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A77979 An exposition with practical observations continued upon the fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh chapters of the prophesy of Hosea· Being first delivered in several lectures at Michaels Cornhil London. By Jeremiah Burroughs. Being the fifth book, published by Thomas Goodwyn, William Greenhil, Sydrach Simson William Bridge, John Yates, William Adderly. Burroughs, Jeremiah, 1599-1646.; Goodwin, Thomas, 1600-1680. 1650 (1650) Wing B6070; Thomason E588_1; ESTC R206293 515,009 635

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Lord calls to contend by fire Surely the Lord doth it at this day he calleth to contend with England by fire in a most dreadful way and who knows what the end shall be That he hath a most dreadful controversy against England at this day will appear if we further take these considerations First That a people complaining of bondage heretofore yet when God offered deliverance should be so far left of God as they shall now rather be willing to make themselves and their posterity bond-slaves Surely God hath a dreadful controversy against us it were else impossible that such a thing should be in the hearts of men Men love liberty they groan under bondage We did groan but a few yeers ago and the Lord was coming to help us and yet we are now so left of God that we even turn again to our former bondage and would have our ears to be bored that we might be perpetual slaves Secondly It is not only that we wil turn again to bondage but this is out of a spirit of enmitie against the yoke of Jesus Christ This is the very ground and bottom of it in a great part of the Kingdom whatsoever yoke they have upon them they are resolved they will not have the yoke of Christ out of a spirit of enmity against the Godly party who desire and endeavor Reformation At the beginning of this Parliament when we began to have hopes of some liberty and reformation Oh what a joy was there generally in the Kindom all men agreed together but when those that were wicked and carnal began to see that their godly neighbours rejoyced that they blessed God for what was done that they had their minds now they turn out of a spirit of malice against them rather than they shall rejoyce rather than they shall have their minds we will turn back again to the bondage we were in before and we will stand and oppose that which heretofore we rejoyced in Certainly here is the very ground of so much contradiction as there is at this day They have therefore turned Malignants against that Cause which a man would wonder that ever rational men should be against But there is a spirit of malice against Christ and his Ordinances fearing a reformation they would have their lusts and they think if reformation come they should not have them with that liberty they have had here is the very reason that the Gentry and others in the country are opposite Surely God hath a controversie with us Thirdly That men should so vily desert those whom they have chosen and trusted who have been faithful those Worthies in Parliament who have ventured their lives for them basely and unworthily now to desert them it is one of the greatest judgments of God upon the hearts of men and therefore upon a nation that ever was If they complain of them now they would much more have complained of them if they had complyed suppose the Parliament had made up a patched reformation and a crazie peace that uppon any occasion we had bin in danger to have had war broken out again would not the people of the land have cried out of their unfaithfulness But now they venture themselves and labour so hard for a sound peace therefore to be deserted An unworthy generation a generation that we have cause to fear is become the generation of Gods wrath and the people of his curse People are affected according as success is we complain of those in Parliament because of some difficulties that are in the work yet if they had not done what they did they would have complained much more So of Ministers sometimes Ministers speak and stir up people because their consciences tell them they should be unfaithful to their country and to the cause of God if they did not now they cry out as they did of Luther that they are the trumpets of sedition and rebellion whereas on the other side if they should say nothing then people would have cryed out that they had betraied their Country and that they were not so faithful in their places as they should therefore people were so bad as they were Thus hard it is for God or man to please people Again That not only people should desert them but that so many of Nobles and some Members of the Parliament themselves should desert their Brethren there and joyn with Papists French and Walloons When as not long since a company of vile wretches being gathered together to fight against our brethren of Scotland and yet those vile people could not be brought to fight against them by any means But now not the vile ones but Nobles Knights and Gentry can be brought to fight against the Parliament their own Brethren Is not here a mighty hand of God against us Could this ever be if God had not a dreadful controversie against England Fourthly That men should be so blinded as to think the Protestant Religion should be maintained by an Army of Papists that the Laws and Liberty of the subject should be maintained by an Army of Delinquents and strangers yea that the King with Papists Delinquents French and Walloons should better maintain the Liberty of the Subject and the Protestant Religion than with the Parliament That people should come to beleeve this is not the hand of God upon the people of this land Are they not infinitely besotted can we think that men indued with reason should do this Surely were not the Judgment of God fearfully upon their souls it could not be beleeved that ever this should be done by people that had any rationality in them Fiftly God surely calls to contend fearfully with us in that he should suffer such an ill cause to prosper so as it hath done and to get to that height as it is It is that which is the amazement both of England and the Countries about us that such an ill cause should get so high and prosper so much as it hath done Surely the Lord is against us or else it could not have been Sixtly When there shall be such a desperate design so long a hatching drawn forth in such a season and so driven on and now breaking forth in such violence and yet men cannot see it The tract of the design is a● cleer as the Sun at noon day and drawn on from one step to another by comparing of one thing with another we may see it as apparantly as the light Would you not think it a besotting thing if there should be a train of Gunpouder laied along in the streets from such a place to the Parliament House to blow it up and yet that men should pass by and say they see no such thing Certainly the drawing on of the design against our Religion and State to bring us under tyranny and slavery the tract is as evident and plain as ever there was train of Gunpruder laid to such a place that men would willingly blow up and yet
word here translated Swearing it is of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and signifies Maledicere Execrare and likewise P●rjurare It signifies these three things to Curse and to be Perjured and to Swear Any of these three this word importeth And likewise it signifies sometimes to howl out Ejulare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joel 1.8 Lament like a Virgin girded with sackcloth c. It is the same word Lament or howl out So that the same word that signifies cursing and swearing and forswearing signifies to howl and cry for God hath a time to make cursers and swearers and forswearers to howl and cry out An Oath is a sacred thing a part of Gods worship and therefore the abusing of this is a dreadful sin Especially if it be abused to swear to that which is false In Aegypto siquu juret per Caput Regn non praestet morte plectitur nec permititur ut auto vel aliâ revitā redimat Paulus Phagius in his Comment upon Genesis 42. saith it is reported of the Egyptians that if any man did but swear by the life of the King and did not perform his Oath that man was to die and n● gold or any thing in the world could redeem hi● life so did Heathens hate that sin of per●urie Yea we have found others that have not had much Religion in them yet have extreamly hated the sin of ordinary swearing I have read of Lewis the 9. of France that he punished that sin by searing the lips of swearers with an hot Iron which Law being executed upon a Citiz●n of Paris some said it was two cruel which he hearing of gave this answer I would to God saith he that with searing mine own lips with an hot Iron I could banish out of my Realm all abuse of Oaths He could be willing to sea● his own lips that he might banish the abuse of swearing Chrysostom in some 16. Homelies together if not more 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hom. 11. Ad pop Antioch whatsoever his text was he alwaies concluded against swearing as being such a vile and notorious sin And amongst other things because some pleaded custom he putteth them upon this saith he if you would but punish it thus that if there were an oath sworn in your house he that swore should but abstain but from one meals meat that that servant or that child that swore an oath should not dine that day that would do somewhat yet saith he the command of God will not do so much as that Divers other expressions I might name but I must hasten That place Jer. 23.10 is remarkable for this and sutable to this text