods to Hercules Plinie writeth that the Arabians pay tithe of their incense to their God Sabis and that it is not lawfull before that be done to buy or sell. Xenophon also sheweth that they which had gotten the victory did use to pay tithes to their Gods of the spoile of their enemie Perer. 2. Doct. Of the lawfulnesse of an Oath Vers. 21· I Have lift up my hand c. In that Abraham doubted not to take an oath wee see the lawfulnesse thereof that it is not denied unto a Christian to sweare when he is lawfully called thereunto contrary to the phantasticall doctrine of the Anabaptists that simply condemne the use of an oath but Moses saith Thou shalt feare the Lord thy God and sweare by his name Deut. 6.13 Muscul. 3. Doct. God onely the possessor and true owner of the earth Vers. 22. POssessor of heaven and earth c. Philo noteth hereupon that no mortall man is properly possessor or true Lord of the earth But that both the heaven and earth are the Lords possession and we are but tenants at the Lords pleasure as the Lord himselfe saith The land shall not be sold to be cut off for the land is mine and ye are but sojourners and strangers with me Levit. 29.23 Whereupon he enforceth Ius possessionis omnium rerum ad Deum pertinere usum solum ad creaturam that the right of possession of all things belongeth to God the use onely to the creature 5. Places of
land mounting c. Abraham saw not the raine of fire and brimstone but the smoake onely thereof and yet he rose very early so that it seemeth the burning of Sodome was done in a moment for the raine fell not till Lot was entred into Zoar which was about the Sunne rising vers 23. By this we may see how suddenly the world at Christs comming shall be consumed with fire and we changed in a moment in the twinkling of an eye 1 Cor. 15.52 Muscul. 6. Doct. Wherefore unlawfull copulations are often more fruitfull than lawfull Vers. 36. THus were both the daughters of Lot with childe c. We finde in Scripture that many lawfully companying with their husbands as Sara Rebecca Rachel Anna yet hardly conceived and yet divers with one unlawfull copulation were with childe as Thamar with Iuda Bersebe with David Lots daughters with their father which the Lord doth not as more favouring such unlawfull conjunctions but to this end that such secret uncleane works should come to light for their conversion as in Iuda David or confusion Marlor 5. Places of Confutation 1. Confut. Vniversality no sure marke of the Church Vers. 4. ALL the people from all quarters All rhe whole City of Sodome consented in evill onely Lot and his family were free Universality then is but a slender or uncertaine argument of the truth or Church that professeth it It is oftner seene that the greater part is the worse than otherwise The Romanists therefore reason but simply that their religion is the best because the greater part of the world received it for by the same reason the uncleane conversation of Sodome might bee justified against Lot 2. Confut. Against Atheists that beleeve not the transmutation of Lots wi●● Vers. 26. SHe became a pillar of salt Let not prophane persons scoffe at this as though it were one of Ovids Metamorphosis fables There is a great difference betweene Gods actions and Poets fictions he that beleeveth that God made all things of nothing which dayly seeth birds to come forth of egges and living creatures to be ingendred by dead seed and hopeth for the resurrection of the body cannot doubt but that God could turne a womans body into a salty pillar 3. Confut. Monkish and solitary life maketh not more holy Vers. 38. HE dwelt in a cave Even Lot in a solitary cave committed sinne it is not then the place that amendeth mens manners Gregory well saith sic desit spiritus non adjuvat locus If an heart be wanting the place helpeth not Lot sinned in the mountaine Adam fell in Paradise the Angels in heaven It is then but a Popish fantasie that a Monks coule a cloister life an Hermites weed can make a man more holy But it is to be feared that as dtunkennesse and incest were committed even in the cave so the Gloisters and Cells of Popish votaries are not free from the like uncleannesse 6. Places of morall observation 1. Observ. Vnruly people to be gently handled Vers. 7. I Pray you my brethren doe not so wickedly c. Lot sheweth that a furious multitude is to be gently dealt withall and not to be exasperated with sharpe words as here Lot calleth the Sodomites his brethren not in the same profession but in respect of his cohabitation and common condition of life This is S. Pauls rule Instructing them with meeknesse that are contrary minded 2 Tim. 2.25 2. Observ. God delivereth in extremity Vers. 10. THe men put forth their hands and pulled Lot c. The Lord though he deferre his helpe yet will not faile us in the greatest danger when we are brought to a straight As here Lot was delivered from the Sodomites as from raging Lions when he was as under their pawes Calvin In the like pinch the Lord delivered David when Saul had compassed him in 1 Sam. 23.26 3. Observ. Prophane persons make a mocke of Gods judgements Vers. 14. HE seemed to his sons in law as though he had mocked c. Such are the prophane Atheists and worldlings that make but a mocke and scorne of Gods judgements and are no better perswaded of the end of the world by fire than these wretches were of the destruction of Sodome of such S. Peter speaketh That there shall be in the last dayes mockers c. which shall say where is the promise of his comming c. 2 Pet. 3.3 Calvin 4. Observ. We must not deferre our turning to God Vers. 16. AS he prolonged the time By Lots example who delaying the time if God had not beene more mercifull to draw him forth might have perished in the overthrow of Sodome wee are taught how dangerous a thing it is to deferre our calling and to trifle or dally with Gods judgements Therefore the Prophet Amos saith Prepare to meet thy God O Israel Amos 4.12 better to meet and prevent the Lord by repentance than to stay till his judgements overtake us 5. Observ. We must not forsake our calling Vers. 26. HIs wife looked backe This teacheth us that a man should not fall away from his profession and calling whereinto he is once entred as our Saviour saith He that setteth his hand to the plowe and looketh back is not fit for the kingdome of God Luk 9.26 Muscul. 6. Obser. He that wavereth in faith is never setled Vers. 28. NOt so my Lord Lot not following the Lords direction to goe first to the mountaine entreateth for Zoar yet being in Zoar he is not contented to stay there So they which doe not submit themselves to Gods ordinance but are doubtfull in faith are unconstant and wavering and never setled as Saint Iames saith A wavering minded man is unstable in all his wayes 7. Observ. Custome and continuance in sinne dangerous Vers. 35. THey made their father drunke that night also c. We see then what a dangerous thing it is once to give way to the tentation of Satan Lot having beene once drunken already is more apt to fall into it againe so fearefull is a custome and continuance in sinne Our instruction is therefore that we should resist the temptation at the first and not by yeelding to give way for a second assault 〈◊〉 the Apostle saith Be not overcome of evill but overcome evill with goodnesse Rom. 12.21 8. Observ. The sinne of drunkennesse how dangerous FUrther we see how much drunkennesse is to be taken heed of which did prostitute Lot so excellent a man to such beastly uncleannesse Origen well noteth Decepit Lot ebrietas quem Sodoma non decepit uritur ebrius flammis mulierum quem sobriam sulphurea flamma non attigerat drunkennesse deceived Lot whom Sodome could not deceive he burneth with the lust of women being drunken whom while he was sober the flames of brimstone touched not Wherefore let us alwayes remember that saying of the Apostle Be not drunke with wine wherein is excesse but be ye fulfilled with the spirit Eph. 5.15 CHAP. XX. 1. The Method THis Chapter hath
Majestie doe urge and induce another to speake the truth or doe or not doe any thing as Ahab adjured Michaias and charged him in the name of God to speake the truth 2 Chron. 18.15 or else it is used passively when we force another to take an oath as Abraham here maketh his servant to sweare The first kinde of adjuration is used two wayes 1. By way of deprecation and intreaty by the inferiour to the superiour as the devils doe impudently adjure Christ not to torment them Matth. 5.7 but it was by way of intreaty vers 10. 2. It is used by way of authority and command 1. Thus the Prince adjureth his subjects as Saul did the people that they should eat nothing till night 1 Sam. 14.24 2. Thus the Apostles charged and commanded the spirits to come out of men as Paul did Act. 16.18 By this kinde of adjuration which is with power and authority spirits may be adjured but by the other which is by intreaty and supplication to conjure them which is nothing else but to intreat them for their helpe as Magicians and sorcerers doe it is a great impiety and plaine idolatry 3. Yea by a power and authority given from God thus the senslesse creatures may be adjured and commanded as Iosua by the power of God commanded the Sunne to stand still and it obeyed Perer. The other kinde of adjuring which is by ministring an oath is to be used onely in grave and weighty causes either divine as Nehemiah tooke an oath of the people that they should not give their daughters in marriage to the heathen Nehem. 13.25 or in humane affaires 1. For the deciding of controversies and ending of strife Heb. 6.16 2. For the binding of one to the obedient or faithfull performance of his service As Abraham here taketh an oath of his servant so officers may lawfully be sworne for the upright execution of their office and subjects to be loyall and true to their Prince 3. For the establishing of a league or covenant as an oath was betweene Iacob and Laban Gen. 32.53 4. For the clearing of a suspition as the woman suspected of adultery was charged with an oath by the Priest Numb 5.21 5. For the satisfaction of our neighbour in a matter of trust Exod. 22.11 so by the law the debtor may be lawfully urged with an oath by his creditor 6. For the security of a mans life one may sweare to another as the Egyptian servant to the Amalekite required an oath of David for the safety of his life and estate Sweare unto me by God that thou wilt neither kill me nor deliver me into the hands of my master c. 1 Sam. 30.15 QUEST VI. Why Abraham refuseth to take a wife from the daughters of Canaan Vers. 3. THou shalt not take to my sonne of the daughters of Canaan c. The reasons why Abraham would not have his sonne Isaack be linked in mariage with the Canaanites are these 1. Because they came of cursed Cham Generis author maledictionis haereditatem transmisit in suos The author of their stocke for not honouring his father did bring a curse as an inheritance upon his posterity Ambr. lib de Abrah cap. 9. 2. Because the Canaanites were Idolaters and of corrupt manners Primum in conjugio religio quaratur Religion must first be sought in mariage Ambr. Againe Salomon was corrupted and perverted from his faith by his idolatrous wives for although Nachors stocke were not pure in religion having a smattering of imagery and idolatrous worship as Laban sought for his gods that were stolen from him Gen. 31.30 yet they had some knowledge and understanding of God as appeareth in this chapter vers 50. This thing is proceeded of the Lord c. And beside their manners were honest and commendable not like to the Canaanites as is evident by Rebecca her virginity and their humanity in entertaining of strangers Perer. 3. Another reason hereof was for that the Lord promised the Countrey to Abrahams posterity and to expell the Canaanites therefore Abraham as he refused to bury his dead among them so much lesse would mingle his seed in mariage with them Mercer QUEST VII Why Abraham sendeth not Isaack to chuse his owne wife Vers. 4. THou shalt goe 1. Though Abraham send his servant about this businesse of mariage yet it was not without Isaacks consent who knowing this servant to be the minister of his father will yeeldeth himselfe to his fathers choice 2. Isaack is not sent not to make a way unto a mystery as Rupertus thinketh to shadow forth Christ who not by himselfe went but by his Apostles sent to the Gentiles 3. And though Isaack afterward sent Iacob for the same end to chuse him a wife from his fathers kindred yet that case was not like to this for Isaack had two sonnes Abraham but one and besides Iacob fled from the wrath of his brother to save his life Perer. And further Isaack was but forty yeares old a youth ●n those dayes Iacob was about seventy seven yeares of age and so fitter to chuse for himselfe QUEST VIII In what sense Mesopotamia is called Abrahams Country seeing he was borne in Chaldea Vers. 4. GOe unto my Countrey and kindred This Countrey and place of Abrahams kindred is named to be Aram Naharaim that is Mesopotamia vers 10. where was the City of Nahor which was Charran Gen. 28.10 Now Charran in Mesopotamia is said to be Abrahams Countrey 1. Not that he was borne there as Ramban and Paulus Burgens thinke for the place of Abrahams birth was Ur of the Chaldees Gen. 11.28 2. Neither is it called his Country because as Tostatus thinketh he dwelled there a long time even 60. yeares till the death of his father which is a great errour for Abraham stayed not long in Charran Eucherius thinketh but one yeare Pererius not so much Mercerus some two years Iunius five yeares howsoever the time was not long for Abraham no doubt being called to goe into Canaan would make no long aboad by the way nor yet deferre to obey Gods commandement So then neither Pererius thinketh right that Terah lived 60. yeares in Charran after Abrahams departure for Abraham came not into Canaan till after his fathers death Act. 7.4 And Tostatus also is deceived that Abraham with Terah lived together 60. yeares in Charran for seeing Abraham was but 75. yeares old when he departed from Charran if he staied there 60. then was hee but 15 yeare old when he came first to Charran which cannot be for he was then married Gen. 11.30 But both these errors are builded upon a false ground that Abraham was the eldest sonne of Torah and borne in his 70. yeare whereas the truth is hee was the youngest and borne in the 130. yeare of his fathers age as hath beene before shewed in the questions upon the 11. chapter 3. Wherefore the solution is this that Abraham calleth all the region beyond
