THE SPOVSES SPIKENARD.
12. While the King sitteth at his Table, my Spikenard sendeth forth the smell thereof.
13. A bundle of Myrrhe is my welbeloved vnto me, he shall lie all night betweene my breasts.
THree Workes did Salomon Write, that the Church of GOD might be the better for that Wisedome which the God of Wisedome bestowed vpon him, Proverbiall Sentences, Powerfull Sermons, and Patheticall Songs: which Workes in Canonicall Scriptures, are knowne by these names, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Canticles, each of which [Page 2] conteineth in it most excellent and heavenly matter, but the sweetest of all the rest is this Booke of the Canticles. Wherein, vnder a continued Allegorie in the forme of a Pastorall Elegie, this heavenly inspired Poet doth breath out the melodious straines & passages of loue mutually interchanged betweene the great Spouse Christ Iesus, and his best beloued Bride the Church. Amongst which straines this Text is one, being a part of that heavenly Dialogue betwixt Christ and his Church, comprehended in this Chapter. In which Dialogue, two things (to make the parts of this Chapter) are considerable; first, the Prologue or Entrance into the Dialogue, in the first six verses. Secondly, the Dialogue it selfe, from the seaventh verse to the end of the Chapter. In the Prologue, the Church doth two things; first, she expresseth her ardent desire of a coniugall communion with her husband Christ Iesus, in the second, third, and fourth verses. Secondly, she taketh away the scandall, partly, of the crosse which she is exposed vnto, partly, of those infirmities which she is inclined vnto, both which might be cast in her teeth by false brethren, to vpbraid her for too much saucinesse, that shee seeming so blacke, dares be so bold as to desire communion with so beautifull an husband as Christ is; and this she doth in the fifth and sixth verses.
The Dialogue it selfe comprehends in it three particulars. First, a question that the Church maketh where shee might find her Christ as a comforter in the time of affliction, as an helper in the time of temptation, in the seaventh verse. Secondly, Christ his answere to this question, in the eight verse. Thirdly, the excellent praises which they doe mutually conferre each vpon the other, from the ninth verse to the end of the Chapter. Christ praising the Church in the ninth, tenth, eleventh, fifteenth, sixteenth, and seaventeenth verses. And the Church commending her Christ, in the words of this Text, and that from two properties which shee perceived in him,
- 1. Greatnesse in the 12. verse.
- 2. Goodnesse in the 13. verse.
The first of these, Order requireth wee should first deale withall.
BEcause the royaltie of personage,Parts of the Text. The reason [...] the division, because King in the 12. ve [...] is a stile of Greatnes, and Welbeloued in the 13. verse a title of goodnesse. costlines of provision for his Bride, and statelinesse of presence with his Bride, doe much set forth the Greatnesse of a Bridegroome: therefore the Church here commendeth the Greatnes of HER spirituall Spouse, from these three particulars. 1.Regem non citrà magnificentiā nota appellatum sponsum Mercer. ad locum. The first circumstance in the first part. The meaning. the royaltie of his person by the stile (KING) that shee giveth him. While the King. 2. The costlines of provision for her, by the Table which shee speaketh of, calling it His Table. 3. The statelines of his presence, by his sitting at this Table, While the King sitteth at his Table, amplified by the adiunct sweetnesse, which her Spikenard did send vnto him, while he was thus present with her; My Spikenard sendeth forth the smell thereof.
TO begin with the stile royall which shee giueth him, While the King. HowsoeverBrightns. One by King here, vnderstandeth King Asa, spoken of 2. Chron. 15. and others in the hystoricall sense, King Salomon, yet withMercer. Piscat. others I doe rather mystically vnderstand Christ Iesus, the spirituall Salomon, andIsa. 9.6. Prince of peace. And so our Observation must be this; That the husband of the Church Christ Iesus is a King. This is a knowne Maxime, in the proofe whereof the Scripture is no whit barren. The Psalmist,Doct. 1. Christ the Churches Spouse is a King. speaking in the person of the Church, calleth himPsal. 47.7. our King. Daniel calleth himDan. 9.25. Messiah the Prince. AndChap. 12.1. Michaell the great Prince. S. Iohn in one place of the Revelation stileth him the Prince of the Kings of the earth Apoc. 1.5.; and in another, the King of Kings, the Lord of Lords Chap. 19.16.. Herewith squareth that of Ieremy, Iere. 23.5. Behold the daies come, saith the Lord, that I will raise vnto Dauid a righteous branch, and a KING shall raigne and prosper, and shall execute iudgement and iustice vpon the earth. The same thing spake the Angell to Mary, concerning Christ,Luk. 1.33. He [Page 4] shall raigne over the house of David, and of his kingdome shall be none end. All these testimonies (with many other which might haue beene alledged) doe manifestly shew this to be a truth, That Christ Iesus, Sions Spouse, is a King.
How Christ is a King, two wayes.And if we would know how he came by this Kingly office (which must be answered before the poynt be applyed) wee must vnderstand, that he is a King two wayes.
- First, By dominion of himselfe.
- Secondly, By donation from another.
1. First, by dominion and authoritie of himselfe, and so he is Iehovah, God equall with the Father, and the holy Ghost, in vnitie of essence, equalitie of potency, maiestie, glory, and soveraigntie over all creatures.