For because of swearing the land mourneth the pleasant places of the wilderness are dried up and their course is evil and their force is not right It is a sin that hath more malignancy in it against God by how much the less the temptation is unto it I verily beleeve that if God had never made the third Commandement there would never have been so many Oaths in the world but it springs from a meer malignancy of spirit that is in men against God because he hath forbidden it For there is no profit that can come by it If men be guilty of thi● sin meerly thorough a vain custom what high indignitie is this against God what slighting and neglect of God is there As if sinning against God were an argument of no more weight but that the using of a thing without any reason when nothing can be got by it could down-weigh that argument Custom indeed is enough to prev●il in things that are of no moment a now some man that hath by custom gotten such a kind of posture of his body or taking hold of hi● beard and the like such a kind of gesture he hath gotten by custom and he cannot leave it why becau●e the thing in its own nature hath no great consequence in it and so custom prevaileth But that custom should be enough to be set against the high displeasure of the blessed God or be set ●gainst his solemn professi●n that he will not hold that soul guiltless that takes his name in vain this argueth a most insufferable vilifying his sacred Majestie Secondly To swear that thereby the words of men may be graced this is more horrid impiety As if the polluting of the holy Name of the most holy God were the best ornament of thy speech as if the dishonour put upon God were the best grace to thy language Thirdly To swear out of a conceit that this argueth braveness of spirit a braver spirit than other men have a spirit of valor and courage as if according to the fulness of mouthing of Oaths there were a braveness of spirit this yet is more hideous wickedness As if that were the courage and excellency of our spirits to fly in the very face of God Whence it is that many men if any anger them what do they do they fall a cursing and swearing that is when others displease them they will fly in Gods face that is the language of it though you will not dare to say so but that is the language of your practice others displease and anger me and I to revenge my self will fly in the very face of God A hiddeous wickedness there is in this that you do not think of You that are passionate spirits when you come home and your wives and children or servants anger you you fall to cursing and swearing Know you do no other but this this is the language of your practice they displease me and to revenge my self I will fly in the very face of God And whence it is that Gentlemen and Noble-men and those that belong unto them are such great swearers because they imagine that it is an argument of some braveness of spirit and that thereby they express a spirit of a higher strain than other men Oh hiddeous and abominable wickedness This is all the valour that many men have that they da●e sin against the glorious God and never be troubled at it wherea a godly man is described in Scripture Eccles 9.2 To be a m●● th●t feareth in Oath but for these it is not for them to fear it is for tim●rous melanch●lly poor spiri●s but they are m●n of b●ave spirits ●nd they would have men know th●t they can swear and not be troubl●d at it they have stronger spirits than o her m●n h●ve Thu● is the bles●●● God di●honored by this sin more than we are aware of There is a fourth sort that are higher than these and those are they that swear that they may not be accounted Puritans or of the number of such a faction Because where they go if they be but suspected to be savorers of such kind of men as were heretofore named by that nick-name and now are by another I say if they go into company where they think they may be suspected to be inclined to that partie what do they
get any thing by any fair way then they invent lyes and make lyes their refuge It is the Maxim of the Jesuites C●lumniare audacter aliquid herebit Calumminate and ly stoutly to purpose and somewat will stick for every one that shall hear of the report shall not come to hear of the answer that can be given to it And that is their policie to spread abroad lyes as much as they can and especially to invent lyes of those that are most eminent and active in publick affairs and that is the reason of those strange inventions that are raised of such as are most active in Parliament and also in the City and in the Ministry things so hideous that if they were true would render men altogether unfit to be entertained in a Common-wealth But you will say what can they get by it when it proveth to be false Yes because their lye● spread a great way further than the answer to them can spread And those in Jer. 20.10 do fully set out the condition of these men I heard the defaming of many saith the Prophet how Report say they and we will report it This was their plot against Jeremiah the truth i● we must defame Jeremiah we see he hath got a great deal of credit and prevails with the people and we know not how to help our selves only if we can but defame him if we can but raise up something that may take away his esteem with the people we may then have our end Ier 20.10 Opened therefore devise somewhat report and we will report it we will spread it abroad we will put it into a frame and print it As now if a company of Malignants get into a Tavern there they wil talk against this Minister and the other against thi● Parliament man and the other against this Citizen and the other what shall we do say they we see they prevail let us devise somewhat that may defame them report somewhat and we will spread it This hath been the way to this day to maintain that Antichristian partie that great Lye Jer. 9.3 They bend their tongue like their bow for lyes and ver 5. They have taught their tongue to speak lyes They are now become artificial in it and they do it the rather because they know it will please some great ones It was so in former times Pro. 29.12 If a Ruler hea ken to lyes all his servants are wicked If any Officer or any that are about him see that it will humour him to raise ill reports against Gods servants the servants of such a Ruler will be wicked and raise lyes enow And amongst other places that is famous Hos 7.3 Hos 7.3 the text saith there They make the King glad with their wickedness and the Princes with th●ir lyes Opened It is spoken of J●roboam and the other Kings that followed him that set up false worship How there were a great many in Israel whose consciences would not give them leave to follow that way of false worship upon that there were a company of Promoters and Apparitors and Baylifs and some Courtiers they would invent lyes against those that would needs go up to Jerusalem to worship and would not content themselves with the Calves that the King set up Now when they had invented lyes of some of the most zealous men amongst the people they brought these tales to the King and said thus Did your Majestie hear such a thing There are such men in your Majesties dominions that dwell in such To●ns and they are forsooth so scrupulous they will not be content with that Religion that the Law hath established but they must go up to Jerusalem to worship yea and at s●ch a● m● they get into a corner and there they commit s●ch and such wickedness and they live in these and these wicked waie● And thus they came and told the King t●les of them and the text sai●s They mad● the King glad with their tales the King was tickled with it and rejoyced at it and he gave them his hand gave them encouragement Cert●inly amongst u● there hath not been wanting men that have endeavoured this that w●●ld have accounted this their happiness to get a t● i●●o tell of a Puritan or of a godly Mini●●er though it were never so false Thus we have briefly pa●● over this second charge in this second verse ●wea●ng and Lying The next follows The Lord hath a contr●●● 〈◊〉 with 〈…〉 of the land for Murder for Killing Murder that is a provoking sin God seldom suffers it to go unrevenged in this world Whence are all those discoveries of Murders scarce any one but can tell strange stories of the discovery of murder We have a vain distinction of murder man-slaughter as 't is call'd that forsooth if a man be angry and in a passion kills another thi● is man-slaughter and no murder God will not own that distinction for if you shall by your passion make your self a beast and so kill a man God will require this at your hand for Gen 9.5 God saith that he will r●quire the blood of man at the hand of every beast much more at the hand of a man that by his passion makes himself a beast The life of a man is precious to God and God will not suffer any creature to have absolute power over it he keeps the dominion of mens lives unto himself Mr. Ainsworth upon Gen. 9.6 citeth the the Jewish Doctors affirming that a Murderer though it were possible for him to give all the riches of the world yet he must be put to death because the life of the murdered is the possession of the most holy God this is their argument Certainly it is not in the power of any man upon earth to save a murderer be he what he will be The greatest man upon earth hath no liberty from God no prerogative to save a Murderer but he that sheds blood by man must his blood be shed God avengeth the blood that Manasseh shed a long while after his death 2 King 24.4 And for innocent blood that he shed which God would not pardon Though Maness●h did repent and so we have cause to hope wel in regard of his soul and his eternal estate * Though Calvin seems to be of the contrary opinion Deut. 28. yet the Lord came upon the Nation after his daies and would not pardon his shedding of innocent blood What adoe do we find in the Law concerning the killing of a man When a man was found dead in the field nigh unto a City the Elders of that City they must come to the dead body wash their hands over the heifer to be slain and ●ake a solemn Oath that they had no hand in the murder and so clear the City from the guilt of it This shews how precious the life of man is in Gods esteem and that God hath a controvers●e with a land for shedding of blood And if this be