wife 1 Cor. 7.12 which sheweth that the marriage of such is sound and good and not against the law of nature though it be not safe nor convenient 4. Confut. Antiquity no good rule for religion Vers. 53. THe God of Abraham the God of Nahor the God of their father c. Laban pretendeth antiquity for his God whom his father and grand-father worshipped yea and Abraham also who at the beginning before his calling was given to the same superstitious worship But Iacob sweareth by the feare of his father Isaack hee riseth up no higher neither to grandfather nor grandfathers father and yet he doubteth not but that he worshipped God aright wherefore antiquity is no good rule for religion neither is it a warrant for us to be of the same religion which our fathers and grandfathers were of before us Calvin 6. Morall Observations 1. Observ. Afflictions make us thinke of our heavenly Canaan Vers. 1. NOw he heard the words of Labans sonnes c. Iacob if hee had not perceived some discontentment in Laban and his sonnes against him would not so soone have bethought himselfe of his returning into Canaan these crosses therefore and domesticall wrongs doe awake him and rouse him up and bring Canaan to his remembrance In like manner the Lord useth by afflictions and troubles to awake his servants that otherwise would be drowned in the pleasures of this life and so prepare them for their heavenly Canaan Calvin As the Prophet David saith before I was afflicted I wont astray Psal. 119.67 2. Observ. The wicked have no power to hurt the servants of God Vers. 7. GOd suffered him not to hurt mee The wicked may band themselves and bend their strength against the servants of Christ but they shall have no more power to hurt them or to prevaile against them than shall be to Gods glory and his servants good Calvin As our Saviour saith My father is greater than all and none is able to take them out of my fathers hands Ioh. 10.29 3. Observ. The Lord delivereth in the time of extremity Vers. 24. GOd came to Laban the Aramite in a dreame c. Laban was now come to mount Gilead where Iacob was with a malicious purpose toward him but the Lord stayeth him being now ready to have done him some mischiefe thus the Lord sheweth his power in the deliverance of his children even in the time of greatest extremity Mercer Thus God turned Esaus heart comming with a band of men against Iacob Gen. 33. thus God delivered David from Saul in the wildernesse of Maon when Saul with his men had almost compassed him in 1 Sam. 24.26 4. Observ. A good conscience a bulwarke against slanderous reports Vers. 30. WHy hast thou stollen my gods this is the portion of the righteous in this world to be slandered and evill reported of as Iacob here is made a theefe thus we must be tried by honour dishonour by evill report and good report as deceivers and yet true as the Apostle saith 2 Cor. 6.8 but a good conscience is a sufficient bulwarke against all such assaults of slanderous tongues as Saint Paul saith As touching me I passe very little to be judged of you or of mans judgement nor I judge not my selfe I know nothing by my selfe 1 Cor. 4.2 5. Observ. Not to be forward to undertake for others honesty Vers. 32. WIth whom thou findest thy gods let him not live Iacob was too confident and presumed too much of the innocency of his servants and the rest of his family in this case which teacheth us that we ought not to be too ready to answer and undertake for the honesty and innocency of others unlesse we be of a sure ground lest it afterward turne to our rebuke Calvin As the wise man saith He that praiseth his friend with a loud voyce rising early in the morning it shall bee counted to him as a curse Prou. 27.14 CHAP. XXXII 1. The Argument or Contents THis Chapter consisteth of two principall parts First Iacobs feare of his brother Esau is expressed vers 7. with the occasion thereof the message sent to his brother and the returne thereof which was full of suspition vers 3. to vers 6. Secondly is shewed how Iacob was comforted against this feare which comfort was of two sorts humane divine Humane either religious by faithfull prayer which consisteth on Iacobs behalfe of the confession of his unworthinesse vers 9 10. on Gods behalfe of the certainty of his promise made to Iacob to vers 13. or politike Iacob divideth his company into two parts vers 7. he sendeth presents to appease his brothers wrath vers 14. to vers 22. The divine comfort was by the vision of Angels vers 1 2. by wrestling and prevailing with an Angell where these things are declared 1. Iacobs wrestling and prevailing vers 24.25 2. His infirmity of halting upon the same vers 26. 3. The blessing of Iacob with the change of his name to vers 30. 4. The custome of the Israelites upon this accident of Iacobs halting vers 32. 2. The divers readings v. 1. looking backe he saw the tents of God pitched S. the rest have not this clause v. 2. he called the name of the place the Lords tents or hosts S. Mahanaim caet v. 10. let it suffice me by all thy righteousnesse and truth S. my merits are lesse than all thy mercies C. I am lesse or unworthy of all thy mercies P.H.B.G. impar unlike or not answerable T. chatan little I came alone over this Iordan C. with my staffe caet v. 25. he touched the breadth of his thigh S. the palme or inward part of the thigh C. the hollow of the thigh G. the hucklebone acetabulum B.T.H. caph the hollow or bowing the sinew of the thigh H. v. 25. the sinew of his thigh withered H. the bread of his thigh withered S. the hollow was loosed G. loosed out of joynt B. moved out of his place C. P. did hang. T. jachang signifieth both to hang and to move v. 30. he called the place the face of God S. peniel caet I have seene an Angell of God face to face C. I have seene God face to face caet v. 32. the sinew that withered H.S.C. shrank B.G.P. the borrowed sinew of the thigh T. nashah signifieth to lend and to remove the hucklebone borroweth certaine sinewes of the hollow bone that it turneth within 3. The explanation of doubtfull places QUEST I. Whether this vision of Angels were sensible or spirituall Vers. 1. THe Angels of God met him 1. This is the third vision that Iacob had the first was of the ladder and the Angels ascending and descending upon it as he went into Mesopotamia the other of the particoloured rams leaping upon the ewes while hee was in Mesopotamia the third of the Angels now at his returning home 2. But this apparition of the Angels was not by a spirituall vision and in dreame as Cajetan and Pererius but it
we should contemne all things in respect of him and refuse no labour nor spare cost to gaine Christ as S. Paul counted all things dung to win Christ Philip. 3.8 5. Mor. Religion must not be professed for gaine but for Religions sake Vers. 23. SHall not their flocks and substance be ours They accept of circumcision not of any love to the worship of God but of a covetous mind for their owne profit for the which cause God was angry with them It is therefore a dangerous thing to dally with God and to make religion a cloake for our covetous and carnall affections S. Paul noteth some that thinke gaine to be godlinesse 1. Tim. 6.5 such are they which professe the Gospel not for conscience but for gaine and advantage Mercer CHAP. XXXV 1. The Contents IN this chapter first are declared such things as befell Iacob to vers 23. then mention is made of his sons their names and number and of the buriall of his father vers 23. to the end The things which concerne Iacob specially are set forth by the places where they were done 1. In Sechem God appeareth to Iacob and biddeth him goe to Bethel vers 1. then Iacob reformeth his house and hideth their strange gods under an oake vers 2. to 5. then he taketh his journey prosperously 2. In Bethel Deborah dieth and is buried under an oake vers 7.8 And there God appeareth to him againe and confirmeth the promise made where Iacob builded an altar for a memoriall vers 9. to vers 16. 3. Neere unto Ephrah Rachel dieth in travaile Benjamin is borne Iacob setteth up a pillar to vers 20. 4. In Migdal●eder Ruben lay with Bilha vers 21.22 2. The divers readings v. 2. Iacob his whole house being called together said H. Iacob said to his house and all that were with him caeter v. 3. His word was my helpe in the way which I walked C. he was with me in the war c. caeter v. 4. They gave Iacob the Idols of the people C. strange gods caet the gods of strange people ● for strange nechar is put in the singular number and so cannot be the substantive to gods cel●be which is in the plurall under a terebinth H. S. under an oake caeter ●elab signifieth both and he lost them to this day and Israel went from Sechem S. v. 5. they durst not follow after them going away H. they did not follow the sonnes of Iacob caeter v. 8. she was buried in the plain● of the valley Ch. under an oake caeter and he called the name of it the oake of mourning H.S.B. the valley of mourning C. Allon Bac●t● caeter alun an oake ●elon a plaine v. 11. I am thy God S. I am God almighty caeter shadai heb v. 13. and he went away from him H. and the glory of God ascended in that place where he spake with him Ch. and God ascended from him in that place where he spake with him caeter v. 15. he called the name of the place Bethel H. Iacob called the name of the place where God spake with him Bethel caeter v. 16. Iacob pitched his tent beyond the tower of Hader S. this is transposed out of the 21. vers and inserted here which clause the rest have not v. 16. He came in the spring to the ground which leadeth to Ephrata H. when he came neare to Cibrath to come to Ephrata S. there was a fields breadth or space of ground to come to Ephrata C. T. B. about halfe a daies journey G. about a mile P. he Cibrath of Barah to eat which signifieth a space of ground which may be gone before the time of the first eating or baiting v. 21. He pitched his tents beyond the tower of the flocke H.C. the tower of Eder caet Migdal Eder G. v. 22. Israel heard it and it seemed evil in his sight S. and Israel heard it caet v. 27. to Mamre a citie of the field S. kiriah Arbe B. a citie of 〈◊〉 caeter 3. The explanation of doubtfull questions QUEST I. How the Lord spake to Iacob and when Vers. 1. THen God said to Iacob 1. Whether God spake to Iacob by dreame or manifest ●ision it is not expressed whether way we take there is no inconvenience but it is most like that God spake to Iacob immediatly as he used to doe to the patriarkes without the ministery of prophets Mercer 1. This was some thirty yeares after God had appeared to Iacob in Bethel for he had beene 20. yeares in Labans house 8. yeares in Sichem 2. yeares in his journey so that he was now about 106 yeares old whereupon Ramban thinketh that God punished Iacob in the ravishing of his daughter because he had forgotten his vow and so long deferred it ex Mercer QUEST II. What strange Gods Iacob putteth away and why so called Vers. 2. PVt away the strange Gods c. 1. These might be those idols which Rachel stole from Laban as also such as were taken in the spoyle of the city of Shechem Mercer 2. Iacob neither winked at the superstition of Rachel of a blind love toward her as Calvin neither need hee to bee instructed by revelation of this misdemeanour of his house as Rupertus Iacob was not such a stranger in his owne house but that it might otherwise come to his notice 3. They are called strange Gods not because they estranged mens minds from God or because they were the idols of devils that were alienissimi estranged in affection from men Perer. or because they were strange that is unknowne Gods that were not able to helpe in the time of adversity ut Hebr●● but because they were the Gods of strange people from Israel and so are the words truly translated the Gods of strange people Iun. QUEST III. Why Iacob did choose to bury not to burne the idols Vers. 4. ANd Iacob hid them under an oake c. 1. This is not to be imputed to Iacobs infirmity that burned not those idols but buried them as Calvin 2. Nor yet did he burie them that the matter thereof might afterwards serve for some profitable use as some thinke that David found them and imployed them toward the building of the temple histor scholastic 3. Nor yet is it like that Iacob melted them into one lumpe and after buried them in a deep pit as Tostatus 4. But it is more like that Iacob for haste of his journey wanted opportunity to consume them with fire Cajetan or hee rather chose in silence to burie them for feare further to offend and exasperate the Canaanites Mercer and hee did it in a secret and unknowne place that his familie should not doat after them againe Iun. QUEST IV. Why mention is made of the death of Deborah Rebeckahs nurse Vers. 8. DEborah Rebeckahs nurse died c. 1. She is called Rebeckahs nurse not because she suckled her but was her bringer up and instructer 2. Deborah was