2. He is a King by donation and gift, receiuing the kingdome (as he is [...]) or Mediator of the Church from the Father, in which regard he is called Messiah in the olde Testament, and Christ in the new, which signifie Annoynted, that is, Annoynted of the Father, and so much he testifieth himselfe;Mat. 11.27. All things, andChap. 28.28 All power both in heaven and in earth, are giuen me of my Father. Thus the poynt is made good and made cleere. It is as vsefull as plaine. Vse 1 For, first of all it lets vs see, the notable dignitie of the Church of Christ. To heare the Psalmist calling her the DAVGHTER of the King Psal. 45.13.: to heare Salomon stiling her the Princes DAVGHTER Cant. 7.1., is to heare her dignitie vnmatchable; but to heare her, her selfe (as shee is the WIFE of Christ) stiling him the King in my Text, to heare Christ the King calling her his Spousesse, his loue, his doue, his vndefiled one, &c. as he doth in more places of this Booke then one; this is to heare her excellency to be vnutterable. What honour can be paralelled with it? What dignitie is comparable to it? Behold (saith S. Iohn) (to stirre vp attention) what manner of loue the Father hath bestowed vpon vs, that we should be called the sonnes of God 1 Ioh. 3.1.. Behold, (may I say, to stirre vp admiration) what singular kindnes the sonne hath showne the Church, that shee should be the Wife of God? If by the grace of adoption, to be the BRETHREN of Christ, can command [Page 5] a Behold at our hands, then by the vertue of an holy coniunction to be the BRIDE of Christ, must needs call for a Behold and wonder at our hands. And (to speake truth) so wonderfull is this dignitie, that except by an Allegorie I cannot set it forth. We know that that Woman which hath an earthly King to her husband, excelleth all other degrees of Women (though great and noble) in the Land where shee liueth, in divers particulars. For shee hath a more noble Guard to attend her, more royall Garments to array her, more c [...]stly Iewels to adorne her, more stately Pallaces to inhabite in, more pleasant Galleries to walke vpon, then they haue, or at least then its fit they should haue. And doth not thatApoc. 12.1. Woman cloathed with the Sunne, I meane the So Paraeus, and others expound it. Church, who is contracted to the Heavenly King, excell all other sorts and societies of people in the like? Out of doubt shee doth: Emperors with all their Monarchies, Nobles with all their dignities, Captaines with all their Victories, Papists with all their prelacies, Pagans with all their excellencies, are not comparable vnto her. Her guard are the Angels of ChristPsal. 34.7. Heb. 1.14.; Her garments are the robes of ChristApoc. 12.1.; Her iewels are the graces or Christ; Her dwelling place is the kingdome of Christ, of grace here, of glory hereafter; Her walking places are the wayes of Christ, for it is onely the priviledge of Christians to tread in the steps of their soveraigne and Saviour. Well then might the Psalmist say, Glorious things are spoken of thee thou Citie of God Psal 87.3.. I know what opinion the world hath of the Church, deeming her of all people to be the basest,O nunquam satis expensam credentium dignitatem. Muscul. in Explana. Psal. 45. v. 9. Obs. 2. even the very scumme and refuse of men: I know also that her owne members in the time of temptation thinke more hardly of themselues, then there is either cause or warrant; But whatsoever the world thinkes of her, whatsoever poore Christians in the times of distresse thinke of themselues, yet it is a certaine thing, that great honour haue all the Saints Psal. 149.9.; the poynt in hand informeth vs of no lesse, when it saith, that Israels husband is a King.
Vse 2 Secondly, this poynt is not without its Vse, for the enemies of the Church;For the enemies of Sion. For, first it may be bent AGAINST them by way of terror. Secondly, it may be directed To them by way of counsell.
1. By way of terror.First, I say, it may be a ground of terrour AGAINST them, for the wrongs that they offer to the members of Christ. Ah poore wretches, are they aware whom they oppose! consider they whom they set against! they persecute, wrong, oppugne, them who are the Wife of Christ Iesus, a glorious Bride, whose husband is a King; King, not onely by donation from the Father, but also by dominion of himselfe. Meane men (yee know) if they loue their Wiues, will not see them wronged if they can helpe it, much lesse will Kings brooke the iniuries that are offered their Queenes. That treason which is spoken or plotted against them, they take as done to themselues, and will be revenged for it. And will the King of Kings, that Great Prince, Christ Iesus, doe lesse for his Wife▪ the Church? No, no: he paide too deare a price for her, as not to maintaine her cause, and avenge her quarrell: and if he vndertakes to defend her, then woe to those that offend her; Better a Mill-stone were hanged about their neckes, and they cast into the middest of the Sea.
I remember in the Booke of Ioshua, how thoseIos. 10.3-26 verses. fiue Kings were served for Warring against the Gibeonites, that were entred into league with Iosuah; the Captaines trod vpon their neckes, they were hanged vpon fiue trees against the Sunne: And will not the greatIos. 5.15. Captaine of the Lords Host tread vpon THEIR neckes, and punish THEM in his wrath, that set against those that are entred not onely into league, but also into contract with Iesus, our spirituall Iosuah? Be but a man aIos. 9.27. Water-bearer to the Congregation of Israel, or aPsal. 84.10. Doore-keeper in the house of God, or like Iohn Baptist Mat. 11.11. least in the Kingdome of heaven, his wrongs shall be righted, his cause shall be avenged. What became of them that set against Daniel? were not their bones broken, and their bodies eaten with the teeth of LyonsDan. 6.24.. How fared it [Page 7] with those that bound the three Children, and cast them into the fiery Furnace? were they not scorched to death with the fl [...]me of the fireChap. 3.22.? Did notAct. 12.23. Lice gnaw out the bowells, and doth not a curse lie vpon the name of Herod, who murthered Iames, and imprisoned Peter, theIam 1.1. 1 Pet. 1.1. servants of the Lord Iesus Christ? What end came Nero vnto, that vnnaturall Monster, who imbrued his hands in the blood of his owne mother, wife, kindred, and othersSueton in vita Neronis. cap. 34. 35.; that cruell Lyon, as Paul calls him2 Tim. 4.17., who murthered and massacred the poore Christians? If that be true, which is storied of him, his owne sword did he sheath in [...]his owne blood, and became his owne ButcherAuson de 12. Caesar Matricida (que) Nero proprio se perculit ense.. In times of later persecution amongst vs, what fearefull endes did those butchers come vnto, that slew the Saints. Some had their gutts carried about the streets vpon Bulls hornesFox Martyr: Olog. edit. Anno 1596. Pag. 712. Idem ibid.; others dyed maddePag. 1904. Melanct. chron. l. 11 p. 20.; others were strucke dead with the immediate hand of GodFox. Mart. 1908. & 1417 as they haue3 Ioh. 9. Diotrephes-like beene prating and inveighing against the members of Christ, in their Pulpits. And therefore I tell thee, tis dangerous medling against the Saints, it is fearefull to flout at them, to backbite them, slander them, hate them, devise & practise mischiefe against them. What? longest thou to haue Sions King to breake thee in pieces, and theRevel. 5.5. Lyon of the tribe of Iudah about thy eares? Alas man, if the rage of an earthly King (as Salomon speaketh) be like the roaring of a Lyon Pro. 19.12., what shall Christ his wrath be against his owne and his Brides adversaries? Is he thinkest thou a King onely IN his Church, and To his Church, to rule it by his Word, and guide it by his Spirit, and not as well a King FOR his Church, to auenge the wrongs thou shalt dare to offer vnto it? Oh, fond wretch, doe not deceiue thine owne soule; Vengeance belongs to him and he will repay.