but upon the rule according to what God had required They understood not this They were led away meerly with the fair shews and pomp of Religion but they did not understand that al the acceptation of divine worship cometh from having a divine rule Most people at this day understand not this and that is a great evil Thirdly They did not understand this That their safety did more depend upon the true worship of God than upon all the politick wisdom that possibly could be They understood not that their protection depended upon Gods service and worship but they thought to go politickly on to provide for their own safety and they thought their safety depended upon their wise men that understood better than they And then Fourthly They did not understand that whatsoever was commanded by their Governours or taught by their Priests yet if it was against the mind of God it would not excuse them from judgment and deliver them from the wrath of God though their Migistrates did command it and their Priests did teach it They did not understand these four things and for not understanding these four things they shall fall This was that which brought them down and did ruin this people There are divers degrees of not-understanding First When people do not understand meerly for want of the means of knowledg This excuseth not wholly but they shall even fall though they have no means Secondly When men have means yet thorough their negligence in the use of the means they do not understand Thirdly When they are not only guilty of negligence but they oppose and shut their eyes wickedly against that means of knowledg Then they shall fall indeed Fourthly When having knowledg heretofore now they lose it by their often resisting of knowledg and so come to fail in their understanding Lastly When they so provoke God as that he hath given them up unto a sottish spirit so●● at they shall not understand Now these people fall deepest Where all these five are as they are in many places surely that people must needs fall My brethren have we not cause to fear our not understanding at this day in these five degrees Applic. And in a great part even in those four Generals The not-understanding the vain pretences of our adversaries of what our Cavaliers say First That they fight for Religion and they make such and such kind of protestations and they intend nothing but the liberty of the subject many people are led away with these pretences and understand not that their design is to bring them under slavery and to take away their Religion And this want of understanding is like to cause us to fall Secondly People understand not that the worship of God must have the word of God to be the rule and that the government of the Church must be according to the word They think what shall be most sutable to the reasons of understanding men that is best Because men understand not this we are in danger to fall Thirdly People at this day think there is too much to do about Religion and let us rather go in a way of policy to provide for our selves as for that why should we injure or trouble our selves so much we have troubled our selves too much already People think not their safety is in Religion therefore they shall fall Fourthly people think if they be taught so by their Ministers that's enough for them Is it not so with us now Therefore we have cause to fear that the Lord intendeth us a grievous fall Yea as those four Ojects so the four degrees of want of understanding In many places they have no means many Towns and Countries have scarce a Sermon in half a yeer In many places where there is most means there they are negligent of it they rebel and shut their eyes against it and are weary of it And others that have had knowledg heretofore have resisted their light are grown sottish yea it is to be ●eared that God hath delivered many amongst us over to a sottish spirit it is impossible they should remain so ignorant as they are if God in his just jugment had not delivered them up unto a sottish spirit To instance in this Is it not a sottish spirit of men that after all their oppression and misery that they have suffered yet they will not understand but joyn with those that have opprest them and lay all the blame upon them that venture their lives to deliver them Surely this is most gross sottish ignorance that when men shall come and spoil them of their goods and ravish their wives and children yet in the mean time they rather cry out of those that venture their lives to do them good as if the cause of their misery was from them Surely these people do not understand can it be expected but that these people should fall themselves and their posterity into the depth of misery to be made slaves for ever They shall fall Idolatrous people shall fall that 's the next note An Angel proclaimeth this Babylon is fallen is fallen It is fallen already my brethren how ever Idolaters seem to lift up their heads high yet they are falling and fal they shal God hath pronounced it and the time is at hand they have fallen off from God and fall they shall by the hand of God and the prouder they grow the nearer they are to their fall Pride goes before a fall while the Gospel of Christ and his pure Ordinances that are now so opposed they shall stand and all superstitious waies and persons they shall fall That is observable that place before named Revel 14.6 Rev. 14.6 Opened An Angel flye● in the midst of Heaven and preacheth the everlasting Gospel and within a vers or two another Angel cryes out Babylon is fallen is fall●n When Babylon with all their Idolatrous wayes shall be fallen then shall the everlasting Gospel be preached the Gospel and the Ordinances of Christ shall be everlasting shall continue for ever when all superstitious vanities shall fall We find it so how ever they thought to bear up all their superstitious waies by all the means that ever the devil or wicked men could devise to keep them up to perpetuity yet have we not found that God hath blasted them and many of them are fallen and though God bring his people into affliction yet they shall rise the wayes of God shal rise Zion shall rise Babylon shal fall the people that understand not they shall fall A word or two about the meaning of the word in the original The word is from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall fall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is nor often in scripture very rare and I find divers translations of it Shall be beaten so some Shall be brought into captivity so others And others again give this the meaning of the word and so it doth properly signifie Shall be perplexed The word signifies to be
and twenty thousand sheep yet if after this at all thou shalt forsake me all that thou hast done shall be rejected Therefore those sacrifices that are not joyned with offering up of our selves as a sacrifice are such as God will make us ashamed of But if together with our sacrifices we offer up our selves as a sacrifice you shall never be ashamed of that sacrifice Therefore you that are poor people and weak parted and have but little grace yet if you have true grace though you cannot offer up such large prayers your heart is not so enlarged perhaps as others are and you look upon your sacrifices as poor and mean and as unworthy to be tendered up unto the great God but dost thou then offer up thy self unto God as a sacrifice It is true my parts are weak and my abilities are poor and mean but Oh Lord what I am and what I can do I tender it unto thee here Lord take soul body life estate liberty and all I do enjoy I tender it up all unto thee as a sacrifice I say then peace be unto thee those sacrifices thou lookest upon as being ashamed of them God will not make thee ashamed of them but he accepts of thy poor mean and weak services when together with them thou offerest up thy self as a sacrifice unto him whereas if thou didst not tender up thy self as a sacrifice though thy services were ten thousand times more glorious than they are they would be all cast back as dung in thy face Sixtly Be humbled after all your best sacrifices take no Answ 6 glory unto your selves but be vile in your own eyes after you have done the best duty that ever you have done in your life when you perform any duty that seems to have any excellency in it and perhaps others look upon it as having much excellency in it if your hearts be puffed up with it the glory of it is gone and it is that which you must be ashamed of though Answ 7 now you be honored for it and pride your selves in it Lastly Tender up all in Christ in the worthiness of his infinite sacrifice Christ is that sacrifice that is pleasing unto God and all sacrifices are pleasing unto God only thorough the merit and worthiness of the sacrifice of the Lord Jesus Christ who hath tendered up himself unto God the Father as a Sacrifice to heal all our sacrifices and to take away all the shame of our sacrifices 1 Pet. 2.5 Ye also as lively stones are built up a spiritual house