of the one may be preserved the others poore estate pitied that the people may say unto them as the Egyptians did to Ioseph Thou hast saved our liues for as Amb. well saith they thought it no sale of their right but a safety of their estate Lastly Ioseph most wisely did temper severitie and clemencie justice and mercy together first he dealt roughly with his brethren charged them to be spies imprisoned them caused Simeon to be bound laid theft to their charge but afterward he lovingly embraced them wept over them and was afoster father unto them O tormenta misericordiae cruciat amat O the torments of pittie hee vexeth and yet loveth them So mercie and judgement tempered together make a sweet harmony as David saith I will sing mercie and judgement such a song did Ioseph sing His wrath asswaged which appeared and was not his mercie prevailed which was and appeared not So Magistrates doe well sometime with Ioseph to use threats and speake roughly where is cause but I well hope that Iosephs irefull words and pretended threatnings will end toward his brethren with mercifull deeds and extended embracings We praise God for your Honours mercifull government let them first taste of your mercie that teach you to shew mercie The Egyptian priests under Pharaoh by the hand of Ioseph were maintained in the time of dearth I doubt not but your Honour under our peerelesse Pharaoh will doe your best that the Ministers of the Gospell be stored with maintenance where they have it not much more bee suffred to enjoy that they have Ioseph remitted his brethrens trespasse that had taken away his particoloured coat and although some of our brethren would have certaine ceremonies which may seeme as the coat of this Church removed yet Iosephs brotherly connivence may heale up that breach Toleration and forbearance toward friends and brethren in such matters may well beseeme Ioseph But your Honours constant resolution therein concurring with his excellent Majestie against all toleration of contrary religion or giving countenance to such is most honourable and joyous to all faithfull hearts If they differed from us only in some externall rites and were beside peaceable and profitable men they might have some reason to desire and expect to be tolerated and borne with according to that conclusion of the Toletane Councel In una fide nihil officit Ecclesiae sanctae consuetudo diversa c. In the Church the unity of faith is not hindred by the diversitie of rites But seeing they dissent from us in substantial and fundamentall points of faith and so are enemies to the Church and depend upon a forreinē Prelate for their direction and so are dangerous to the state your Honours resolution is most Christian to shew no connivence in this case much lesse to give protection but to use against such all providence and circumspection for Christ and Belial Dagon and the Arke light and darknesse cannot dwell together God give your Honour courage strength and zeale notwithstanding the malice and envie of idolatrous Romanists to hold on this happie course that with Ioseph though archers shoot at you your bow may abide strong and the hands of your armes be strengthened by the hand of the mightie God of Iacob Now lastly I wish unto your Honour Iosephs portion that according to his name first Iosephs vertues then Iosephs honours may be added unto you in this life and his everlasting inheritance afterwards in the heavenly Canaan through the great mercies of our gratious God and infinite merits of our blessed Saviour Christ Iesus to whom bee praise for ever Your Honours ready to bee commanded in the Lord Andrew Willet CHAP. XXXVII 1. The Method FIrst in this Chapter are set forth the causes of the envy and hatred of Iacobs sonne● against Ioseph 1. His complaining of them to his father vers 2. 2. Iacobs extraordinary love and affection toward Ioseph vers 4. 3. His two dreames of the sheaves vers 7 8. of the starres vers 9 10. whereby was prefigured his preheminence over his brethren Secondly the fruits and effects of their envy are declared their hard dealing toward Ioseph with the occasion thereof and the sequele 1. The occasion was ministred by occasion of Iosephs sending to his brethren by Iacob vers 13. to 19. 2. Their hard dealing appeareth first in consulting to kill Ioseph but that Ruben otherwise turned them vers 20 21. secondly in casting of him into a pit while they themselves did eat and drinke not regarding the affliction of Ioseph vers 23. to 26. 3. In selling of him to the Madianites at Iudah his motion who sold him afterward to Potiphar Thirdly the sequell and issue is this first they dissemble with their father making him beleeve that Ioseph was torne of the wild beasts then they are causes of Iacobs great sorrow and griefe that mourned for his sonne vers 34 35. 2. The divers readings v. 2. when Ioseph was sixteene yeere old H. seventeene caeter v. 2. hee accused his brethren of a bad crime H. Ioseph brought their accusation C. evill saying or report B.G. evill fame T. dibbah signifieth infamy slander reproach v. 5. who hated him so much the more all have but the Septuag v. 13. Israel said to him H. Israel said to Ioseph caet v. 14. and Israel said to him S. and he said caeter v. 20. into an old pit H. into one of these pits caeter v. 21. endevoured to deliver him H. delivered him out of their hands caeter v. 22. this he said to deliver him H. that he might deliver caet v. 28. for twenty peeces of gold S. twenty peeces of silver caet v. 36. to Potiphar Pharaohs Eunuch H.S.B.G. one of Pharaohs courtiers T. Princes C.P. saras a Prince an Eunuch it is like he was not an Eunuch being married Pharaohs chiefe cooke S. chiefe captaine C.H. chiefe steward B.G. master of his guard T. chiefe of his slaughter men P. tabach signifieth to kill to put to death 3. The explanation of doubtfull questions QUEST I. What generations Moses here meaneth Vers. 2. THese are the generations c. 1. Some by generations expound the events and things that happened to Iacob and his posterity sic Vatab but the word toldoth will not fitly beare that sense 2. Some referre these generations to Ioseph as the principall among Iacobs sonnes in whom the image of Iacobs inward vertues and outward countenance did more appeare than in any of the rest Rupert but then he would have said generation not generations in the plurall 3. Others as Ramban Cajetan send us to the 46. chapter following wherein Iacobs posterity is rehearsed and numbred and understand those generations here to bee spoken of but that genealogy following ten chapters after cannot conveniently have dependance of this place 4. Therefore I thinke rather that we are to looke to the 35. chapter where in the end Iacobs twelve sonnes are rehearsed
of heart to his owne glorie Augustine saith Aliud Deus fecit ordinavit aliud non fecit sed ordinavit Some things God both doth ordaineth some things he doth not yet ordaineth that is disposeth of them to some good end 3. God is to be considered in the action of the hardning of the heart as a just judge that punisheth sinne by sinne so is he also an agent and not a patient or sufferer onely Their owne master of the sentences doubteth not to say that concupiscentia in quantum poena est peccati Deum habet a●thorem that concupiscence as it is the punishment of sinne hath God the author thereof lib. 2. distinct 23. So likewise may it be said that the hardning of the heart as it is a punishment of sinne proceedeth from God and his reason is because all punishments are just Therefore as God is a Creator giving power and life to all as hee disposeth and ordereth evill actions unto good as he is a just Judge and punisher of sinne so is he an agent in hardning of the heart therein shewing his power wisedom and justice but the sinne and evill therein committed is only of man who properly hardneth his owne heart 2. Conf. Against the toleration of any contrarie religion Vers. 29. AS soone as I am out of the Ci●ie Moses will not pray in the Citie which was given to superstition and Idolatrie he will separate himself from the companie and presence of the superstitious and unbeleevers that he may give himselfe to fervent and zealous praier And for this cause he said before that the people could not sacrifice unto God in Egypt Simler By this then we see that God cannot be purely served in the middest of Idolaters They which will worship God aright must sequester themselves from among such It is therefore a dangerous thing that any toleration of a contrarie religion should be admitted God will have as the whole heart in man so the whole worship in his Church where Gods arke is there Dagon shall be thrust out of his place for there is no fellowship betweene light and darkenes Christ Belial 2. Cor 6.14.15 As Iacob would suffer no superstition in his familie but removed all the images out of his house Gen. 35. so will a religious prince in his kingdom 3. Conf. Of assurance and confidence in prayer I Will spread mine hands unto the Lord and the thunder shall cease Moses here prayeth with confidence and is assured that God will heare his prayer So ought we to aske in faith pray with assurance that God will heare us S. Iames saith let him aske in faith and waver not neither let that man thinke that is he which wavereth that hee shall receive any thing of the Lord cap. 1.6.7 How then are not the Romanists ashamed thus to affirme non requiri in oratione sidem qua certo credamus Deum absolute facturum quod petimus that faith is not requisite in prayer to beleeve certainly that God will absolutely do that for us which we aske Bellarmin de bon operib in par●icul cap. 9. Indeed there is a double kind of such assurance one is extraordinarie which proceedeth of some speciall revelation as here Moses building upon Gods particular promises made unto him was sure his prayer should take effect the other is an ordinarie assurance which is also of two sorts either when we pray for things spirituall concerning eternall life where the faithfull have an absolute assurance to bee heard or for things ●emporall where our assurance is but conditionall that God will grant us such thing so faire forth as they are expedient And even in praying for things temporall there is also an assurance 〈…〉 and determina●e which is somewhat rare yet often found in the children of God when they ha●e 〈…〉 and constant perswasion that God will heare them for their temporall blessing which they pray for and God therein never faileth them as Iacob was assured that God would keepe him in his journey and give him bread to eat and clothes to put on Gen. 28. And of this assurance S. Iames speaketh th●t 〈…〉 of faith shall save the sicke Iam. 5. they which pray with confidence and assurance for the health of the bodie even shall be heard therein they which are not heard have not that f●i●h and God giveth them not that faith and assurance because he seeth such health not to be good for them There is beside this a generall assurance which every one of Gods children feeleth in their prayer as to be fully perswaded that either God will give them that particular temporall blessing which they pray for or some other gift which God seeth to be more necessary for them As Paul was not in particular assured that the pricke of the flesh should be taken from him yet he knew that his prayer should obtaine either that or a more pretious gift as the Lord said my grace is sufficient for thee he received the grace and strength of God to resist and overcome that temptation though it were not altogether taken from him Augustine concerning this difference of assurance betweene prayer for things temporall and for things spirituall hath this excellent sentence Sanitatem quis petit cum agrotat forte ei adhuc aegrotare utile est potest fieri ut hic non exandiaris at vero cum illud petis ut det tibi Deus vitam aeternam securus esto accipies A man asketh health when he is sicke and yet it may bee good for him to be sicke it may bee then thou shalt not be heard here but when thou asketh of God to give thee eternall life be out of doubt thou shalt receive it 6. Places of morall use 1. Observ. Sinne the cause of extraordinary sicknesse Vers. 10. THere came boiles breaking out into blisters As Pharaoh here and his people were smitten with boiles and ulcers for their sins which they had committed against God and his people so when the Lord sendeth strange diseases and sicknesses into the world wee must take them as signes of the wrath and indignation of God Simler As the Apostle sheweth that the Corinthians for certaine abuses which they were guiltie of in receiving the Lords Supper were chastised some with sicknesse some with death 1 Cor. 11.30 2. Observ. Gods judgements tempered with mercy Vers. 19 SEnd therefore now and gather thy cattell c. The Lord remembreth mercie in the middest of his judgements though the Lord had certainly determined to bring this plague of haile upon Egypt yet together Moses giveth advice how both they and their cattell should be preserved from it thus saith the Psalmist Mercy and truth are met righteousnesse and peace shall k●ss● one another Psal. 85.10 Gods truth and justice is accompanied with mercy truth and favour Pellican 3. Observ. Confession of sins which proceedeth onely from the feare of Gods judgements is no true or right confession Vers. 27. PHaraoh