That therefore I may vse this point by way of counsell,Deut. 32.35. 2. Part of the vse to Sions enemies, viz. Counsell or perswasion. let me perswade a little with thee; Doe no wrong to the Church of Christ, or any member of the same. Remember the charge that the Lord himselfe giueth; Touch not mine annointed, and doe my Prophets no harme Psal 105.15.. Touch them not with thy tongue, shoote not out bitter words against them. [Page 8] Touch them not with thy Pen, frame no bitter writings against them; touch them not with thy hand, offer no violence vnto them; touch them not with thy head, invent no ill against them. For what shall it availe thee to wrong them, when as their husband Christ is a King.Motiue 1. Against this crueltie the King Christ bendes his wisedome and his power. Ledere servos Dei & Christi tuis persecutionibus desine; quos laesos vltio divina defendit. Cypr. Tract. contra Demetr. fol. 72. Motiue 2. To wrong the Church is vnequall and vniust dealing. 1. With Christ himselfe. A King, I say, and therefore wants no wisedome, but is able to goe beyond thee, beest thou as craftie in thy fetches as the Serpent was; A King, I say, who wants no power, but is able to confound thee, wert thou as mightie in thy courses as euer proud Senacherib was: and both his Princely policy, and Kingly potency, shall concurre and meete together for thy ruine, rather then his Wife shall suffer at thy handes any more then what shall turne to her eternall well-fare. Is it not a vaine thing for thee to attempt that which both the wisedome and power of Christ opposeth it selfe against?
Besides, there is little reason, nay it is against all reason, that thou shouldest doe harme vnto the Saints, for neither doth the Husband nor the Wife giue any iust cause vnto thee. First, for the husband and King himselfe. What wrong did he ever doe thee? Hath he ever dealt vnmercifully and cruelly with thee? Is it not by HIS patience that thou art kept out of hell, so long agoe, so many wayes deserved by thee? Is it not by HIS goodnesse and providence, that thou hast health, libertie, peace, prosperitie, &c? Nay, doth He not in the motions of his Spirit, which thou quenchest, in the ministry of his Word, which thou despisest, make most free and gracious offers of his owne precious blood, to saue thy soule from euerlasting damnation, & saued thou mightest be, if thine impenitent and vnbeleeuing heart did not reiect and set light by these offers? Answere me, by whom hast thou, thy beeing, life, and moouing, and euery good thing that thou doest enioy? and is this the recompence of his kindnesse, to abuse and despise his Wife, his beloued Wife, and persecute him in his members? What an vniust and vnequall thing is this? What? Must HIS Wife of all other in the world, be accounted factious, seditious, trouble-States, traytors, that speake against Caesar, not worthy to [Page 9] liue in a Common-wealth, &c? Seruest thou this King thus indeed for his goodnesse? Oh iniury most horrible, Oh wrong most intollerable, which thou wilt neuer be able to answere, when he shallApoc. 1.7. Mat. 24.30. come in the Clouds to avenge the blood of the Saints.
Againe,2. It is iniustice to the Church also. As Christ himselfe on his part giues thee no iust cause to hurt his Church, no more doth shee on her part; for what iniury doth shee doe thee? Shee refuseth indeed to run to the same excesse of ryot with thee. Accountest thou this a wrong. In this (if thou hadst but eyes to see) shee is more thy friend then thine enemy, because shee would not by any bad example hearten and harden thee in the way to damnation; contrarily, by her good example shee would allure thee TO, and invre thee IN the way to salvation. Besides, By HER meanes thou doest enioy much good. Were it not for HER, thy house would be burned over thy head; for when there shall cease to be a Church vpon the earth, all things thereon shall be melted by fire2 Pet. 3.12.. Many a time doth shee confer with her Kingly Spouse for thy good; shee entreateth him (if it be his blessed will) to turnr thee from thy sinnes, to saue thee in the heavens; By her prayers shee stopps many a iudgement from lighting vpon thee, she fetcheth many a blessing from heaven for thee. For Gods sake then be not so vniust, as to harme those, for whose sake the very world it selfe is vpheld & preserued, and by whose meanes thou thy selfe doest enioy a great deale of good. Nature condemnes iniustice against the best friends. Let me then beseech thee, (if thou beest not altogether inexorable, inflexible) for this cause not to offer such iniury to the children of God, iest not at them, rayle not vpon them, bend neither thy craft, nor thy crueltie against them.Mot. 3. They haue buffettings and temptations enough within, they had need be spared and freed from troubles without; Hath thy malice then added to the measure of their afflictions? Get thee vpon thy knees for it, powre out the songs of complaint against thy selfe before the Lord fot it, meete her husband the King in the way, make thy peace with him for the abuses thou [Page 10] hast offred her his Wife, be not sayd nay vntill a bill of pacification, and reconciliation be sealed for thee; purpose thou and promise him neuer to serue him so in his members any more; learne to loue them as much as euer thou hast hated them: and doe this speedily too, least that this great King and Bridegroome of the Church, like aHos. 13.7.8. Leopard in the way, and a Beare robbed of her whelpes, rise vp against thee,Psal. 50.22. teare thee in pieces and there be none to deliuer thee.