an holy Priesthood to offer up spiritual sacrifices how by Jesus Christ Mark you are as lively stones and lively stones built up not only stones lying here one and there another but lively stones built up in a holy communion that is the meaning built up to offer sacrifices and that spiritual sacrifices But mark though our sacrifices be never so spiritual yet they cannot be acceptable to God but by Jesus Christ by Jesus Christ that great Sacrifice they come to be acceptable unto God that is the sacrifice the Saints shall glory in and bless God for to all eternity and never shall be ashamed of their sacrifices when they are tendered up unto God thorough the merit of that sacrifice And thus through Gods good hand of providence we are come to the end of this fourth Chapter CHAP. V. Vers 1. Hear ye this O Priests and hearken ye house of Israel and give ear Oh house of the King for judgment is towards you because ye have been a snare in Mispah and a net spread upon Tabor IN this Chapter we have the summoning of all sorts unto judgment The sum of the Chapter A heavy charge laid and condemnation pronounced against Israel and Judah too brought in as guilty and sentence past upon her also And at last the good effect that the judgments of God should produce is shewed That is the summe of the Chapter This Chapter is the beginning of another Sermon of Hosea Coherence It seems to be preached as some think in the reign of Pekah son of Remaliah king of Israel that you reade of in 2 King 15. The time and especially toward the end of his reign which was the same time that Ahaz reigned in Judah when that horrible confusion was brought into Religion much defilement in the Worship of God he having placed the Altar that he brought the fashion of from Damascus in the house of God therfore the Lord enveigheth by his Prophet not only against Israel but against Judah here The summons to judgment you have in the first verse The accusation and condemnation of Israel by themselves Analysis to the end of the 5. verse The accusation of Judah at the end of the 5th and 6th verses Then Israel and Judah together to the 15th verse And at last the close of the Chapter shews the issue of all what all shall come to Sumōns In the summons observe these three several words Hear ye Hearken Give eare Hear ye Priests Hearken ye house of Israel Give ear O house of the King Obser When God cometh in waies of judgment he expects we should seriously mind what he is a doing We should not only Hear but Hearken and Give ear God will force audience then We are bound to hearken and to give ear to Gods commanding Word But if we refuse it he will have us to hear and give ear to his threatning Word and if that be refused he will force us to hear and give ear to his condemning Word for so it is here Hear ye Hearken Give ear for judgment is against you all There are Three sorts named here Priests People House of the King All sorts are cited to judgment for corruption was gone over all and judgment cometh against them all From thence the Note is That Obser Generality in sins is no means to escape judgments It is true Generality of offences with men may be a means to escape punishment One and all with men is a word of security When Souldiers offend if there be multitudes of them in the same offence and they cry One and al there is no medling then with any of them But it is not so with God God regards not multitudes and generality of all sorts when all sorts are involved in the offence Men think I do but as others do and I shall scape as well as others With men it is somwhat but it is nothing with God though all sorts offend yet there is never a whit the more security thereby unto any We have a notable Scripture for that Nah. 1.12 Though they be quiet and likewise many yet thus shall they be cut down when he shall pass thorow Though they be many yes thus shall they be cut down He begins here with the Priests Hear O ye Priests They were the principal cause of all the evil first of the evil of sin and then of the evil of punishment
and therefore he begineth with them They are called Priests not that they were true Priests for they were not of the tribe of Levi Observ Priests but they were so reputed to be The Priests have usually been the causes of all the wickedness in and judgments on a Nation Jer. 23.15 Prophaness is gone throughout the Land from the Prophet and the Priests Multitude of Scriptures are evident before us that layes the evil of Nations upon Priests And hath it not been so with us and is it not so at this day Applic. There was never a more filthy sink of scandalous superstitious Priests in a Kingdom than of late amongst us as hath begun and will yet further appear unto you There hath been an accusation against our Parliament that orthodox grave godly Divines have been put out of their livings See the first Century of malignant Ministers ejected I suppose you begin to see what those grave orthodox godly Divines were that were put out under evident and plain proofs it is made known to the world to the satisfaction of them and you have but the beginning of it you will have a great deale more afterward Heare ye Priests And hearken ye house of Israel that is the next Exposit The house of Israel by that is meant the common people Priests first the house of Israel next and the house of the King that is last And the house of Israel is set between the Priests and the house of the King upon this ground because by these two by the corruption of the Priests and the house of the King all was swaied the cause of the evil of the people came from them both partly from the Priests and partly from the house of the King It came both waies to the people and between them both the people were undone Obser Let these two join in any sinful way in a Kingdom the Priests and the house of the King let them joyn and set up what they wil in worship the people will go that way they go If but one of them be right there is a great deal of hope of much good but wo to a people when both of them are corrupt when both Priests and the house of the King too are corrupt If the house of the King should be corrupt yet if the Priests and so the Ministers if they kept up the truth and vigor and life of Religion things would go reasonably well in a Kingdom though Religion might be persecuted yet the life of it would not be taken away Whatsoever Laws Magistrates did enact against the waies of God except Ministers be brought to comply those Laws will not be brought to prevail with the consciences of people nor with their practices Jeroboam and the other Princes saw it was in vain for them to think to prevail with the people except they could get the Priests to be for them therefore it was the great de●●gn of Jeroboam to get the Priests of his side which he easily did for all preferment came by him he raised whom he would and then because that their means and preferment lay upon him they would joyn with him in what way he went Object But mark Might not the people excuse themselves and say what should we do On the one side authoritie enjoyns us on the other side our Ministers teach us to do thus and thus what shall we do they might think to excuse themselves Answ No judgment is against you Oh house of Israel notwithstanding the Priests and the house of the King have done thus and thus yet you are not to be excused A great many reasons may be given why the people may not be excused though they be commanded thus and thus Arias Montan. I remember Arias Montanus upon this Scripture gives this reason why men are not to be excused though they be commanded by the King Kings for he laies down this for a rule That no King can make any Law but by the people they cannot saith he make Laws by themselves alone the people must consent to th●m some way or other therefore the people are involved in al the wicked Laws in a Kindom It is not enough therefore for you to say such and such Laws are made and we cannot help it we are to know it is not meerly the wil of a King that is a Law to a Kingdom but Laws enacted is where people have their hands one way or other in them This answer he gives and he quoteth an Heathen to shew that people must have their hand in the Laws that are made especially some people for some Kingdoms are otherwise governed than others Not alike Absolute as som in Scripture therefore there is no reason for people to say in the Scripture such Kingdoms did so and so We know in one Countrey the Kings authority reacheth so far and in another so far in one Countrey Kindoms are by Election in another by Inheritance in one Countrey the female inherits in another none but the male therefore the power of Kings and their limits is not what hath been heretofore in such and such a place but what is the constitution of that Kingdom of which he is King for many are limitted in their power in one Countrey more than in another Therefore the people are not to be excused because of their evil especially in these times Now this sheweth evidently that God would have every one examine what is taught him and what is commanded him by his superiours It is cleer from hence The people art here cited to judgment and placed between the Priests and the Kings house though the Priests taught them superstitious waies though the Kings house commanded them yet they must be judged then I say it is cleer that God would have every one examine what is taught him and commanded him by his superiours and himself to know the rule of his own actions It is no answer for God to say I am taught thus or I am commanded thus you must know the rule of your own actions your selves for you your selves must give an account unto God But you may say Quest Shall it be left to every one to judge of the truth of what is taught and of the lawfulness of what is commanded If every one shall judg of what he thinks in his conscience lawful what order can there be For answer unto that Answ Whatsoever the inconvenience may be it appears evidently to be a truth for we must answer unto God for our actions therefore we must know the rule of our actions therefore First let the inconveniency be what it wil the truth is good But secondly I say this that every one must judge so far as it concerns his own act he cannot judge so far as it concerns the Magistrates act what is fit for the Magistrate to command Note nor the Ministers act what is fit for him to teach but he may and he ought to judge