Numb 10.29 where Hobab is said to be the sonne of Reguel 2. Oleaster thinketh Iethro and Reguel to be the same so also Iosephus and that Hobab or Chobab was the sonne of Iethro and Reguel and brother to Zipporah And his reason that Iethro and Reguel are all one is because the same title is given to them both Iethro is said to be the Prince of Midian Exod. 3.1 and so is Reguel Exod. 2. Contra. 1. The reason why in one place the father is called the Prince in another the sonne is because the sonnes succeeded the fathers in the principalitie and Priesthood among the Gentiles as they did among the Jewes Lipoman in 2. Exod. Which thing was usuall in the primitive Church as Polycrates Bishop of Ephesus writing to Victor Bishop of Rome there sheweth that seven of his ancestors had beene Bishops in that place before him and he was the eighth Euseb. lib. 5. cap. 22. Pellican 2. Hobab could not be brother unto Zipporah for Numb 10.29 hee is called chothen the father in law of Moses which word though Oleaster contend to signifie a kinsman yet seeing Iethro is called by the same word chothen Exod. 3.1 it seemeth in the same sense also to be given unto Hobab 3. Therefore the truer opinion is that Iethro and Hobab were all one and Reguel was father unto Iethro and grandfather to Zipporah Moses wife Iun. Pellican as is before shewed cap. 2. quaest 26. 4. Some thinke that Iethro was a common name both to the father which was Reghuel and to the sonne which was Hobab Galas Exod. 3.1 But that is not like for Iethro onely hath this addition Moses father in law as it is ten times repeated in this Chapter But Reghuel is not so called Exod. 2. whose daughter Zipporah is said to be because the grandfathers with the Hebrewes are so called by the name of fathers I rest therefore in the former opinion as most probable 5. Concerning the word cohen which signifieth both Prince and Priest and whether Iethro were Prince or Priest or rather both see before cap. 2. quaest 27. It was an ancient custome that they which were Rulers and Magistrates to defend the people did execute also the Priests office by sacrifices and prayer to protect and direct them such an one was Melchisedeck and Iethro here Lippoman 6. Likewise whether Iethro were the worshipper of the true God is handled before chap. 2. quest 28. where it is resolved that he was a worshipper of the true God though not purely as Calvin saith Mihi videtur vitiatum fuisse aliqua ex parte illius sacerdotium It seemeth to me that his Priesthood had some blemish and was stained with superstition But it is not like that he sacrificed to Idols for Moses in all likelihood would not have married his daughter then or conversed with him so long Procopius saith that they worshipped the most high God as Melchisedeck did Nec tamen interim abstineb●nt ab idolatria But yet they abstained not from idolatrie But as Calvin saith there is difference betweene Idolatrie Et impurum Dei cultum degenerem in unae parte And the impure worship of God degenerating in some one part The religion then which Iethro professed was principally the worship of the true God yet intermingled with some superstitions of the idolatrous heathen though hee was not a professed Idolater QUEST II. How Iethro heard what the Lord had done for Moses and Israel WHen he heard all that God had done 1. Some thinke that Moses sent his wife out of the desert unto her father in law and that by this meanes Iethro had intelligence of Moses affaires Calvin But this to be unlikely shall be shewed afterward seeing it is very probable that Moses had sent backe his wife from the place where the child was circumcised by the way Exod. 4. 2. Some thinke that Moses had sent some message unto Iethro and so signified unto him what had happened Simler But the manner of speech When he heard giveth rather that he was led by some common fame and rumor though it is most like that Moses being now not farre from Midian would have sent to his father in law to his wife and children which were deare unto him if Iethro had not prevented him 3. Therefore the common fame and rumor which was spread among the nations moved Iethro to come Galas Especially seeing Midian was not far from Egypt bordering upon the red sea Simler And now Moses was not far from Midian being about mount Sinai where he had beene before time accustomed to keepe his fathers sheepe Tostat. From whence the report and rumour of the Israelites and their acts as the late victorie obtained against Amalek might easily be brought QUEST III. The causes which moved Iethro to come unto Moses Vers. 2. THen Iethro tooke Zipporah c. The causes which moved Iethro to take this journey were these 1. That he might congratulate and rejoyce for those great mercies and benefits which the Lord had vouchsafed unto Moses and all Israel Simler Which his joy is expressed afterward vers 9. Some of those benefits concerned Moses and the people in generall as the deliverance out of Egypt their passing thorow the red Sea the giving of Manna but some specially belonged unto Moses as that the Lord had made him the Captaine and guide of his people and had given him power to worke great miracles Tostat. Therefore both these are put together in the text When he had heard what the Lord had done for Moses and for Israel his people Iethro therefore came to shew and expresse his joy in both these respects 2. Beside another end of his comming was to bring unto Moses his wife and children Simler For he was not now farre off from the host of Israel the Citie of Midian being held to be but 16. miles distant from Rephidim where they had pitched last Pelarg. 3. Further though Iethro doubted not of the truth of those things which he had heard yet he is desirous to come to be an eye witnesse and present beholder of those great works which the Lord had done for them as of the cloudie and fierie piller of the Manna that fell dayly and the water that issued out of the rocke Simler 4. Yea he came to glorifie God to whom he offered sacrifice vers 12. Pellican and to joyne himselfe to the people of God wherein appeared Gods providence both toward Moses and Iethro that as he was a comfort and reliefe to Mose● in his exile for outward things so Moses should be a meanes for his spirituall good to bring him to the knowledge of God Ferus QUEST IV. When Moses had sent Zipporah away Vers. 2. AFter the sending her away 1. Some read after the sending that is of gifts either of Moses to his father in law Simler or of Iethro with his daughter Ex Lippoman But the pronoune ha is of the feminine gender and cannot agree to either
desire to be washed of wantonnesse and pleasure it is not so lawfull upon any day si autem pro necessita●● corporis c. But if it be for the necessitie of the bodie we doe not forbid it upon the Lords day for no man hateth his owne flesh 2. If it be a sinne to wash upon the Lords day neither is it lawfull so much as to wash the face Si hoc in corporis parte conceditur cur hoc exigente necessitate toti corpori negatur If this be permitted in one part of the bodie why necessitie so requiring should it be denied to the whole bodie So then neither were the Jewes so strictly bound from all corporall labour as they superstitiously observe as may appeare by Ioshuahs and the whole hosts compassing of Jericho seven dayes together Iosh. 7. and by the Macchabees fighting upon the Sabbath 1 Macchab. 2.41 And Christians have more libertie herein than the Jewes had for it is lawfull for them to prepare their food upon the Lords day which it was not lawfull for the Jewes to doe upon their Sabbath for as Thom. Aquinas well resolveth Opus corporale pertinens ad conservandum salutem proprii corporis non violat Sabbatum A corporall worke belonging to the conservation of the health of ones bodie doth not violate the Sabbath and this is grounded upon that saying of our blessed Saviour The Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath Mark 2.27 God would not have the Sabbath which was made for mans benefit to be used to his hindrance Lyranus yeeldeth this reason betweene the strictnesse imposed upon the Jewes and the libertie of Christians quia illa vacatio figuralis erat because their resting was figurative and therefore was most strictly to be kept à figura quantumcunque modico subtracto mutatur tota significatio and take never so little from a figure the whole signification is changed as if you take l. from lapis or s. from stone that which remaineth signifieth nothing but though somewhat be taken from the substance of a stone it is a stone still 4. Conf. Against the Anabaptists that would have no day kept holy unto the Lord. IN the next place are the Anabaptists to be met withall and who else doe condemne the observation of the Lords day among Christians because the Apostle reproveth the Galathians for observing of dayes and moneths Galath 4. and in other places Contra. 1. The observing of dayes is not simply prohibited by the Apostle sed cum opinione cultus vel necessitatis but with an opinion of religion placed in the day and necessity the Jewes kept their Sabbath as making the observation of the day a part of Gods worship and they held it necessary to keepe that day unchangeable It was also unto them a type and figure of the spirituall rest But the Christians now keepe not the Lords day in any of these respects either as a day more holy in it selfe than others or as of necessitie to be kept but onely for order and decencie sake because it is meet that some certaine day should be set apart for the worship of God Vrsin 2. As in the practice of Physicke and in politike affaires and in the trade of husbandrie there is both a lawfull observation of dayes and an unlawfull for to observe seasons of the yeate for the earth and for ministring unto the bodie of man as also to make choice of the most convenient times for civill businesse is not unlawfull yet the superstitious respect of dayes as making some fortunate some unfortunate and to depend wholly upon the aspects of starres is a vaine and idle thing So likewise in the businesse of religion as dayes may bee superstitiously kept so they may also for order sake and to other good uses bee distinguished 3. Like as then though Christians yeeld a comely reverence unto the publike places of prayer yet not in like sort as the Jewes accounted of their Tabernacle so according to the same rule there is a preeminence given unto the Lords day but not with the like difference of dayes as the Jewes esteemed their Sabbath Simler 5. Conf. Against the Zuincfeldians that hold the preaching of the Word superfluous whereby the Lords day is sanctified THe Zuincfeldians doe also faile in the manner of celebrating the Lords day counting the ministery of the Gospell and preaching of the word of God whereby the Lords day is sanctified a superfluous thing cleaving wholly unto their vaine speculations and phantasticall visions and revelations whereas it is evident out of the Scriptures that both the old Sabbath of the Jewes was solemnized and kept in hearing Moses read and preached Acts 15.21 and the Lords day in like sort was sanctified by the Apostles with preaching Acts 20.7 ex Bastingio Now proceed we on to deale against the Romanists who diversly erre as touching the Lords day 6. Conf. That the Lords day is warranted by Scripture and not by tradition onely FIrst they hold that the keeping of the Lords day in stead of the Jewish Sabbath is not warranted by Scripture but onely by tradition from the Apostles To this purpose the Rhemists Matth. 15. sect 3. And there are other beside in these dayes that make the observation of the Lords day onely an Ecclesiasticall constitution Contra. 1. There are three most evident texts of Scripture usually alleaged which doe make it evident that this change of the Sabbath began in the time of the Apostles and so by their Apostolike authoritie being thereto guided by the Spirit is warranted and so declared and testified in Scripture These are the places Act. 20.7 1 Cor. 16.2 Revelat. 1.10 In the first we have the exercises of religion preaching and ministring the Sacraments which were peculiar to the Sabbath transferred to the first day of the weeke In the second publike charitable collections for the poore which was also used upon the Sabbath In the third the very name of the Lords day is set downe 2. And further that this day was consecrated by divine authoritie the great works doe shew wherewith this day from the beginning hath beene honoured as Augustine hath sorted them together Venerabilis est hic dies in quo transgressi sunt fili● Israel mare rubrum c. This day is to be reverenced wherein the Israelites passed over the red sea wherein Manna first rained upon the Israelites in the desert our Lord was baptized in Jordan water was turned into wine in Cana of Galile wherein the Lord blessed the five loaves wherewith he fed five thousand men wherein he rose againe from the dead entred into the house the doores being shut wherein the holy Ghost descended upon the Apostles c. Serm. 154. 3. This reason also may perswade it because the Lords day is now sanctified to holy uses as the Sabbath was to the Jewes but it belongeth onely unto God to sanctifie by his word as the Apostle saith Every creature is sanctified by the
which in the market place and in the streets thought it no shame to exercise the act of generation whereupon they were called Cynik●s because therein they were like unto dogs and Diog●nes the first founder and beginner of this beastly errour was thereupon also called Cynicus Tostat. qu. 49. 4. Places of Doctrine 1. Doct. Of the difference of the Law and the Gospell Vers. 18. WHen the people saw it they fled and stood afarre off Here is set forth the difference of the Law and the Gospell for the Law worketh these two effects Terrorem incutit c. It striketh terrour by the manifestation of our sinne as the prodigall childe confessed I am not worthy to be called thy sonne And retrocedere facit it causeth to goe afarre off Hereupon the Publicane stood afarre off beating upon his breast as not worthy to come neere into the presence of God But the Gospell hath two other contrary effects Consolatur allicit It comforteth and allureth as our blessed Saviour saith Come unto me all ye that are weary and laden and I will ease you Mat. 11.28 They that finde not the Law and the Gospell to worke these severall contrary effects doe shew that they understand neither but are like unto those in the Gospell of whom it is said We have piped unto you and yet have not danced wee have mourned unto you and ye have not wept such can neither be wonne by the comfortable promises of the Gospell not terrified by the heavy threatnings of the Law Ferus B. Babington 2. Doct. One truth one religion Vers. 24. AN altar of earth shalt thou make Quòd unum at que ●undeus cultum inter omnes esse vellet c. Because he would have one and the same worship among all he commanded but one altar Gallas He would have but one altar to note one truth and one religion B. Babington as the Apostle saith Ephes. 4.5 There is one Lord one faith one baptisme 5. Places of Confutation 1. Confut. Against Tostatus that it is no more lawfull to make images in the new Testament than it was under the old Vers. 23. GOds of silver or Gods of gold yee shall make yee none c. Tostatus alleaging these two reasons why images were not allowed in the old Testament because Idolatry was then commonly practised among the Gentiles and therefore the Lord would take away all occasion thereof among his people and for that no image could be made to represent God being visible yet he saith that it is lawfull to have images in the new Testament 〈…〉 aliqua predi●tarum causarum neither doth any of the former reasons hinder it because now there is no danger of Idolatry in making an image to represent God Quia non est nunc generalis 〈…〉 There is not now a generall custome of the Gentiles leading that way and though in the old Testament there was nothing which could be expressed by an image God being invisible yet in the new Testament Christ truly tooke our flesh Ita ut statua et couveniat quia 〈◊〉 nostrûm 〈◊〉 So that an image may well agree unto him because he is like unto any of us Sunt etiam ●liqu● sancti viri c. There are also holy men whom though we worship not as Gods yet we have them as intercessors with God and doe make pictures of them to be put in remembrance of them Tostat. qu. 39. Contra. 