Vse 3 Thirdly, is Christ a King? This iustly taxeth the folly of a great many in the world,Reproofe of those that neglect an vnion with Christ. who care not for, who seeke not after, who like not of a matching and marrying with Christ Iesus. He comes vnto vs as a Wooer, in his Word, with his mercies, offring a large ioynture vnto vs in the possessions of grace here, in the portion of glory hereafter, and faine would he haue entertainment at our handes, but we will none of him; iust like Ierusalem, (against whom he takes vp a bill of complaint by S. Luke) I would haue gathered you together as an henne gathereth her chickens vnder her wings, but you would not Luke 17.37.? All the day long stretcheth he forth his hand Rom. 10.21. Isa. 65.2., but we are a gainsaying people. If now and then we afford him a good looke, and a faire word, by hearing a Sermon vpon the Saboth, by receiuing the Sacrament at Easter, by a little superficiall attendance vpon his ordinances, (when we are vrged to it) thats all he gets at our hands: To giue him our consent, to be content to be inuisibly contracted vnto him, and to forsake all other onely to cleaue to him, this we will not by any meanes grant him, the greatest number of vs. Oh that so roiall a Suter, should be so basely serued at the hands of such base creatures. Would any poore mans daughter serue a rich mans sonne after such a fashion? Would a meane subiects childe deale thus with a Prince, with a King? Shee would not, except shee were a foole, or franticke. Ah fooles then, & vnwise that WEE are, to giue this Princely Wooer so cold a well-come. Haue we no regard to our owne good? can we not see when we are well offred? What? thinke wee that we are well enough, rich enough of our selues? Alas we, (Laodicea-like)Apoc. 3.17. are wretched, miserable, poore, blind, and [Page 11] naked, stript and robbed of all the wealth which once we had in our innocent condition; so meane, so beggerly, that except we get him into vnion with vs, to be our husband, and inrich vs, it had beene good for vs if wee had neuer beene: Why then should we be so sottish, so enuious to our owne weale, as to reiect those treaties of marriage with himselfe, that he proffers vs. I guesse at the cause of this,Cavills of some (now a reproouing) that care not for Christ. & (I thinke) not amisse. We (like to some Wiues that loue to play rex, and are loth to be vnder rule) deeme the conditions too strict, which his Spouse must conforme vnto, & this marr's the match. Oh! Oh!1. That he ties to vnreasonable conditions. First, he requires spirituall chastitie at our hands. His Wife must be a Virgin,Psal. 45.14. Isa. 37.22. haue doues eyes, Cant. 1.15. single and simple, not to admit of any Mate with him, Ezechiel's Ezech. 23.5. harlot, and Iames hisIam. 4.4. adulteresse, he cannot away with. That we should part our loue betwixt Mammon and him, him and Belial, him and Satan, he will not tolerate, the whole man must be kept chast wholly for him: If wee entertaine either sensuall pleasures, or sinfull profits, as our Paramours, we are no Bride for his fellowship.
2 Secondly, He must haue obedience at our handes; a like subiection as was imposed vponGen. 3.16. Eue to her husband, doth he looke for indeed; he tells vs if wee will match with him, our desire must be to him, he must rule ouer vs, and of necessitie wee mustPsal. 45.11. reuerence, (that is) be in submission vnto him.
3 Thirdly, He would haue vsPsal. 45.10. forget our owne people, and our fathers house too. Looke as Israell must forsake her idols which shee worshipped in the time of Pagan idolatryAs Cyrill expounds it. Catech. 7.; as the Gentiles must forget and leaue the Iewish rites and ceremonies vnder the GospellSo Lyranus.; so must we forget our old country manners whatsoever Iust. Mart. in Dialog. cum Trypho. [...]. Luk. 14.26.. Our teeth must not be set on edge with the soure grapes that our fathers haue eaten. That we should retaine any dregs of the vaine superstition, or keepe any smacke of the vile conversation of our forefathers, that we should follow the euill cvstomes of euill people amongst whom we liue, will not he at any hand yeeld vnto: He that forsaketh not father, mother, children, friends, and all for [Page 12] Christs sake; he that preferreth the pleasing and imitating any of them before him, is not worthy of him. Here is another condition.