for all high places and these Metenymically for all their superstition and Idolatry committed upon those high places and then the Expos 1 meaning is this Your Idolatry upon these high places hath been a net and a snare to the people Expos 2 But I think rather the sense to be Metaphorical thus These mountains were places very delightful and places where was much hunting and the Gentry of the kingdome took much delight in hunting in these mountains and there they were wont to spread their nets and set their snares for fowls and beasts Now saith God You have been a snare on Mispah and a net upon Tabor that is thus Mispah and Tabor are two mountains where there is much hunting for fowl and beasts and the truth is you watchmen and other people that joyn with you have been huntsmen that have laid snares for the souls of my people as they lay snares on Mispah and Tabor because they were eminent places for hunting therefore God chargeth them for laying snares for the souls of his people and hunting them and catching them in their waies of superstition and Idolatry The Gospel is called a Net in the Scripture and the Ministers of the Gospel are to spread it but the cords and twists of that net are precious they are the blessed truths of the Gospel the mysteries of the Gospel and happy are those that are caught in that net But the net of superstitious Priests and Governors it is made of other manner of stuff they have their ness too that they spread and catch the souls of the people in And the net that is here meant they had to catch the souls of the people for at the first Note Jeroboam and the rest of the Princes would not go on in a violent way to force people to a false religion but would seek by their cunning devices to catch the hearts of people in their love of false worship and they would spread their nets for people before they were aware and the threads and lines it was woven withal were these Method of Princes Priests to delude the people about the worship of God First The plea of Authority Doth not authority command you to do thus and thus Secondly The Priests the Authority of the Priestly Office Do not the Priests the holy fathers do thus and thus and have you more wit than they more wit than all the Statesmen and the Kings house and more wit than all your Teachers too Thirdly We worship God we do not alter our Religion we hope we worship Jehovah that you worship Fourthly The things required of you are not very much it is but a circumstance of place you worship at Jerusalem it is but worshiping at Dan and Bethel here before these two Images you shall not worship the Images but worship in this place Fiftly We intend nothing but that which is for your good all that we aim at is for your benefit for that was Jeroboams pretence It is too much for you to go up to Jerusalem to go twice a year so great and tedious and dangerou● a journey no saith he I tender the good of my people more therefore let them worship here Sixtly Why should you be so curious and strict The most the ten Tribes do thus there is but only Judah and Benjamin that go another way the multitude go this way and why should you when only a poor handful go another way desire to do as they do Seventhly We have prospered a long time in this way Hath not Israel prospered as much as Judah hath not God been with us as much as with them Judah pretends he worships God in the right w●y we are sure God is with us Eightly They would raise reproaches upon the true worshipers of God as in the 7. Chapter of this Prophesie vers 3. Cap. 7.3 Opened They make the King glad with their wickedness and the Princes with their lyes That is this was their cunning devise to raise all the reproches that possibly they could against those that were true forward and zealous worshipers of God especially against the Prophets and Ministers and therefore in Amos you shall find and he prophesied at the same time that Amaziah said the Land could not bear his words they are a company of seditious men that the Country could not bear their words but they were even enough to set the people together by the ears yea what are these men that oppose the Kings Laws but such and such These were the snares that they set to catch the people to make them out of love with the true worship of God Thus they were a snare set upon Mispah and a n●t upon mount Tabor Applic. Thus it hath been with us how cunningly have men l●id their nets amongst us to catch souls Say they it is but yeelding thus far to this thing and the other thing and authority enjoins it if it were more it were no great matter and other learned and godly men they do thus and they think thus yea and why should you hinder your self of the good you may do It is but a matter of circumstance it is but for decency and order and there is much devotion this way we may gain Papists in yeilding as far as we can unto them there is none but a company of simple pleople against it this is ancient the Fathers of the Church have done thus yea many Martyrs that have shed their blood did thus Thus many have been caught as a bird in a snare with these lines and twigs thus cunningly twisted together how have they caught souls simile and so caught them that they could not tell how to get out but being once in they were ensnared more and more as a bird that is once caught in the net it beginneth to flutter a while but at length it is caught so much the faster so men when they yeilded to one thing they could not tell where to stay but at last they have been so deep in and so far ensnared that they could not tell what to do and the truth is at length they have even given up their consciences to those things as a bird that perhaps at first when the net is but stirred it is shie of it but being once got in it is ensnared all over so many men at first being of tender consciences have been shie of superstitious vanities but with cunning arguments and devices they have been caught and they thought they should never hear of them any more but being once caught so as that they have power over them they have come upon them with more violence than before and so have been made to yeild so far that at the last their consciences have wholly been given up to those things They have been vexed and troubled with their consciences at the first but at length they have been resolved to trouble themselves no more but to yeild to whatsoever shall be enjoyned Oh how
it self As thus His glory was as the Son of God The Princes of Judah were those that removed the bound by the light of Nature and the Law of God it was a wicked thing to remove bounds you may see it forbidden by the Law of God Deut. 27.17 It was a custom among the Heathens and the Romans That Obser 2 if any man removed the bound the antient Land-mark if they were poor they were adjudged to slavery to dig in deep pits if rich men to be banished and lose a third part of their estates The Princes of Judah broke down the bounds in a Fourfold way 1. They took away mens estates that were none of their own God appoints men their bounds and estates therefore 't is not in the power of Princes to take them away at their pleasure It was not in the power of Ahab to take away Naboths Vinyard nay nor to force him to sell it though a King he thought it too much to take it by violence and Jezebel though a cruel woman yet would not take his Vinyeard without some coulor of Law Therefore Princes have no right to the Subjects estates and liberty for to take them away at their pleasures though such principles of late have been infused into them by some for which we at this day suffer so heavily In Isa 1.23 Their Princes are said to be rebellious and companions of theeves Now if all were their own they could not break bounds We would think that they of all men should not break bounds for what is it they may not have if they would I have read a story in Plutarch concerning Cyneas and Pyrrhus who was mightily set upon war with Italy Cyneas speaks thus unto him What shall we get if we overcome the Romans Saith Pyrrhus We shall subdue our great enemy and be made possessors of a brave Country Cyneas asked him what he would do then Saith Pyrrhus Then we will subdue Affrica Carthage and Sicila And what then Then saith Pyrrhus we wil feast drink and be merry Cyneas answered Why may you not do so now without sheding so much blood putting your self to so much trouble and endangering your person If Princes would keep within their bounds what hinders but that they may enjoy themselves and their comforts with peace and quiet without the sheding of so much blood 2. They break all bounds That is They break all Laws and Liberties they wil not be bound by Laws saying thus Laws were made for subjects and not for Princes And thus these Princes broke the bounds Hence we may see what corruption there is in the hearts of men naturally and this is furthered by evil Counsellors I have