1. If the forbidding to make any graven image to represent God by be a morall precept as it cannot be denied then it bindeth Christians as well in the new Testament as it did the Israelites in the old 2. And there is more danger of idolatry 〈◊〉 than there was the● for the grosse idolatry of the Gentiles was not so dangerous to imitate nor so like to be followed as the coloured superstition and refined idolatry of those which professe themselves Catholikes and Christians the grosse Pagane idolatry is now turned into counterfeit Christian imagery And if the nations which have not yet received the Christian Faith as the Turkes Mahometanes Jewes have renounced idolatry it is a shame for Christians in profession to retaine it still 3. Concerning the other reason first the Godhead and divine nature is no more circumscriptible and to be pictured now than it was in the old Testament And as Christ in the new did take upon him the shape and forme of man so also in the old he appeared in humane shape to the Fathers why might they not then have pictured him according to that appearance as well as now therefore in this respect there is no difference But can they also by any image resemble Christs divine nature If they cannot it is a lying image for either they make a picture of Christ as God and Man and so they with Eutyches will confound the natures of Christ making the Godhead circumscriptible or else with Nestorius they must divide his person making two Christs one as he is Man whom they cannot picture another as he is God who cannot by any image bee resembled And whereas Tostatus himselfe misliketh that any image should be made of the Trinity upon this reason Quia cum nihil tale ut est exprimere in personis divinis valeat solius erroris Arriani occasio est ut tres Deos essentialiter distenctos c. 〈◊〉 Because no picture can expresse any thing in the divine persons as it is and so it would only give occasion of the Arrian errour that wee should imagine three Gods essentially distinguished c. this reason may be returned againe upon him that seeing nothing of Christs divine nature can be expressed by a picture such delineation and portraiting of Christ would give occasion of the Nestorian heresie to make two Christs one which may be pictured as he is man and the other which cannot be pictured as he is God Secondly concerning the images of Saints Were there not glorious and renowned Saints in the old Testament as the Patriarkes Abraham Isaack Iacob with the Prophets Moses and Elias with the rest as the Apostles and Evangelists and holy Martyrs under the New Why then was it not as lawfull to make images and visible representations of the Saints then as now Therefore herein there is no difference betweene those times and these and so notwithstanding all these shifts and evasions it is found to bee no more lawfull to have Images and pictures for religious uses now than it was then 2. Confut. Against the grossenesse of idolatrie BUt this place which forbiddeth any Gods of silver or gold to bee made maketh strongly against all adoration of such Images which by so doing they make their Gods And whereas the Lord saith Ye shall not make with me Hac voce ostendit alios sibi deos adjungi cum eriguntur simulachra By this word he sheweth that other Gods are joyned with him when as Images are erected c. For when they doe bow before them and make their
seventh moneth and so they continued there during the two other feasts of the Reconciliation in the ●0 day and of Tabernacles which began in the 15. Osiander But here I approve rather Calvins reason Gravin fuisset tam diuturna mora So long abode together at Jerusalem had beene burthensome for the space of three weekes together from the first day of the seventh moneth to the 21. when the feast of Tabernacles ended therefore this third time of their going up was against the feast of the Tabernacles as is evident Deut. 31.10 and that these were the three times in the yeere is directly mentioned Deut. 16.16 These three times in the yeere shall all the males appeare c. Tostat. quaest 25. QUEST XXXV Who were bound to appeare before the Lord whether their servants Vers. 17. SHall all thy men children appeare 1. The women were not bound by this Law to appeare because it was necessary that they should be left at home to attend the domesticall affaires and have a care of the young children yet they might come up voluntarily as Anna the mother of Samuel did and Marie the mother of our blessed Saviour especially those which dwelt neere to Jerusalem 2. Concerning the males Tostatus thinketh that all the males after they were come to yeeres of discretion ascended as Christ being but a child according to the custome of other children went up with his parents But it is more like that none went up under 20. yeere old only those males qui ira●sibant sub censum which passed under the account Calvin Some thinke also none above 50. yeeres but that is not like the children might goe up with their parents also but that was not of any necessity And left it might have seemed a dangerous thing to the countrey if all the males together should have beene absent the Lord promiseth that their enemies should not desire their land in the meane time while they appeared before the Lord Exod. 34.24 3. Neither were the males of their owne children only bound to goe up but their servants also as is expresly mentioned Deut. 16.12 that their sonne daughter servant and maid should rejoyce with them before the Lord. Of their Hebrew servants there was no question because they were of the same profession and they were but their servants for a time And concerning other servants bought with their money they were to circumcise them and then they were to eat of the Passeover Exod. 12.44 Now if they were circumcised they were thereby bound to keepe the whole Law as the Apostle sheweth Galath 5.3 And seeing they also were to eat the Passeover which could not be offered but before the Lord Deut. 16.2 they were also necessarily to appeare before the Lord. 4. But if all their servants were bound to goe up with them thrice in the yeere and that from the furthest parts of the land this would seeme to have beene a great prejudice to their masters and an hindrance to their businesse to spare their servants so long Lyranus and Tostatus here answer that they which dwelt farre off were dispensed withall and it was sufficient for them to come up only once in the yeere at the Passeover But no such dispensation is extant in the Law I rather insist upon that other answer of Tostatus that damna animae plus vitanda sunt quàm damna corporis the detriment of the soule is more to be shunned than the detriment of the body Therefore seeing their appearing before the Lord concerned the health of their soules all worldly respects ought to give place unto it and the Commandement of God was to be preferred before all Tostat. quaest 26. QUEST XXXVI To what end the people were commanded to meet together THis generall meeting of all Israel thrice in a yeere before the Lord was profitable for divers ends 1. Ad concordiam religionis doctrinae conservandam c. To keepe and preserve concord and unity in doctrine and religion Simler for if they might have sacrificed where they would the people might soone have declined and fallen to strange worship 2. Ingenti multitudinis concursu alii alios incitabant c. By this concurse of the multitude one helped to stirre up and provoke another to the more cheerefull setting forth of the praise of God Gallas 3. It was effectuall also Ad coalitionem animorum c. For the knitting together of their hearts and mindes the maintaining of love and charity among them Marbach 4. Solemnia festa angustiora fieri tanto conventu The solemne feast dayes by this company of the people were thereby more adorned and set forth 5. And this was a figure also of Christ that as they had but one Sanctuary one Altar on high Priest so Christus est unicus servator Christ is our onely Saviour and high Priest Simler QUEST XXXVII Why the people were not to appeare empty before the Lord. Vers. 15. NOne shall appeare before me emptie 1. Though this precept be annexed here to the solemnity of the Passeover yet it is to be referred not only to that feast as Tostatus seemeth to take it but to all the rest of the three Cajetane Gallas 2. Some understand it thus that none should appeare empty or in vaine before the Lord but they should receive some blessing at his hand but it is plaine Deut. 16.17 that it is meant of such gifts and oblations as they should bring with them to offer before the Lord Simler 3. Which offerings and oblations served for the repairing of the Temple and the maintaining of the Levites and for other such uses belonging to the service of God Simler 4. This presenting of gifts unto the Lord was to testifie their thankfull minde Non enim satis erat verbis gratitudinem testificari For it was not sufficient in words only to testifie their thankfulnesse Gallas And to this end they did it ut personarum rerum fiat Deo oblatio qui dat personas res omnes that they might offer unto God as well their substance as their persons who giveth all both the persons and all things beside Cajetane 5. Though we are not bound unto this Law seeing it is abolished veritas tamen a●uos pertinet yet the truth thereof belongeth unto us Gallas that if wee have money or any other substance we should first releeve the poore tunc demum Deo preces fundamus and then offer our prayers unto God Saltem animam non à bo●is operibus vacuam Deo offeramus c. At the least we should not present our soule unto God empty and void of good workes Theodoret. To the same purpose Chrysostome idcircò pauperes ante fores sunt ut nemo vacuus ingrediatur c. intras ut misericordiam consequaris prior ipse miserere c. Therefore the poore stand at the Church doore that none should goe in empty thou encrest to obtaine mercy first shew mercy thy selfe c. Gregorie applieth it to
he did not bring them in by Moses it followeth that Moses could not be that Angell 2. Tostatus therefore thinketh that this Angell must be understood to be Ioshua for he brought them into the land of Canaan neither did he spare their iniquities for he punished Achan Iosh. 7. And Gods name was in him both because he was an Israelite which is interpreted one prevailing with God Rabanus and he is called Ioshua which is the same with Iesus a Saviour and his name being before Oshea God tooke one of the letters of his owne name Iehovah the first letter jod and put it to his name and so made it Ioshuah which signifieth a Saviour Tostat. So also Lyranus Contra. 1. But by name is here understood not any title or appellation consisting of syllables but power and authority and the essence of God which was not in Ioshua Genevens 2. And the peculiar and proper name of God is Iehovah which was never given unto any mortall man Gallas 3. Neither did Ioshuah punish all their transgressions though he met with some publike and notorious offences Simler 4. And if Ioshuah should have beene this Angell car●isset populus ductore Angelo c. the people should have wanted this Angell their guide as long as they sojourned in the wildernesse Calvin 5. And further the Lord saith to Moses Mine Angell shall goe before thee Exod. 32.34 But Ioshua went not before Moses he came after and succeeded him Calvin Borrhaius here understandeth both Ioshuah as the type and Christ the great Angell of God secundum veritatem in truth But this cannot agree unto Ioshua at all no not as the type of Christ for the reasons before alleaged 4. Lyranus and Lippomanus doe interpret this place of a created Angell the same which went before them in a pillar of fire and in that he saith My name is in him the meaning is Quicquid loquitur 〈◊〉 nomine loquetur c. Whatsoever he speaketh he shall speake in my name Lippoman Contra. 1. That Angell which went before the people in a cloudy and fiery pillar was no created Angell but God himselfe for he is called Iehovah chap. 13.21 Gallas 2. Whereas the Lord said to Moses that he would not goe himselfe with them but send his Angell chap. 33. 2. and yet afterward being intreated by Moses granted that his presence should goe with them chap. 33.14 hence it is evident that th●● was not such an Angell as he said he would send and not goe himselfe but such an Angell wherein his presence should be Simler 5. Wherefore this Angell is none other but Christ that great Angell of Gods counsell whom God sent into the world as appeareth evidently by these reasons 1. The text saith My name is in him Pro naturali divinitate eodem quo ego censetur nomine In respect of his Deity which he hath by nature he is called by the same name that I am Rupertus Ferus 2. Augustine taketh him to be the same Angell which wrestled with Iacob and changed his name Gen. 32. which was God himselfe Christ in humane shape wrestling with Iacob for Iacob is called Israel because he had prevailed with God 3. This is the same Angell which is called the Angell of Gods covenant Malach. 