There is another yet, which is not the least. They that fellow and follow him, must take vp their crosseLuk. 9.23.: He tells vs the hardest in Wooing time: if we be his Disciples, we shall beIo. 15.19.21 Luk. 21.17. hated for his name sake, scoffed at with Isaac Gen. 21.9. Gal. 4.29., oppressed with Israel Ex. 5.5.6 &c., accused1 Sam. 2.19., hunted1 Sam. c. 24, 26. &c. with Dauid, imprisoned with Ieremy Iere. 32.2., stocked with Ioseph Gen. 39.20., fettered with Paul and Silas Act. 16.23., fed with the bread of affliction with Micha 1 Kin. 22.27, carried into Captivitie with Ezechiel Ezek. 1.1., plunged into the den of Lyons with Daniel Dan. 6.16., fired in the brazen Bull with Antipas See Paraeus in Apoc. 2.13., robbed of goods, spoyled of life with Polycarpus Apoc. 2.9.. In a word, persecuted and opposed, & men of sorrowes with himselfeIsa. 53.3.. These indeed, are the conditions He tyes his Wife vnto, and these things, He propounds vnto vs when he comes a Wooing vs, and hence it is we are so loath to be contracted vnto him. Hard termes indeed to meere naturalists, who haue no eye to see the royaltie of the person, nor the recompence of reward that he brings with him: But to a man that hath any sound iudgement in spirituall matters, these Articles are easie and reasonable enough, if wee may take the Bridegroomes owne wordMat. 11. last. My yoake is easie, & my burden light. The cavills quelled.. Let vs examine the case a little. Is it more then reason, that, a great Prince (making choice of a peasants daughter to Wife) should request and require a reservation and preservation of her chastitie, loue, and loyaltie for himselfe? Must Pharaohs daughterSo literally the word reuerence him, importeth. Psal 45.11. obey Salomon, and is it much for the Church to obey her Salomon, Christ Iesus? To him onely it is meete (saithBeza. Paraphrase vpon Psal. 45. one) thou shouldest be subiect, as to thy Lord; I would haue thee to know (saithIohan. Compens ibid. Paraphrasticè. Est autem vt scias hic rex dominus tuus dignus cuitu in genua prouoluta supplex fias. another) that this King thy Lord is worthy to haue bended knees, and a bowing heart. Againe, shall Valeria, the wife of Seruius (of whomHier. li 1. adversus Iovin. one of the Fathers reporteth) not consent to marry another, saying;Seruium semper viuere. Seruius my husband liueth still: and shall Ierusalem play the Harlot, suffering Egypt, Assyria, the world, the Deuill, and corruption toEzek. 23.3. presse and bruise the teates of her Virginitie; as though her husband Christ were [Page 13] quite dead, and without being? Must Sarah forsake her owne Country Gen. 12.5., Rachell leaue her fathers familieGen. 31.14., to follow their husbands? and may Sion stay in Sodom still, not leaue the rotten errors, & corrupt manners, of her old fathers house? May shee say as the Romanists doe at this day, I beleeue as the Church beleeueth, though they know not how the Church beleeues; or as the Libertines doe, We will doe as our fathers haue done, as our neighbours doe, we will play on Sundayes, keepe merry company, loue good fellowship, such doe so, wee will none of these precise orders in our families, our fathers neuer taught vs this, nor did this; shall shee (I say) say thus? Shall Michol incur the displeasure of Saul 1 Sam. 19.12.17. for Dauids good; and shall the Church be loth to beare rebuke for Christ his sake, and flinch backe because of troubles? Is it too hard, for Christ to require constancie and patience at her hands? What great thing I pray is required, (saithMusc. in Psal. p. 357. A. Quaeso quid magni exigitur cum idem coniugi suo debeat vxor. one) when euery Wife owes the like to her husband! What want of equitie is in these conditions? let any man iudge. Or put case these termes were vnreasonable. Yet this husband is an heauenly King (you see) and that makes amends for all, lighteneth the burden, and qualifieth the seeming tartnes of these Articles. But its come to Calvins saying;In Psal. 45. v. 11. Hereupon groweth it, that we be so stately and proud (we will none of Christ) because we consider not how precious a treasure God offreth vs in his onely begotten sonne. If this vnthankefulnesse letted not, it would not grieue vs after the example of Paul, Phil. 3.8. to account whatsoeuer we set most store by, to be but dung, and right nought, that Christ might enrich vs with his riches. Worthy therefore to be blamed, are all those, who, (because they must keepe themselues chast from whooring after their owne pleasures, and profits, yeeld obedience to Christs will▪ suffer troubles for his name, renounce their superstitions and corruptions for his sake) cannot, will not accept those treaties of communion with himselfe, which in loue he tendereth vnto them. What sayd I? Worthy to be blamed? Nay (their contempt of the royaltie of his person, and richnes of his portion being considered) they are worthy to be excluded from euer hauing share in that excellent [Page 14] GLORY, which he hath prepared for his owne.
Vse 4 Fourthly, Is Israels Spouse an heauenly King? What reuerent regard and good well-come ought we (then) to afford Gods Ministers,Exhortation to make much of Levi, who labours in matching vs to Christ. who come vnto vs and deale with vs about a Match with Christ Iesus. Wee know what respect Rebeccah gaue Eliezer, Abrahams servantGen. 24.31.32.33., when hee came vnto HER about a Match with the Patriarch Isaack his Masters sonne: how much made on a Princes messenger to a poore mans daughter, about such a matter should be, wee may easily coniecture; and shall not we account theIsa. 52.7. Rom. 10.15. feete of them beautifull, that bring vnto vs the glad tydings of peace; and that tell vs, that the sonne of God would faine be married vnto vs? God forbid, but we should. Alas, alas then what an heauie inditement at the day of iudgement, will be brought IN against the vnthankfull world, for the bad entertainement that it yeelds vnto the Lords Levites, and labourers in this busines. We come from the King of heauen, as his Ambassadors, we talke with people about this Spouse, and (according to the talent which the Lord hath lent vs) we acquaint them with the comelines of his feature, the statelines of his person, the greatnes of his portion, we direct them how to entertaine him, shew them the way how to obtaine him, &c. And yet (lamentable it is to consider) some deride vs, some disgrace vs, and many deale vniustly with vs. Men and brethren, what shall wee doe? Shall we desist? Hath the Lord taken an oath of vs (as Abraham of his servant) that wee shall seeke out a Wife for his sonne, and shall we deale falsely and faithlesly in our errand? Oh, let vs labour to ioyne still, even heaven and earth, Christ and the Church. We haue not our names▪ and offices ofLevi signifieth ioyned. Levi for nought. Pray we for a blessing vpon our trauaile, asGen. 24.12. Eliezer did; shun we not to declare all the counsell of God Act. 20.27., for any by-respect whatsoeuer; and then albeit our message be not entertained by All, as we doe desire, yet a good Rebeccah will make vs well-come for the tydings that we bring her of this heauenly Isaac, and the comfort wee shall reape in this, will countercheck the discomforts that may be occasioned [Page 15] by the contrary. And as for the Egyptian Dames, Philistins Dalilahs, daughters of Heth, and wicked ones, who care the lesse for vs, by how much the more wee vrge them to this Bridegroome; let them liue single from Christ if they list; one day they will curse the time, that euer they set so light by so weightie a message, so Princely a marriage.