read of Cambyses who had a desire to marry his Sister but questioning whether he might do it or no he cals his judges together to give him their advice they told him there was a Law against it but say they Ye Princes of Persia may do what you will They were so far from diswading him from that wicked act that they gave him incouragement to it And hath not our time afforded such Counsellors to our Princes 2. They break the bonds of Religion Therefore Interpreters conceive that our Prophet Hosea prophesied in Ahaz his time when he provoked God so by Idolatry setting up the abomination of desolation And this is the great breach of bonds when people must provoke God God hath set bounds to His Word for His Worship and Service Now take heed that you go not beyond those bounds for any pretence of decency or comlinesse sutable to the state in which we live and such like God hath given great liberty in Civil things for men to use but none in hi● Worship and waies Oh what evil have Popish Princes done in this thing in removing these bounds and this is the main reason which makes Papists so to labour for the upholding and setting up an arbitrary government having thereby ●ull liberty to break all bounds in Religion Lastly They brake the bonds of their own Covenants and regarded them not These were the corruptions of these Princes they brake all sorts of bonds Civil Spiritual Covenanting bonds nothing will keep them in But hath God left no means to keep these in bounds Quest Princes as well as Subjects To this I answer Yea certainly Answ Those who at first gave power for families and persons to keep these never tollerated the great ones to break them The Law of Nature never gives power to destroy it self especially in a Kingdom where there are defensive offencive means to be used against any means that the greatest in power may raise against the Laws and Liberties of men for there is no man who is a subject to the Prince but is also to the State and the State may deal with his instruments that he imploys either defencively or offencively Trajan after he was made Emperor put a sword into his Officers hand to defend him while he defended the Laws but if he did fail in his duty gave the Officer leave to deale with him as a delinquent It will be worth our pains and cost if after all our troubles we can but get the Kingdom setled in its true rights and liberties though our workmen who are making up our breaches through some negligence or miscarriage suffer the wild beasts to break in yet let not us murmur and repine but be content and bless God that we have means for to help our selves few yeers since we thought our breaches to be so wide that none could help or deliver us now then that God hath raised up for us helpers contrary to our expectation bless God for them and be content let us stir up our selves and joyn with them for their assurance If the Sea should break in upon a Country would you sit stil or let any rest quiet by you that would not stir to make up the breach A Farmer is contented to suffer Cattel and see them to run up and down in his ground while his workmen are making up his hedges and fences for to keep them out So our workmen are making up the hedges let us be contented to suffer a while patiently The truth is those most complain of confusions and disturbances who have been most instrumental to make our breaches and distractions and thus the Princes of Judah were like them that break the bound and for thus doing the Lord threatens in the following words to powr out his wrath upon them like water They have past their bounds in sinning and my wrath shall pass its bounds upon them they kept no bounds in sinning and my wrath shall keep no bounds in punishing The Hebrews use to express anger by a word that signifies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 going beyond bounds noting thus much that ordinarily in our anger we are apt to go beyond bounds and besides the rule The sence then is I will powr my wrath upon them in great abundance like waters The judgments of
after he had killed Nabal and telleth him of his sin he fals down and humbleth himself in so much that God himself takes notice of it and upon it pronounceth a transmission of his punishment That he would not bring the evil in his daies but in his sons God bids the Prophet see how he humbled himself that not in a show as if his heart were not touched and affected he did truly humble himself in his kind but now was there no reformation followed upon this No none at all great men not easily reformed Theodos 'T is very hard to bring great men to reforming where have we such an example since Theodosius the Emperor who being a man guilty of rash effusion of blood coming upon a Sabbath day to the place of publick worship and would have received the Sacrament Ambrose Ambrose seeing him a coming goes and meets him at the door and speaks thus to him How dare those bloody hands of yours lay hold of the body and blood of Christ who have been the sheders of so much innocent blood Which speech did so startle him that he went away and was humbled for his sin and afterwards came and made his publick confession and then was received in Whence we may see that Kings An Emperor may be kept back frō the Sacrament yea Emperors have been kept back from the Sacrament But did this humiliation of Ahab come to nothing If we look but into the 22. chap. we shall find him of a proud hauty spirit resolved upon his own will contrary to the will of God he would go up to Ram●th Gilead and when Jehoshaphat asked him if there were not a Prophet of the Lord more that they might enquire of him and he said there is one but I hate him and this was in the time of his humiliation And is it not thus with us Applica many times when judgments are upon us how penitent are we and then humbled presently but if the rod be off us we grow proud and stout again presently So in Judah what beginnings did that young King Joash Joash make in the 2 Chron. 24.6 what care was there taken in reparing the Temple gave commandement to the Priests and the Levites to gather mony for the building the House of the Lord and commanded it to be done spedily he was a very young Prince but very zealous in so much that he blamed the high Priest for his want of zeal and verse 10. 't is said the Princes and all the people rejoyced and brought in and cast into the chest now what did this produce surely some glorious effect mark in the 17. verse After the death of Jehojadah came the Princes of Judah and made obeisance to him and what then the King hearkened to them they then began to get him on their side by complying with him for the text saith that he hearkened to them and then wrath came upon them 't is very likely they said after this manner to him Consider who you are a Prince the head of a people and you do all that the old man Jehojada commanded he was a subject to you and you be commanded by him The Princes discourse to Joash and besides he is now dead and gone therefore shew your self a man like a Prince in your Kingdom stand upon your own legs be like unto the rest of the Princes about you Now such words as these might please the King and be hearkened to and then they presently forsook the House of the Lord God of their fathers and served groves and Idols they forsook their Religion while they kept the truth it preserved them and they followed the rule but turning from the rule what outrages do they commit verse 21 22. conspire against Zaccariah and stoned him the blood of a Prophets son is now nothing to them they can down with it and the King stood and saw him stoned Oh what a height of sin is this young zealous Prince come unto How many sad examples have we in these our daies which second this of Joash Young ones of our times how many young ones are there who in their youth give very good hopes but it proves to be but a morning cloud their timely beginnings end in apostacy Another example we have in Amaziah in the 2 Chron. 25.2 Amaziah Amaziah in the 6. verse had hired an hundred thousand of Israel to go to the war with him and for their hire he had given them an hundred talants of silver now after he had hired them and paid them all their monies there comes a Prophet of God tels him that he must not use a man of them why saith he what shall I do for my mony the hundred talents which I have paid the Army with the man of God answered the Lord is able to give thee much more than these he had no security for it but only G●●s word for it and that from the mouth of a man what now Amaziah obeyed presently and separated the armies of Israel But what became of this Vers 14. after he returned from the slaughter of the Edomites he brought the gods of the children of Seir and set them up to be his gods and bowed down to them and the 15. verse God sends him another Prophet and now see how the spirit of the man is changed In the former verses the other Prophet coms to him and crosses his design and turns his mind he hearkens presently unto him and obeys the command of God in that thing which was for his present and eminent losse but this Prophet speaks as mildly with as much love as possibly could be and he speaks as much reason to him as a man can desire Why hast thou relied and sought after the gods of the people which could not deliver their own people out of thy hand they could not rescue or save their people from thee and wilt thou serve them yet in the 16. vers mark what he saith Medle not with this matter Art thou made of the Kings Councel forbear why shouldest thou be smitten Dost thou know what a plot and design there is in this thing The Prophet forbears but what follows I know by this the Lord hath determined to destroy thee Because thou hast done this Wilfulness after enlightening a note of d●structiō and hast not hearkened to my counsel The truth is when we see men unruly stubborn and wilful rejecting counsel and very unreasonable in their way especially after some good workings and stirrings it is a fearful sign God hath a purpose to destroy them So that wicked King at one time could call the prophet his father yet how was he afterward inraged against him Some may be friends to the Saints at one time and bitter enemies to them at another And as the Scripture is full of such examples as these so also are Ecclesiastical histories 'T is storied of Domitian Domitiā a most