3.1 Ferus But herein he is deceived he thinketh this to be majorem Angelum a greater Angell than that Angell which went before them in a cloud whereas he is the very same Angell 4. This Angell is called Iehovah chap. 13.21 Iun. Piscator 5. They are bidden not to provoke this Angell But it was Christ whom they tempted and provoked in the wildernesse 1 Cor. 10.9 and Heb. 3.9 Simler 6. Angelus iste judex statuitur c. This Angell is appointed their Judge if they did offend He will not spare your misdeeds Calvin 7. Againe he saith If thou hearken unto him and doe all that I speake c. signifying parem ab illis secum obedientiam flagitare that he requireth of them the same obedience with God himselfe as being of the same power majesty authority as our blessed Saviour saith in the Gospell Ioh. 10. I and my father are one Marbach 8. Iudicium occultorum eidem tribuitur c. Unto this Angell is given the judgement of secret things hee will not spare c. Simler Pelarg. Etsi enim Magistratus non omnia delicta vidit novit c. For although the Magistrate doe not see and punish all offences yet God seeth and in time will be avenged Osiander 9. This was the same Angell which here performeth that which was promised to Abraham long before I will curse them that curse thee Gen. 12.3 as here he saith I will be an enemy to thine enemies and that was Iehovah Gen. 12.1 Pellican QUEST XLV Why in this place the prohibition of idolatry is inserted Vers. 24. THou shalt not bow downe to their gods c. 1. This Law is annexed to the former exhortation of obedience because idolatry is the very root and foundation of all iniquity and the whole Law and Commandements of God were neglected by Idolaters so that nothing was more contrary to their obedience to the Law than idolatry Simlerus 2. And seeing they were to cast out the inhabitants of Canaan which worshipped Idols they are charged also together with them to cast out their superstition and idolatry Tostat. quaest 81. 3. Quia proclives sunt animi hominum ad superstitionem c. Because the mindes of men are prone unto superstition therefore this precept is often here repeated that they should not serve other gods nor doe after their workes but abolish and destroy all monuments of superstition Gallas Ferus 4. And three things are forbidden touching idolatry First they must not bow unto them give them any externall signe of reverence then they must not serve them by sacrificing unto them erecting temples altars and such like Oleaster Thirdly nor doe after their workes that is follow other their superstitious rites and ceremonies and generally tota eorum conversatio prohibita est their whole conversation was naught and therefore is forbidden Tostat. quaest 81. 5. And because it was not sufficient to decline from superstition si religione car●as if thou want religion therefore as they are forbidden the worship of false gods so they are commanded to serve the Lord vers 25. Gallas QUEST XLVI What manner of promises are here made and why Vers. 25. ANd he shall blesse thy bread c. 1. This must be here observed that these promises here made are only temporall because the people then were carnall and only sought such things In the new Testament Christ doth not promise these terrene and temporall blessings to his Apostles non quia illis haec invidebat c. not because he did envy them these things but because he had greater blessings for them like as the father when his sonne is come to age doth no more entise him with apples but bestoweth
his Law is transgressed though anothers person is touched as in theft murther or in particular when beside the breach of the Law the person or state of the Magistrate is touched as when treason is intended against him or his goods stollen So likewise men trespasse against God first in generall when his Law is violated though our neighbour only be hurt as in all the precepts of the second Table secondly more specially when beside the transgression of the Law actus immediate dirigitur in Deum the act is immediately directed against God as in the breach of the first Table and principally in idolatry Tostat. qu. 86. 4. Places of Doctrine 1. Doct. Of divers actions of love generall and particular Vers. 1. IF thou 〈◊〉 thine enemies oxe c. As Gods actions are of two sorts generall and particular the one toward all men in as much as he suffereth the Sunne to shine and the raine to fall upon all the other toward the elect in sanctifying them by his Spirit So must our actions be toward men A generall love we must shew toward all men Turkes Jewes Infidels and toward our enemies in procuring their good in seeking to doe them no hurt in preserving them and theirs out of which generall fountaine of love flow these curtesies in bringing home his straying oxe and helping up the overladen asse But friendship familiarity society we must only have with the children of God This difference the Apostle maketh where he saith Let us doe good to all but specially unto them which are of the houshold of faith Galath 6.10 B. Babington 2. Doct. Of Christs Deity Vers. 21. BEcause my name is in him Hic Moses Divinitatem Christi palam confitetur exprimit Here Moses doth openly confesse and expresse the Divinity of Christ which the Jewes to this day will not see nor acknowledge for this Angell is Christ in whom the name of God is he is called by the same names that God the Father is as the Lord almighty eternall c. Ferus as the Prophet Isaiah saith Hee shall call his name Wonderfull Counsellor the mighty God the everlasting Father c. Isai. 9.6 3. Doct. God disposeth and transposeth kingdomes Vers. 31. I Will make thy coasts from the red Sea c. This sheweth that God setteth the limits and bounds of kingdomes which they cannot passe nor goe beyond he setteth up kingdomes transposeth them and pulleth them downe as Daniel saith He changeth times and seasons he taketh away Kings he setteth up Kings Dan. 2.21 Marbach Borrhaius 5. Places of Controversie 1. Confut. Vniversality and multitude no sure marke of the true Church and religion Vers. 2. THou shalt not follow a multitude c. As in civill matters it is not safe to follow the custome of a multitude so in religion it is dangerous to be lead by numbers and multitude In our blessed Saviours time the people followed the Scribes and Pharisies only a few whom he had chosen out of the world as the Apostles with some others embraced the doctrine of Christ. Therefore universality and multitude which is so much urged by the Romanists is no good rule to know the right Church and the truth by Simler 2. Confut. Against the secret Spanish Inquisition Vers. 1. THou shalt not receive a false tale Although this be a generall instruction to all both publike and private persons that they should not be carried away with false tales yet it most of all concerneth Judges which as Lyranus noteth saith that the Magistrate is forbidden by this Law to heare the one party in the absence of the other because many false tales will be devised by the one when the other is not present to make answer But Burgensis confuteth Lyranus herein whom T●oring in his replies maintaineth who affirmeth truly that this Law videtur habere ortum à natura seemeth to take beginning from nature that when any suit is promoted at the instance of a party the adverse party should be cited Yet he maketh exception of some Courts the processe whereof is secret without any such inquisition as he giveth instance of that great Court in Westphaliae which is called Iudicium secretum Westphaliae The secret judgement of Westphalia Wherein beside that he in pretending to defend Lyranus confuteth him shewing that in all proceedings it is not necessary that publike inquisition bee made the instance that he giveth is insufficient what that secret manner of judgement in Westphalia is he declareth not but if it be such as the Spanish Inquisition is which is shuffled up in corners and in darknesse there being none present but the Inquisitor the Scribe and tormentor disguised like a Devill and the poore innocent lambe that is tortured and examined it is most unjust cruell and tyrannicall The Romane Governours were more equall toward Paul who brought him forth in publike to answer for himselfe and did not sift him in corners And what is to be thought of such secret actions our blessed Saviour sheweth Every man that evill doth hateth the light neither commeth to the light lest his deeds should be reproved 3. Confut. Against the Manichees who made the old Testament contrarie to the new Vers. 22. I Will be an enemy unto thine enemies c. The Manichees who rejected the old Testament and would make it contrary to the new take exception to these and the like places where the Lord professeth enmity against the Canaanites and chargeth the Israelites to kill and destroy them how say they is this consonant and agreeable to that precept of the Gospell that we should love our enemies Contra. 1. Hierome answereth Non tam personarum quam morum facta est dissensio That this dissension and enmity was not in respect of the persons but of their manners The Israelites were not so much enemies unto them as they were enemies to the true religion of the Israelites in worshipping of God aright 2. Augustine saith Illa inimicorum interfectio carnali adhuc populo congruebat c. That killing of the enemies did agree unto that carnall people to whom the Law was given as a schoolemaster unto Christ. 3. The Apostle when he delivered over the incestuous young man unto Satan for the destruction of the flesh Satis declaravit in aliquem inimicum vindictam cum charitate posse procedere c. Did sufficiently declare that revenge may be taken of some enemy in charity c. Potest ergo dilectio esse in vindicante Therefore there may be love in him that taketh revenge as we see in fathers that correct their children whom they love And although fathers kill not their children in correcting them yet God who knoweth what is best for every one cum dilectione corrigere non solum infirmitatibus sed etiam mortibus temporalibus c. can correct with love not only with infirmity and sicknesse but with temporall death as is evident in the Corinthians as S. Paul saith
foundation as there were two sockets under every boord by the bars are understood the Ministers and teachers of the Gospell by whose preaching the frame of the Church is held together 3. The two vailes did both keepe the people from curious gazing and bold accesse which admonisheth us that we must not draw neere unto God without great reverence 4. The large outward court did represent and prefigure the vocation of the Gentiles which should be called in great multitudes whereas the Church of the Jewes was straitned and pent up in a small corner Simler 4. Places of Doctrine 1. Doct. There is no salvation but in Christ. Vers. 1. THou shalt make the Altar The Israelites had but one onely Altar appointed upon the which they were to offer all their sacrifices and therefore both Ieroboam sinned that afterward set up two other Altars one in Dan the other in Beersheba and Vrias the high Priest who to please the idolatrous King Ahaz caused a new Altar to be set up after the patterne of the Altar of Damascus This one Altar was a type of our blessed Saviour who onely satisfieth for our sinnes neither are we to use any other helpes in our owne works or in the merits or mediation of Saints beside Christ for this were nothing else Quam aliud novum Altare prater Christum instituere Then to appoint another new Altar beside Christ who onely is ordained of God to bee the Saviour of the world Marbach As S. Peter saith Neither is there salvation in any other for among men there is given no other name under heaven whereby we must be saved Act. 2.12 2. Doct. That all things should be done orderly in the Church Vers. 9. THou shalt make the court of the Tabernacle We learne by this that Nihil in Ecclesia confusum esse debet Nothing in the Church must be confused but all disposed in order as in the Tabernacle the outward court was appointed for the Levits and vulgar sort the holy place for the Priests the most holy place none could enter into but the high Priest So now in the Church of God all things should be done in comelinesse and order Our assemblies should be orderly and reverently set and disposed Distinction of degrees and persons to be observed not all confusedly shuffled together as now in many Churches men and women one with another are mingled together Oleaster This is S. Pauls rule that all things be done honestly and by order 1 Cor. 14.40 3. Doct. The mysteries of Christian religion are manifested to all Vers. 16. IN the gate of the court shall bee a vaile of twentie cubits Although the court were compassed about with curtaines yet Ostium satis amplum habuit It had a doore wide enough thorow the which they might see all the breadth of the Tabernacle and the Hebrewes thinke that the curtaines were made with holes Quibus ea quae in atrio agebantur conspici potuerint Whereby such things as were done in the court might be seene By the which is signified that the holy mysteries of the Church are not such as the ceremonies of Ceres of Eleusis which were not imparted to strangers or of Iuno of Coos unto the which servants were not admitted but the secrets of the Gospell are revealed to all the world Pelargus Lippoman As the Apostle saith If our Gospell bee hid it is hid to them that are lost 2 Cor. 4.3 5. Places of Controversie 1. Confut. Against free will in good things Vers. 4. THou shalt make unto it a grate like networke c. Beda thinketh that the fire was made under tbis grate and that thorow the holes thereof the flame ascended and consumed the sacrifice whereupon he giveth this note Nequaquam obduremus corda nostra more Pelagianorum c. sed liberè aperiamus c. Let us not harden our hearts and locke them up as the Pelagians against the grace of God but so open them that as thorow many doores in all things that we begin well the grace of God may illuminate us c. And he sheweth what the error of the Pelagians was S●●e gratia Dei se aliquid boni perficere posse praesumunt They presume they can without the grace of God doe some good thing And so they doe not set a grate before their hearts for the sacred fire of Gods Spirit to enter Sed quasi parietem solidum inter se ign●m Spiritus sancti interponunt But doe put a thick● wall betweene them and the sire of the holy Spirit lest they should be heated thereby and warmed with love With the Pelagians herein consent the Romanists whose assertion is this That a man naturally without faith both with speciall assistance from God and without it can performe some morall good worke if no temptation let Bellarmin But against both these may be opposed that saying of our blessed Saviour Without me can ye doe nothing Ioh. 15.5 See more hereof Synops. Centur. 4. err 43. 2. Confut. Against Altars in Popish Churches Vers. 7. THe bars shall be in the two sides of the Altar c. This Altar was a type and figure of Christ and it was to continue till Christ the true Sacrificer should offer himselfe upon the Altar of the crosse But now the Church of God knoweth no such materiall Altars as Rupertus well observeth this Altar was holy Antequam Christus qui per hoc promittebatur veniret c. before Christ came who was promised by it but after that he is entred into the most holy place Nunc reprobatum abjectum est Now it is repelled and rejected The Romanists therefore doe Judaize in retaining still Altars in their Churches Antiquitie knew no such Altars of stone as Celsus as Origen saith objected it as a fault among the Christians Quod nec imagines nec Templa nec aras haberent That they had neither images Temples nor Altars Augustine calleth it Mensam Domini The table of the Lord Chrysostom 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The holy boord Athanasius Mensam ligneam The table of wood B. Babing Neither have they any colour for their Altars out of that place Heb. 13. We have an Altar whereof they have no authoritie to eat which serve in the Tabernacle c. For the Apostle there speaketh of no materiall Altar but of the death and passion of Christ as it followeth vers 12. And Bellarmin forbeareth to urge this place because divers of their owne writers apply it to Christs crosse lib. 5. de miss cap. 9. 3. Confut. Against the setting up of candles in the day in popish Churches Vers. 1. SHall dresse them from evening to morning The lamps burned in the Tabernacle onely in the night and were put out in the day as is before shewed quest 21. which sheweth that the Romanists are herein more superstitious than the Jewes in setting up candles and tapers by day in their Churches Hierom saith Ceras non clara luce accendimus c. We