Vse 5 Fiftly, I may vse this poynt as a Motiue to stirre vp Christians, to solicite Christ for the good of their brethren,Advise to pray for the church in affliction. a part of his Bride, who are vnder the rod, and the flaile, for the Gospells sake. His Kingly office, is an argument, that there is neither want of wisedome, nor defect of power, to bring to nought, the subtile policies, and cruell practises of those RomishThe Iesuits. blood-hounds, and heathenish Atheists, who hunt after the ruine of Gods Israel. Hauing then such an one to speake to, why should our prayers be either few or cold? Nay, why not more then ordinary in extraordinary times of need? What an heauie case is it, that in theIsa. 22.12. day when the Lord calls vs to mourning, to weeping, to baldnesse, and girding with sackcloth, there should beVers. 13. ioy and gladnes, slaying Oxen, and killing sheepe, eating flesh and drinking Wine! Oh, that this principle could learne vs better things. Needfull it is (now if euer) for vs that wee should; well it would be with vs, if we would euen importune this Bridegrome for his church, with the Prophet Dauids argument; Thou art my King, O God, command deliverances for Iacob Psal. 44.4..
Vse 6 Finally, what a number of sweet rills doe flow from this fountaine, to comfort and atcheere the children of God.Comfort to the faithfull. Speake thou afflicted Christian, what is it that troubleth thee? The Deuill dogges thee, doth he not? Corruption clogs thee, doth it not? Peradventure thou thinkest, thou shalt not hold out to the end: It may be the reproches of neighbours, the malice of enemies, the feare of death, and the like, doe disquiet thee. Well, whatsoever it be that grieueth thee, proue but thou that Christ Iesus hath wooed thee, and won thee to himselfe, and this poynt will glad thee and comfort thee.
Comfort, 1. Against Satan.What though that Arch-adversary to thy peace, and thy soule, the Devill, will not let thee alone, but is euer and anon molesting of thee, with such and such assaults, setting vpon thee. Remember, thy husband is a King: and thisGen. 3.15. seed of the Woman hath broken the head of that serpent, and victoriously conquered this Prince of darkenes, insomuch, that though he doth nibble at thy heele, yet this Prince, this God of Peace, shallRom. 16.20. tread him downe shortly vnder thy feete; And then all his darts that he hath shott out against thee, shall be retorted vpon himselfe, to the wounding of his own pate. Yea, and this be thou surely perswaded of too, for thy husband, the great King, will haue it so, such is his pleasure, and can haue it so, such is his power. So that the Devill cannot be so violent against thee, but Christ will be as valiant against him for theeQuo impetu venerat, eodem impetu pulsus est, & quantum fotmidinis, & terroris attulit, tantum fortitudinis inuenit & roboris. Cyp. Epist. l. 1. Ep. 1..
2. Against the rebelling of nature against grace.Secondly, Fearest thou that thy corruptions will subiugate thee to their former yoake, and prevaile over thee, because they are continually stirring against the worke of the Spirit in thee? Consider still thy husband is a King; and by consequent, he hath mastered sinne for thee, even in thine owne flesh,Psal. 68.19. he hath led captiuitie captiue, he hath layd chaynes vpon thy lusts, and hath taken such order for the continuall decrease of euill in thee, that (like as it was fore-prophesied, the Israelites should the Babylonians) so thou shalt take those Corruptions captiues, whose captiue thou wert, and thou shalt rule ouer those thy spirituall oppressors, and rest shalt thou haue from this thy sorrow, and thy feare, and from the hard bondage, wherein (before conversion) thou wast made to serue Isa. 14.2.3..
3. Against doubting of perseverance.3. Standest thou in doubt, whether thou shalt haue grace enough to bring thee to heaven, and is this a discomfort vnto thee? still keepe the memoriall of this poynt in thy thoughts. In this thy KingColoss. 1.19. Chap. 2. v. 9. dwells the fulnes of the God-head bodily, and the absolute riches of all graces, which graces are the iewells that he mindes to furnish and fill thee withall continually. Will a Princely wooer be sparing in his gifts? will he marry himselfe with one, whom he meanes to make [Page 17] a bill of divorce against, after there hath passed a most sweet Communion betwixt them for a time? Or what? Can he not for want of might, or loues he not for want of will, to make that good which he promised, when he sayd,Hos. 2.19.20. I will marry thee to my selfe FOR EVER? yea, and that in righteousnes, in iudgement, in faithfulnes, and knowledge? When tookest thou him euer tardy, or faithles? He would not be thy Prince, thy Soveraigne, if he meant not to guide thee by his law, and governe thee with his Spirit, vntill he even bringeth thee to glory. Wherefore, if here be thy feare, comfort thy heart with that which the Apostle hath, Heb. 12.28. the kingdome which thou hast received (yea, hast receiued alreadie) cannot be shaken.
Fourthly, Doth the world powre contempt vpon thee?4. Against contempt. Art thou set at nought? canst not haue that esteeme amongst men, which thou desirest and deservest? I see little reason why this should trouble thee; If it doth, here is comfort against IT also. Thou hast a KING, whom thou art married vnto, yea, the KING of heaven and earth, which if the world knew (as it doth not, in which thou liuest as a stranger, and vnknowne vnto thee) it would be twice advised, ere it would dare so much as to haue any base thought, or contemptuous conceit of thee. But the world knowes none but her owne bratts; and thou (being of the of-spring of GodAct. 17.20., a member of Iehovahs familie, yea, a Spouse made fit for the King himselfe) shee knowes not thee, esteemes not thee, any more then a foole doth a prize, put into his hand. Which contempt thou needest no more care for, and at which thou needest be no more cast downe, then a Noblemans Wife, or a Princes Bride, when (being in a strange Countrey, and vnknowne what her house and husband is) shee is either despised, or not esteemed, according to her owne, and Spouse his worth.