wel or immediately after an act of uncleanness but God at that very instant looks upon thee as drunken unclean and filthy though the act may be past many yeers before VER 3. They make the King glad with their wickedness and the Princes with their lyes THey make the King glad That is Expos 1 By their willing yeilding to his commands by the way of their false worship the King and the Princes were glad to see their edicts yeilded unto and obeyed at the first when the commands came from Jeroboam to change the way of Gods worship they had cause to fear that it might not take with the people there would be something to do to make them change the way of Gods worship but when they saw it go on currently without contradiction they rejoyced Expos 2 By their flattering of him in his wicked waies they did not only yeild to his unlawful edicts but commended them and applauded him for his care and tender respect which he had to them in shortening their journy that they should not go so far as Jerusalem to worship they flattered him in this extreamly telling him that this was the way to establish his Kingdom He was glad when he saw the people wicked in their waies Expos 3 and their lives loose and prophane at this the King was glad and why because he knew they were for his turn his design was accomplished now he had made them wicked in their lives by letting them have their will in evil and now he never feared their scrupling or making question of the thing he never once doubted of their unwillingnesse to worship at the Calves to go to Dan and Bethel Thus they made the King glad The Notes First observe That carnal and wicked people are Obs 1 easily led aside by the examples of those that are their Governours Which way Superiors go the multitude will go if they do that which is good in the outward part of it for externals they will do the same if they do wickedly they will do so likewise though they do not love their Prince yet that they may have their Princes favor they will sin against God It is wickednesse for any people to obey the unlawful commands of Obs 2 their Governors This people might think this was no sin in them What must we not obey our Governors and be subject to authority yet we see the holy Ghost calls it wickedness So how many are there who for their worship have no other authority but their superiors their Governors this wil never pass for currant in Gods account It is a vile wickednesse to flatter Princes Yet how hath this Obs 3 been the constant course of Courts It is reported of Dionysius that when he spit his flatterers would lick it up and say it was sweeter than Honey This is vileness in people to do and more vile in Princes to love to be flattered Cyril Cyril upon this text saith That the fear and love of God had it been in this people it would have kept both them and their Princes to have withstood such wicked commands it would have ballanced their spirits Obs 4 It is a most most wicked and vile thing to make any glad with their wickedness or to be made glad by wickedness Yet how many are guilty of this sin some are so hardened in their wickedness that they will make others drunk and then laugh at them when they have done so How far are these from Davids temper whose eyes ran down with tears because men kept not the Law and horror took hold on him there is no greater sign of a desperate heart hardened in sin than to laugh at sin in others and make a sport of it in themselves and the higher men are in place and dignity the greater is the aggravation of their s●ns for Princes to be glad at wickeness and to be made merry by iniquity who are set to be punishers of sin and a terror to evil doers this is most horrible wickedness Prov. 29.22 If the Prince hearken to lyes all his servants are wicked They make the King glad with their lyes Note Obs 5 The King is in a sad condition when his ends and plots must be accomplished by the wickedness of the people Such are the dispositions of these men that they will do any thing rather than suffer the least evil of punishment for saith a Prince these men they have no conscience left in them to check them but these precise Puritans they will suffer and die rather than sin against God and wrong their consciences Now these Priests and their officers which the Prophet here speaks of they would reason thus If I should crosse the Kings mind I should lose my place and be put out of my office and suffer a great deal of trouble and rather than they will run upon these straights they wil run upon any design for the ruining of that which crosses them yea though it be the worship of God Oecolampadius saith that bad Princes are alwaies enemies to to the strict waies of religion and unto such as are the strictest in those waies and walk most agreeable to the Word and are tender in their conscience fearful to sin against it these are disregarded and discount●●anced but those that are most wicked they are accounted the best subject● Irreligion slavery companions and these they will trust Therefore where there is no religion slavery soon follows that people may be brought to any thing who have lost their religion but where profession is maintained it will teach men to stand for their liberties and not to yeild against the truth But what doth Religion teach men rebellion doth it deny obedience to Governors No by no means Religion teaches obedience to Governors and the more religious any man is the more obedient he will be to lawful Authority the Gospel commands obedience to Governors but not to Tyranny to the wils and humors of men God never made such difference between men Religion never teaches disobedience to lawful authority to such as rule in the Lord yet this was the case of this people It follows And the Princes with their lyes Expos 1 Luther Luther carries this to the lye of their false worship their Idolatry which the Scripture cals a lye Rom. 1.25 Who changed the truth of God into a lye and worshiped the creature more than the Creator But this is not the full meaning and scope of the words but thus They put their false glosses upon their false worship to Expos 2 make it to take with the people and with the Princes as thus The Priests did not only submit and yeild to them themselves but encouraged the people telling them it was decent and comely in the worship of God Or thus By denying whats●●er may hinder them in their Expos 3 false worship If the Prince should by any means hear that his Commands were not like to take with the people
cast him out that is eijce pirtilentem de consilio cast him out of your counsels let him have no part of advice with you Again The Septuagent translate it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one without understanding because scorners are foolish and silly men Prov. 21.11 When the scorner is punished the simple are made wise Thirdly they translate it pride 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because scorners are proud men Prov. 1.3 4. God resisteth the proud Prov. 21.24 Proud and haughty scorner is his name who dealeth in proud wrath Fourthly they turn it by untamed unpunished Prov. 19.29 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wanton stripes are prepared for the backs of scorners Because they go unpunished they grow scorners Luther translates the word mockers and flowters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by a word signifying evil men because scorners are ful of al kind of evils and interprets false teachers that delude the people and deprave the Scriptures and this kind of scorning by perverting the Scripture is the worst kind of scorning of all others it is most abominable Job 20.14 The meat in his bowels is turned to the gaul of Asps the word in such mens spirits as these are is turned into bitterness these scorners who were they the Nobles and the Princes the Officers in the Court these were the men which scorned at the people for going up to Jerusalem to worship what fools are these which will lose the Kings favor their places at Court their honors and preferments and all for a meer circumstance and a trifle as they thought and this was at the time of their feasts and jovialities when they might both harden the hearts of the King and people now he stretched forth his hand to them that is 1. He encouraged them and gave them his hand to kiss how unlike is this unto God of whom Job speaks that he will not give his hand to the wicked to malignants Again 2. Job 8 2● to stretch forth his hand is to put forward any work or further designs on foot as Herod furthered their wicked designs of the high Priests and Scribes in persecuting Christ by countenancing them he stretched out his hand to scorners Acts 12.1 Scorners such as are the basest kind of people as fidlers common jerves c. as if he were a common companion for them he put off all Princely dignities and made himself an associate for the basest of men that could but any waies further his designs