10.28 3. And as offence might grow by eating of things sacrificed to idols see likewise concerning other meats forbidden by Moses Law great question did arise betweene the converted Jewes and the beleeving Gentiles for the deciding of which controversie Saint Paul giveth two rules first That they should not judge one another Rom. 14.13 that he that did eat should not condemne him that would not eat secondly that they should not grieve or offend one another with their eating ibid vers 15. that they should abstaine from eating such things at the least in their brothers presence And after this the Church came together and decreed that for a time in regard of the weake they should abstaine from strangled and bloud Act. 15. Tostat. qu●st 13. 4. But this further must be considered that Christians now have a greater liberty than the Israelites had for they are simply forbidden to goe unto the Gentiles feasts or to have any fellowship with them lest by little and little they might be drawne to partake with them in their idolatry But S. Paul allowed Christians to goe unto the feasts of the Gentiles and to eat of their sacrifices so it might be done without offence 1 Cor. 10.27 Gallas 5. And the reason hereof why the Israelites are forbidden to communicate with the Gentiles and to eat and drinke with them may thus further be declared For the communion of some is forbidden to the faithfull two wayes either in poenam illius cui communio fidelium subtrabitur for a punishment to him from whom the company of the faithfull is withdrawne as the incestuous young man was excommunicate among the Corinthians or ad cautelam eorum quibus interdicitur for their warning and heed-taking which are so forbidden others company And if so the faithfull be strong in faith and are more like to win the Infidels than to be corrupted by them they are not forbidden their company but if they be weake and such as easily may be drawne away the company of Infidels to such is dangerous Thomas And of this sort were the Hebrewes who were weake and prone to idolatry and therefore the Lord forbiddeth them all entercourse and communion with the Gentiles QUEST XXXIV Why marriages with the Idolatrous were forbidden and in what cases Vers. 16. LEst thou take of their daughters to thy sonnes 1. The Israelites were forbidden to take wives unto their sonnes from the idolatrous Heathen lest they might draw them also unto idolatry men must not deceive themselves in such marriages and thinke that they may draw their wives or the wives the husbands rather unto the true religion which they professe then to be corrupted by them For how knowest thou a man te uxorem lucrifacturum that thou shalt gaine thy wife to thy religion or thou woman that thou shalt perswade thy husband Gallasius Shall a man thinke himselfe more wise than Salomon whose heart was perverted by his wives and to please them he fell to most grosse idolatry Simlerus 2. Yet it was lawfull for the Israelites to take to wives such of the Gentiles as were converted to their religion as is evident Deut. 21.13 as Boaz married Ruth who had then imbraced the true religion and worship of the God of Israel as she said unto Naomi Thy people shall be my people and thy God my God Ruth 1.16 3. But the example of ●●hlan and Chilian will be objected the sonnes of Elime●ech who tooke unto them wives of the Moabites Orpah and Ruth who were not then converted to the faith of Israel for then Naomi would not have bid them returne into their country as shee did Ruth 1.12 for that had beene to give them occasion to commit idolatry Therefore this marriage is excused by the necessity of that place where Mahlan and Chilian sojourned namely in Moab for the space of ten yeeres where were no women of their religion and so they were faine to take them wives from the Moabites 4. Now further as it was unlawfull to take wives to their sonnes from the Gentiles so was it also forbidden that they should give their daughters to their sonnes Deut. 7.3 which of the two was the more dangerous 1. For the man is the head of the woman and so the Israelitish wife should come in subjection to a Pagan and by this meanes dishonour her nation 2. The man being of greater power might use more violent meanes to force the wife to Gentilisme than the wife could to draw the husband 3. The children also were more likely to be corrupted which are brought up according to the fathers minde Tostat. quaest 14. An example whereof we have in that blasphemer that was stoned to death who was the sonne of an Egyptian and of an Israelitish woman Levit. 24. QUEST XXXV Why the images are called molten gods Vers. 17. THou shalt make thee no molten gods 1. The Gentiles so called their idols communi populari errore by a common and popular errour as now among the Romanists the common people call their images their Saints But the wiser sort among the Heathen did not take the idols to be their gods but only representations of them yet that excused not their idolatry no more than the like pretense now among the Papists that they use images only to put them in minde of God Simler 2. But an idoll is farre from being God or having any divine thing in it that as the Apostle saith It is nothing in the world not in respect of the matter but of the signification for it neither representeth the true God who is a Spirit and hath no bodily shape nor yet the false gods which are nothing at all in the world Marbach 3. By one kinde of molten images all the rest are forbidden whether they be graven carved painted locutio est à parte totum significans it is a manner of speech taking a part for the whole Augustin Iunius But he giveth instance of molten images because of the molten calfe which they had lately made Lyranus 4. If it were unlawfull for them to suffer the Gentiles idols to stand but they were to breake them downe much more were they not to make them new Simler And so often is this Law repeated because of their pronenesse to idolatry Tostat. QUEST XXXVI Why the principall feasts of the Israelites are here rehearsed Vers. 18. THe feast of unleavened bread 1. The Lord renuing now his covenant with his people which was interrupted by their apostasie and falling away doth also againe prescribe unto them these festivall solemnities which they should observe unto him therefore renovato foedere repetuntur the covenant being renued they are also repeated Borrhaius 2. Another reason of this repetition is ne otiosus populus ceremonias Gentium aemuletur lest the idle people should have followed the ceremonies and superstitious festivals of the Gentiles the Lord prescribeth them certaine feasts wherein they should be occupied in setting forth of his praise Lippom. 3.
Then there is declared how forward they were in offering both what was brought not only gold and silver and precious stones but other things of lesse price as rams skins badgers skins and by whom they were offered by the men women and Princes to vers 30. 3. Then the institution of the workmen is expressed 1. Who they were 2. What gifts they were indued with 3. To what end not only to worke themselves but to teach others vers 35. 2. The divers readings Vers. 22. Hookes or buttons earings rings and studded girdles I. better than rings and chaines B. or rings and bracelets G.L.S.C. or rings and aprons A. the ornaments of the nether parts it is not like they offered such the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 chumaz which Iunius interpreteth cingula● bullatas studded girdles here and Numb 31.50 Vers. 34. Both him and Aholiab c. that is God hath called both him and Aholiab Iun. So also the vulgar Latine putteth it in the accusative likewise A.P. better than in the nominative as V.B.G.S.C. For so it hath no grammaticall construction with the precedent sentence 3. The questions discussed QUEST I. Why the precept of keeping the Sabbath is so often inculcate Vers. 1. IT shall be unto you the holy Sabbath of rest unto the Lord. 1. Cajetane thinketh that this is the reason why the precept of the Sabbath is here iterated because Moses propositurus ceremonialia being to propound ceremoniall Lawes beginneth with the chiefest of them which is concerning the Sabbath But the preamble vers 1. These are the words which the Lord hath commanded that ye should doe them sheweth that Moses speaketh not only of ceremoniall but morall duties also which were to be done and performed by them Marbach 2. But there are two reasons of this repetition one lest they might thinke that they might intermit the rest of the Sabbath because of the workes of the Sanctuary for the which reason this precept was urged before chap. 31. Iun. Marbach Pelarg. 3. The other reason is because this precept religionis caput totum Dei cultum continet c. doth in a manner containe the head of religion and the whole worship of God because upon the Sabbath they were taught their whole duty toward God therefore the neglect thereof would tend to the ruine and decay of all religion Gallas Simler 4. And this precept is so often inculcate to admonish us Primo omnium Dei regnum quarendum esse That first of all we must seeke the kingdome of God Osiander QUEST II. Whether it were simply forbidden the Israelites to kindle fire upon the Sabbath Vers. 3. YOu shall kindle no fire thorowout all your habitations c. 1. The Hebrewes were so strict in keeping the very letter of this Law that they thought it not lawfull to strike fire out of a stone or iron nor to light a candle but for the sicke nor to put out a fire and if they made a fire to warme them by they were not to kindle it with bellowes but with reed Oleaster And therefore the Jewes used to hire Christians to make their fires upon the Lords day Lippomnn But this their superstition was convinced by their owne practice in the Tabernacle where the Priests did keepe fire on the Lords day upon the Altar which was never to goe out 2. Some of our owne Writers thinke that by this they were forbidden to make a fire ad calefaciendum to warme them by And therefore the man that gathered stickes upon the Sabbath day was stoned to death Gallas But seeing the Sabbath was made for man that is for his good not for his hurt there was no doubt but in extremity of cold for the preservation of their health it was lawfull for them to warme them at the fire the man was put to death for gathering stickes not for kindling of a fire and he did it with an high hand that is of an obstinate minde as may be gathered Numb 15.30 3. Some thinke that only such kindling of fire is forbidden ex quo lucrum sperari posset whereof they made gaine as in furnaces and forges Vatab. But the words are generall that not only in their shops and forges but thorowout all their habitations they should not kindle a fire 4. Therefore I preferre rather Cajetanes opinion that it is not simply forbidden to kindle a fire but relativè ad coquendum with relation to the seething and dressing of their meat which asked much businesse and great preparation they were to prepare their meat the day before Exod. 16.23 which shewed a difference betweene the Sabbath and other festivall dayes wherein it was lawfull for them to dresse their meat as in the Pasch chap. 12.16 5. R. Abraham Aben Ezra did hold it lawfull to kindle a fire upon the Lords day to warme them by though not to dresse their meat whereupon the other Rabbines would have pronounced him an Heretike and they writ a booke against him under the name of the Sabbath as though the Sabbath it selfe had spoken against him But as herein Aben Ezra did hit upon the meaning of the Law yet he was deceived in another point that though it were not lawfull to kindle a fire upon the Sabbath from the rising of the Sunne to the setting thereof yet they might doe it in the night before But they used in the account of their feasts to begin from the evening before as they began the feast of unleavened bread upon the 14. day at even Exod. 16.18 They observed then their feasts according to the naturall day which contained both the day and the night not after the artificiall from Sunne to Sunne Tostat. qu. 1. 6. This precept of not kindling a fire upon the Sabbath must be understood extra casum necessitatis beside the case of necessity Marbach For otherwise to kindle a fire to dresse meat rather than to starve and to comfort the sicke was not forbidden 7. It is added thorowout their habitations that is their private dwellings for otherwise in the Tabernacle they did kindle a fire and doe other bodily workes which concerned the service of God Tostat. quaest 1. QUEST III. Why the Lord would have his Temple built sumptuously Vers. 5. LEt him bring an offering to the Lord gold silver c. 1. Moses to shew his faithfulnesse in executing Gods commandement neither adding thereto nor taking any thing therefrom repeateth in these chapters this and the rest following almost the same things verbatim which were prescribed before to be made concerning the Tabernacle chap. 25 26 27 28. Gallas And therefore the Reader is to be referred to the large treatises and questions there handled if he desireth in any thing to be satisfied 2. The people then had both silver and gold and other jewels which they brought out of Egypt with them neither had they bestowed all upon the golden Calfe 3. It so seemed good unto God that his Tabernacle should be builded sumptuously