Fiftly, Art thou not onely despised,5. Against persecution. but also mis-vsed in the world? Doe the persecuters of the truth,Ioh. 8.4 [...]. who are of the Deuill their Father, goe about to wrong thee any kinde of way, in thy name, state, person, life, or libertie. Here is thy [Page 18] Shield still against discomfort. Thy husband is a King; and the time will come, when He will be knowne to be a King in the middest of thine enemies: Told I not thee, that he isDan. 12.1. Michaell the great Prince, that STANDETH for the people of God. Never louing husband stood more stoutly for his Wife, then he hath stood and doth stand for his Well-beloued. Remember what he did for his ancient Israel, he reproved even Kings for their sakes Ps. 135.136.. What is become of Og, the King of Basan, and Sehon, King of the Amorites, who were great and mightie Princes? Are they not perished long agoe? Felt they not the heauines of his revengefull hand? And what is His hand shortned Isa. 50.2. now, that it cannot redeeme? or hath it no power to deliuer now as well as then? Yes, yes,Isa. 43.13. Before the day was I am he, (saith the LORD, speaking of deliuering Israell from the handes of Babylon, and Babylon into the handes of Chaldea) and there is none can deliuer out of my hand. I will worke, and who shall let it? The LordPsal. 110.5.6 at thy right hand, (saith Dauid speaking of Christ) shall strike through Kings in the day of his wrath, and wound the heads ouer divers Countryes. Wherefore comfort thy selfe with these things, against trouble and persecution, be it verball and Ismaell-like, or reall and Iesabell-like. ForIsa. 43.15. I am (saith Christ) the Lord, your holy one, the Creator of Israell, your King.
6. Against the feare of death.Lastly, if Death be the King of terrors vnto thee: and thou doubtest how thou shalt well-come, and away with this pale Sergeant when he comes with heavens fore-decreed Writt to arrest thee, consider, that this thy Christ, thy King, hath like a stout Commander, and vnvanquishable conquerour, charged this Sergeant to doe thee no hurt, trod this enemy in the dirt. He told thee he would doe it long before he came;Hos. 13.14. Oh death, I will be thy death; O graue, I will be thy destruction: according to his promise, he did doe it when he came; forCol. 2.15. he hath spoyled principalities and powers, made a shew of them openly, and triumphed ouer them. And now, since he is gone into heauen, he hath left thee a Writt of assurance for it, enrolled in the Writings of that famous Doctor of the Gentiles; [Page 19] 1 Cor. 15 25.26. He must raigne, till he hath put all things vnder his feete; the last enemy that shall be destroyed is death. God forbid then that thisApoc. 6.7. Rider vpon the pale horse, should vpon the thought of his comming, either driue colour out of THY face, or courage out of THY heart. Let them feare death, who are out of Christ, who feare not this King. But as for thee, whom Christ hath linked to himselfe, insult thou ouer Death, as Death doth ouer the sonnes of vnbeliefe,1 Cor. 15▪ 55.57. O death where is thy sting? O graue where is thy victorie? Thankes be vnto God which giueth me victory through Iesus Christ our Lord. Thus (I say) whatsoeuer the temptations be that trouble thee, the discomforts be that molest thee, arising either from the thought of the Deuils subtiltie, from the sight of thine owne infirmitie, from suspition of the want of constancie, from the contempt of neighbours, malice of enemies, or feare of death, tune but this Text with the voice of faith; in this Text, strike but vpon this string, harpe vpon this poynt with the finger of faith, (That Christ the Spouse of the Church is a King;) and it will make such Musicke to thy soule, that like as (when Dauid played before Saul 1 Sam. 16▪23.) the wicked spirit went from him, so the troubled spirit will goe from thee, or els at least that disconsonant, and disconsolate, noise betwixt faith and feare, to disquiet thy conscience, will be well qualified, and allayed. And so an end of the first poynt in the first part, let vs now set vpon the second. Which is the royall provision that this royall person makes for his beloued Bride. For as he is a King, so he hath a Table, which Salomon here in my Text, calleth
His Table.] Or (as some Translations haue it) his repast. The second circumstanc in the first part. The Interpretation. Either of which readings (as the learned obserue) the originall will beare; but the former doe I follow.
A Table, we know, in the proper, and natiue signification, is a frame of Wood, made to eate meate vpon, in which sense we cannot take it here; nor yet for corporall meate, set vpon the Table to refresh our bodies withall. For the Kingdome of God consists neither in meates nor drinkes, as the Apostle shewethRom. 14.1 [...].. We must therefore vnderstand it [Page 20] Metaphorically, and taking it so, I find varietie and diversitie of Expositions amongst Interpreters.
R [...]b. Selomoh. Fol. 117. fac. 2Some of the Iewes, whom Genebrard quoteth, s thinke it to be Sinai, the mount where the Law was deliuered to Moses, and whence he descended in hast when the Israelites erected and worshipped the golden CalfeExod. 32.: But this cannot be, because it is a confining of this Text to the state of the Iewish Synagogue at that time; when as yet the holy Ghost hath a larger ayme then at that.Mr Brightman. One of our owne Countrymen, thinkes it to be meant particularly of the Congregation of Iudah, Beniamin, Ephraim, &c. who gathered themselues together at Ierusalem, in the third moneth of the fifteenth yeare of the raigne of2 Chron. 15. [...].10. Asa. This opinion I will not censure, yet I dare not subscribe to it. For this also I take to be a setting too short boundes to the Text. We will walke in a broader way, and allow larger limits (with other sound and learned Writers). I know Saint Luke speaketh of aLuk 22.30. Table, whereat Christ promised his Disciples to sit and eate; and that intimates the heauenly dainties they should partake off in his Celestiall Paradise, the Kingdome of glory: which someAs Piscator. Merc. doe vnderstand in this place. But with * others, I vnderstand the Word and Sacraments, the dyet of the Church; wherewithall shee is fed and refreshed spiritually, as men are corporally with meates and drinkes set vpon their Table; Neither doth this swerue from the Canon of Scripture: For is not the Kingdome of heauen, that is, the Word of the Kingdome compared to a Supper, and toIoh. 6.27. Meate that perisheth not? And doth not the Apostle call the Sacrament of his last Supper, A Table 1 Cor. 19.21.? And whereas it is called here, HIS Table, it intimates, that HE is the Founder of this Feast. For who giueth the Word, the meate that endureth to eternall life, if notIoh. 6.21. the sonne of man, whom the Father hath sealed: And the Sacramentall Table, is called the Table of the LORD In that place [...]recited out f the Corinths.. I know indeed that Christ feedeth and feasteth his Church with the internall graces, and comforts of his Spirit, but because these follow to be considered off in His Sitting at this Table, therefore my intent is in this onely, to [Page 21] insist on the externall dishes of his Ordinances: And so make this the Doctrine.