Obs 1 The first Note from hence may be this That such Courtiers which live sensually are for the most part great scorners Experience proves this Obs 2 Times of feasting are usually times of the greatest scorning and contemning all Religion then they think there is none live such brave lives as they do when they are throughly heated with wine then they have a flout and a scorn for every one then God himself is reproached by them his Saints had in disgrace Psal 35.16 With hypocritical mockers in feasts they gnashed upon me with their teeth There are many which carry things very fair in the eyes of the world who seem to be Christians yet when they come in place among scorners they have a scorn a flout and a private jeer these are odious in Gods sight Where is there more scorning and scoffing than in Princes Courts and great mens Tables If a Court Chaplain had but heard any thing of a Puritan or of a private meeting was it not their musick Thus they informed the King that they were none but a company of precise fools giddy headed people and the King he received this news with joy it made him merry and he gave them thanks for their pains Oh how far is this below a true Princely spirit Obs 3 That the right way of worship is by carnal hearts accounted a very slight thing and Gods people who stand for Gods Ordinances in their purity are looked upon as people who stand for incities and trifles Obs 4 It hath been the old way of the Devil to hinder reformation by raising up men of pestilent wits to scorn at Religion and this way the Devil prevails very much when he cannot prevail by persecution he gains much this way men that are of any spirit cannot endure scorning therefore we reade of mocking to be a cruel persecution in Heb. 11.36 And others had tryals of cruel mockings And Ishmaels mocking is said to be persecution In the primitive times they would set up an Asses Head and a book by it to shew that they professed to learn and yet were as simple as an Ass I have heard of a Scholer in Queens Colledg who professed he had rather suffer the torments of Hell than endure the comtempt and scorn of the puritans And this is the Devils old way but men will not be jeered out of their inheritance and God will scorn such scorners Prov. 3.34 That place is famous in Lament 3.62 63. The lips of them that rose up against me behold their rising up and their siting down I was their musick What then Render them a recompence according to their works give them sorrow of heart thy curse unto them Kings while their hearts are against Religion shall never want Obs 5 wits to further their designs in this It is a sad thing to that Kingdom when their Princes give their Obs 6 hands to scorners and to deny it to the people of God it was a happy and blessed time with that people in 2 Chron. 35.1 2 3. verses when the Prophets of God were encouraged by the King himself It follows VER 6. For they have made ready their hearts like an oven whiles they lie in wait their baker sleepeth all the night in the morning it burneth as a flaming fire THE meaning of these words is to set out the strength of Jeroboam and his Princes desires to set up false worship and their subtilty in taking opportunity and lying in wait to leaven the people The Notes are from the similitude The heat of their hearts was so violent that it did devour all that Obs 1 opposed it as fire devoures all cumbustable things so they devoured all kind of reason which was brought against them and their way what was spoken to them to contradict them in their worship it was like straw or wood in an oven they were so strongly set upon it they devoured all presently they tell in all companies such men have nothing to say for their way c. Therefore at any time when we come to men and see them wilfully bent upon their way it is to no purpose to speak to them but let them alone and let God but humble them upon their sick beds and then they will hearken No dealing with Bees in a hot day but at night there is Obs 2 As mens spirits are as hot as an oven in sin so Gods judgments which are prepared for such are as hot as an oven Malachy 4.1 God
Page 345 Riches How riches are fatal to Church-men Page 100 Rule The rule of our actions must be known and why Page 341 Rulers Rulers and Governors should be men of good mettle Page 229 Romans see Education Resurrection We live in Christs Resurrection Page 543 Relations What relation God stands in to the Saints Page 547 Revealing We must take notice of Gods revealing himself to us Page 557 Reformation see Hypocrisie Religion see Unconstancy S Saints see Good works Sacrifices The sacrifices of the wicked are slaughters Page 3●● What sacrifices should be rendred up to God Page 332 Satan Satans way to get in false worship Page 469 See Temptation Admonition Sensual see Ministers Sensuality Sensuality is a besotting sin Page 129 Self-love Self-love is sinful Page 409 Sermons Sermons must be preached to the life Page 439 How to know when a Sermon works really Page 440 Ministers in their Sermons must denounce war if peace be slighted Page 441 Secret sins see Beware Services Former services are not to be presumed on Page 402 Shame Causes of shame what they are Page 326 Sin Sin causeth a controversie between God and man Page 4 Sin not mortified will break out again Page 59 God punisheth sin with sin Page 152 Sin after rebuke is very sinful Page 363 Sin acts more on the will than on the power Page 376 Sin see Controversie Stealing What stealing is Page 52 Strife Strife against God is dreadful Page 7 Strive see priest Striving Striving against God is vain Page 6 Scornfulness Scornfulness reproved Page 19 Scripture see Papists Society The Society of the Saints is to be improved Page 196 State A State is hard to be stood out against in matter of Religion Page 365 State see Failing Subjects Subjects suffer for Princes sins Page 490 Superstition Curiosity to see Superstition is dangerous Page 187 See Preaching Command Superstitious How Superstitious men look upon Gods Ordinances Page 325 Superstitious people must be heeded when they come with greatest shew of reason Page 358 Superstitious people are abundant in services Page 406 Superstitious people spare no cost in their services Page 407 See Admonition Stubborn Stubborn people have base spirits Page 194 Swearing Whence swearing proceeds Page 41 The evil of swearing Page 42 Swearing in its self is lawful Page 189 See Lying Salutation The ancient form of the Saints salutation Page 549 Saints What the Saints shall know Page 553 See Experience Sacrifice see Mercy Scornful Evil men are scornful Page 665 Seasonableness Seasonableness commends duty Page 565 Service see Judgment Sin Sin disturbs Heaven and Earth Page 511 Slanders The evils of slanders Page 659 Sluggish A Sluggish spirit in the men of our times Page 556 Soul see Form Suffer see Help Steward see Vertue Superstition see England Spirit God hath sent choice spirits to London Page 590 T Take heeed How men ought to take heed to the Lord Page 126 Ten Tribes Why the ten Tribes had never a good King Page 469 Temptation Satans Temptations are an aggravation to sin Page 386 Terrified see Dying Thought Our Thoughts must be accounted for Page 120 Toys Men contend about toys Page 23 Threatnings see Real Treachery Treachery against God is dangerous Page 419 Treachery is the greatest sin Page 420 Trust see Avenged Truth Suffering truths go hardly down with Ministers Page 94 A hint of Truth prevails much with a subdued heart Page 389 See Hard Terror Terror to Hypocrites Page 551 Thoughts see Penitent Tryal see Repentance Turning Joint turning to God is very honorable Page 531 U Understanding What evil want of understanding doth Page 167 Ugly The ugly face of sin Page 63 Unfaithfulness Unfaithfulness provokes God to cast men off Page 96 Universities Univers ties corrupted Page 628 Why Universities are corrupted Page 116 Unlawful We can never expect unlawful undertakings to prosper Page 124 Vertues Vertues requisite in a steward Page 609 Unbeleef Lay up for time to come against unbeleef Page 546 Unconstancy Unconstancy in Religion provokes God Page 592 Unworthiness Faith sees worthiness in our unworthiness W Way When God is in a way of wrath he can reach the most remote creatures Page 68 Wicked The different spirits of wicked men in prosperity and adversity Page 64 Many wicked Parents are loth their children ' should be wicked Page 156 Wicked men shall need God Page 407 See Children Dogs Wickedness Thoughtful wickedness is the worst wickedness Page 120 God remembers wickedness a long time Page 649 It is a wickedness to flatter Princes Page 653 It is a wickedness to obey unlawful commands Page 653 See Apostates Whoremongers Whoremongers and plausible Ministers are alike Page 124 Works see Good Wine How Wine takes away the heart Page 130 Worship In point of Gods Worship we must not do as others do Page 177 By whom the Worship of God is disesteemed Page 325 See Institution Will Will-worship is abominable to God Page 360 The more will to sin the greater is the sin Page 472 Willing see Obedience Wrath No creature can help in time of Gods wrath Page 68 Wicked men Wicked men are led aside by their Governors Page 653 Wicked men are of no use Page 690 Wilfulness Wilfulness after enlightning is a note of destruction Page 579 Worthiness see Unworthiness Word How the Word slaies Page 590 The Word slaies either the sin or the soul Page 596 Worship see False Y Young Young Converts and weak Christians are soon deceived Page 409 Young ones Young ones are the hope of a Nation Page 429 Young ones must not be corrupted Page 430 Young ones are subject to m scarry Page 578 FINIS