of doctrine and the right administration of the Sacraments Some which are peculiar unto it though not so essentiall as the practice of charitie as our blessed Saviour saith By this shall men know that yee are my disciples if yee one love another and to be exercised under the crosse for all that will live godly in Christ shall suffer persecution Marbach 5. Places of Confutation 1. Confut. Against excessive giving to superstitious uses Vers. 5. THe people bring too much and more than enough c. Lyranus here giveth this note Hoc possumus diebus istis dicere c. we may say the like in these dayes that in many places Christian people and Princes have offered too many things to the Prelates and Ministers of the Church above necessitie yea and against the profit of the Church in respect of the abuse thereof For many doe abuse the goods of the Church unto pomp and enriching of their carnall kindred And therefore according to the example of Moses Superiours ought sinem imponere temporalium augmentationum to stint the augmenting of such temporall things Thus Lyranus And indeed in former times of superstition the people of a blinde devotion gave too much to the Church which to this day by the Romane Prelacie is much abused to riot excesse and vaine pomp But in these dayes charitie is waxt so cold that the people had more need to be bid to give to the Church than to be stinted in their giving 2. Confut. Churches not more holy in themselves NOw further though the Israelites had but one Tabernacle and afterward a Temple that was not as though it were a more holy place in it selfe than other but partly that place was commanded to maintaine order and unitie in religion partly it was a type and figure of Christ the true Tabernacle So Churches now and the places appointed for Gods service are not more holy in themselves but they serve for comelinesse and order for otherwise the Lord is everie where present to the prayer of the faithfull and therefore Saint Paul willeth men everie where to lift up pure hands c. Simler 3. Confut. Against superfluous cost in Churches THough Moses Tabernacle and afterward Salomons Temple were sumptuously set forth with gold that is no warrant now for Christians to adorne their Churches with gold and precious stones as the Papists do their images 1. That was prescribed to the Hebrewes in regard of their infirmitie to win them from the glorious vanities of the Heathen 2. Most of those golden instruments had their speciall uses in the service of the Tabernacle which being now abolished there is no longer use of any such 3. Neither were they simply necessarie for Gods service for then he would not have suffered the vessels of the Temple to have beene carried into captivitie 4. They had a direct commandement from God to make the Tabernacle in that costly and sumptuous manner but no such charge is now given under the Gospell The Churches of Christians are to be kept after a comely and decent manner But two things are here to be taken heed of 1. That needlesse and unnecessarie cost be not laid upon Churches Exuperius the Bishop of Tolouse used to carrie the body of Christ that is the bread representing his body in a wicker basket and the wine in a glasse 2. The necessitie of the living members of Christs Church must bee preferred before the adorning of Churches Cyrillus Bishop of Jerusalem and Acacius Bishop of Amida among the Persians when they saw that the people were like to be famished melted the Church vessels and sold them fot the releefe of the poore Simler 6. Morall Observations 1. Observ. Peace and concord is required among the spirituall builders of Christs Church Vers. 2. THen wrought Bezaleel c. and all the wise hearted c. Here is commended unto us consensio eollegarum the consent of these colleagues and fellow work-men that they all joyne together in peace to set forward the Lords worke Pelarg. Which should teach the Ministers of the Gospell that they doe not by any unnecessarie contentions breake the peace of the Church but like as in the building of Salomons Temple there was not heard the noise of an hammer so much more the spirituall building of the Church should be set forward without contention 2. Observ. Ministers must use their gifts with discretion Vers. 8. CVrtaines of fine twined linnen of blue silke purple Origen hereupon giveth this note Sciamus miscere aurum cum hysso c. quid tibi prodest ut habeas haec si uti nescias c. Let us also know how to mingle gold with silke c. what doth it profit thee to have these things if thou know not how to use them c. Origen commendeth the wisdome and prudence of these artificers that thereby Ministers should learne to labour also for wisdome with discretion to use their gifts 3. Observ. Faithfulnesse is required in Officers Vers. 5. THe people bring too much Herein appeareth the faithfulnesse of these work-men which might have purloyned much to their owne advantage but they deale most faithfully not turning any thing to their owne private profit Tostat. qu. 2. So did Ioshua when he divided out the land of Canaan to the children of Israel hee allotted nothing to himselfe neither would bee his owne carver but when everie tribe had received his part then they cast out a portion for Ioseph Iosh. 19. CHAP. XXXVII 1. The Method and Argument IN this Chapter are rehearsed such things as were before declared chap. 25. and in some part of the thirtieth 1. The Arke is described with the Mercie-seat which was in the most holy place to vers 10. 2. Those instruments are made which were in the Sanctuarie without 1. The table of shew-bread with the instruments to vers 17. 2. The golden candlesticke with the parts and ornaments to vers 25. 3. The golden Altar with the things thereto belonging to vers 29. These things are more fully set downe chap. 25. chap. 30. so that it were needlesse to rehearse them againe here 2. The divers readings See before the diversitie of translations in chap. 25. with the which this chapter agreeth verbatim almost word for word unnecessarie repetitions of the same things may well be spared 3. The questions discussed QUEST I. How the rings are said to have beene in the sides of the Arke Vers. 3. HE cast foure rings for the corners thereof This must be understood with a double limitation or exception 1. Properly the corners of the Arke were either above or below where the plaine superficies did meet with the corners for a solid angle cannot consist of fewer quam ex tribus superficiebus trigonis than of three corner points But it had beene inconvenient for these rings either to be placed in the corner point above or below therefore here the angle or corner is taken for the meeting of the two sides together 2.
the Tabernacle the Romanists would warrant their consecrating of Churches with oyle and other ceremonies and they hould it as a principle that it is not lawfull to say Masse in a Church not hallowed 2. By such ceremonies and rites they say religion and devotion is stirred up in mens minds 3. By such hallowing devils are expelled 4. Constantine when he had built a Chruch called thither the Nicene Fathers to consecrate it 5. Christ vouchsafed to be present at the dedication feast in Ierusalem Contra. As we condemne not a Christian dedication blessing and sanctifying of things without superstition as David dedicated his house which he had newly built Psal. 30. in the title which kind of sanctifying is done partly by prayer grounded upon Gods word as the Apostle sheweth 1 Timoth. 4.5 partly by the sober and right use of such things when they are employed to a good end as the Churches of Christians are hallowed and sanctified by the word of God and exercises of religion there used So yet such superstitious consecrations as with oyle tapers crossings and such like we utterlie condemne 1. There is no hallowing or sanctifying of any thing without the warrant of Gods word 1 Timoth. 4.5 but they have no word for such ceremonies to bee used 2. They make more account of their owne traditions than of Gods institution for every Priest may baptise but their Bishops onely hallow Churches 3. They commit idolatrie by this meanes in dedicating Churches to Saints and so take away part of Gods honour 4. They make these ceremonies a part of Gods worship and ascribe spirituall vertue unto them for they give indulgences and pardons of sinnes by the vertue of such hallowed Churches The former reasons are of no force 1. The typicall ceremonies of the Law such as was the anointing of the Tabernacle doe not bind us now they are abolished 2. True devotion and religion cannot be stirred up in the mind by humane rites and observations which are not grounded upon Gods word 3. By the same reason if by their anointing devils are driven out of Churches it were good that all houses and other places were anointed to drive away evill spirits but our Saviour sheweth that devils are cast out by prayer and fasting therefore not by such toyes 4. Constantines Church was consecrated by the prayers and thankesgiving of the Christian Bishops not by any such superstitious usages 5. The dedication of the Temple was a legall observation and concerneth us not now neither doth it follow because Christ observed it that it is to be kept still for he was also circumcised to shew his obedience to the Law Simlerus 3. Confut. That there is not in Orders imprinted an indeleble character Vers. 15. THe anointing shall bee a signe that the Priesthood shall be everlasting unto them Tostatus out of this place would inferre that in orders as likewise in Baptisme there is imprinted an indeleble character in the soule which can never be blotted out as these were but once anointed during their life to minister in the Priesthood qu. 4. Contra. 1. This place proveth no such thing for it is not spoken of the anointing of their persons which could be for no long continuance but of the anointing and consecrating of Aaron and his posteritie for the priesthood perpetually the anointing and consecrating of the Fathers could not print an indeleble character in their posteritie 2. This indeleble character or badge which they say is by Baptisme and Orders imprinted in the soule and can never be blotted out is but a device of their owne for what badge or marke of Iudas Apostleship could remaine when hee had betrayed his Master and manifestly shewed himselfe to be the child of perdition or what could be imprinted in Simon Magus soule by Baptisme of whom Saint Peter saith He had no part nor fellowship with them and his heart was not aright in the sight of God Act. 8.21 See more of this controversie Synops. Cont. 2. error 98. 4. Confut. Outward succession not alwaies required in the Ministerie Vers. 12. THou shalt bring Aaron and his sonnes c. The Romanists make this speciall exception against the Ministers of the Gospell that they can shew no lawfull succession which is required in an ordinarie calling nor yet miracles to prove their extraordinarie calling therefore they hold their calling to be none at all Contra. 1. Aaron was the Lords high Priest not by succession from any other but by consecration from Moses the civill governour at Gods appointment and so no doubt but Princes reformers of religion by their authoritie may establish Ministers and Preachers thereunto rightly called 2. Everie extraordinarie calling was not confirmed by signes as divers of the Prophets are not found to have wrought miracles 3. And though it were granted that the calling of the first Ministers of the Gospell were in respect of the manner extraordinarie yet because for the matter and doctrine it is not new but the same which the Apostles preached there need no miracles seeing the same faith was before ratified and sealed by the miracles wrought by the Apostles Simlerus See Synops. Centur. 1. err 20. 6. Morall observations 1. Observ. Not to come before the Lord without due preparation Vers. 31. THey washed their hands By this ceremonie was signified that none should assemble or draw neere unto God with impure and unwashen affections Oleaster As Moses also was bid to put off his shooes when hee drew neere unto the fire burning in the bush So the Apostle will have men to examine themselves before they come unto the Lords table 1 Cor. 11.28 2. Observ. Gods house is to be reverenced Vers. 34. THe glorie of the Lord filled the Tabernacle God shewed such glorious signes of his presence to the end his Tabernacle should be the more reverenced of all Marbach As Iacob said Gen. 28.17 How fearefull is this place this is none other than the house of God So David also saith Psal. 5.7 In thy feare will I worship toward thy holy Temple 3. Observ. The greater gifts one hath the more hee should humble himselfe Vers. 35. SO Moses could not enter Moses the more familiarly the Lord vouchsafed to speake unto tanto se humiliorem praebet c. sheweth himselfe so much the more modest and humble he will not presume to enter into the Tabernacle where Gods presence was though at other times the Lord had admitted him to familiar conference This example teacheth men that the more excellent gifts they have they should so much more shew themselves humble and lowly Gallas As Saint Paul though he laboured more than all the Apostles yet confesseth He was the least of the Apostles and not worthie to be called an Apostle Ves. 36. VVhen the cloud ascended the children of Israel went forward Oleaster hereupon giveth this good note Beatus homo quem direxeris Domine qui non se movet nisi signum ei ostenderis c. Happie