Doct. 2 That this King Christ, spreades a Table, and makes provision of the Word and Sacraments for his Church. This is one of the things which the Church setteth his greatnesse forth by in my Text, in so much that now, with the Prophet Dauid, euery member of the same may say,Psal. 23.2. He maketh me to feed in greene pastures. This is that which our Author signifieth elswhere, when he brings in Christ in Wisedomes name, not onely building her an house, and erecting a Church, but also making provision for the inhabitants of that house.Pro. 9.2. Shee hath killed her victualls, shee hath mingled her wine, shee hath prepared her Table. In another place, he is brought in vnder the similitude of a King, making a marriage dinner for his sonne, and sending forth his servants, the Ministers of the Gospell, to toll in guests, and tell them of the feast, both how bountifull it is, and how ready it is; Behold I haue prepared my dinner, my Oxen and my Fatlings are killed, and all things are ready Mat. 22.23.. And that this feast is peculiarly provided for the Church, it is plaine in the same ParableVerses 5.10.. Where we may see, that they which did set light by the seruants call, the Ministers invitation (as they that are out of the Church doe) are threatned, not to taste of that Supper; and onely those are admitted as fit guests, whom the servants gathered out of the high wayes, whom the Ministers of the Gospell are made instruments to turne out of the high way of sinne that leadeth to hell, through the Preaching of the Word. And who are they, but the Church? Herewith accordeth that of Esay, Isa. 25.6. Vpon this mountaine (meaning the Church) shall the Lord make a feast of fat things, a feast of Wines on the lees, of fat things full of marrow, of Wines on the lees well refined. See Ezek. 16.13. So then deny it we cannot, (truth evincing it) that Christ hath a board spread for his Bride, richly furnished with such spirituall dainties, as his Word and Sacraments be. And not without cause.
Reason. For why, he would haue his Church to grow, and thriue. And how grow? Two wayes in addition of members, [Page 22] in augmentation of graces; in multitude, and in measure. As therefore there is need of temporall foode for corporall growth, so of these spirituall Ordinances, for this spirituall growth.
First, He would haue it to grow in multitude: he would haue such daily added to the Church, as are ordained to be saued, that like as Ephraim, Manasseh, Simeon and Beniamin fell from Israel vnto Asa in abundance2 Chron. 15.9.; so there may be an accesse of Elect ones vnto him out of Satans hands, euery day more and more: and this causeth him to giueEphes. 4.8.11. gifts vnto men, and to appoint some to be Prophets, some to be Apostles, some teachers, some Pastors, with this Commission,Psal. 50.5. Gather my Saints vnto me, for the [...]. augmentation of my body, or addition of members therevnto.
Secondly, He would haue his Church grow in measure, his Will is, that they which are added to the Church, should haue grace augmented in their hearts, to be more fat, flourishing, and well liking in their age Psal. 92.14.; therefore he giues them the1 Pet. 2.2. sincere milke of the Word, that they may Dicimus quidem cibum omnem perficere ea quae aluntur, &c. Dyonis. Areop. libro Epistol. fol. 183. b. grow thereby. And giues he not also, not onely Baptisme, as the Sacrament of Initiation, but also, The Lords Supper for confirmation? Nay, by the administration of the one, and communication at the other, doth he not seale vp remission of sins by his blood, to the conscience of the beleever, for the strengthening of his faith, increasing of his loue, and bettering of his obedience? So that the beleever may haue equall recourse to Water in Baptisme by meditation, Bread and Wine in the Lords Supper, by participation, to stay his faith on, to strengthen his faith by, when either the malice of Sathan against him, or the reliques of vnbeliefe in him, shall raise any stormes of Despayre, to weaken the same.
Vse 1 This being so, makes first of all against those that care not for the Word, that contemne the Sacraments; vnto whom if the Ministers cry in the Prophets termes, (Isa. 55.1. Hoe, euery one come yee to the Waters, Come, buy, Wine and Milke without money, and without price,) they stoppe their eares against this call, make excuses when they are bidden. One hath a [Page 23] Farme, another hath Oxen, another hath a Wife to please, another his Market to follow, another his Dice, another his Dogs; one cannot tarry in the Church while the Sacrament of Baptisme is administring; another is at oddes with his neighbour, and he cannot come to the Communion this yeare: And thus while one feedes vpon his pleasures, another vpon his profits, another on his beastly and revengefull lusts, the most hauing the broth of abhominable things in their vessells Isa. 65.4.: This Table of Christs spreading is not so frequented, so regarded as it ought to be. Which contempt of Gods Ordinances, how worthy of reprehension it is, this poynt declareth.
Should some Prince, or Peere of a Kingdome,A similie. make a great feast, furnish his Table with all manner of dainties, yea, with such costly delicates, as he feedeth his owne Queene, or Spouse withall, and should send forth his servants, to invite guests to that feast, bidding to come who haue a list and well-come; and they that are thus bidden, should make excuse, and say; Alas, I haue a poore neighbour dwells by me, he hath invited me to a cold Sallet, or a dish of herbes, in which regard I cannot come: were he not worthy to be Chronicled for a man without wisedome? Might not his friends that loue him, well reproue him, for so carelesse contemning a Princes call, and for preferring a dish of Pepons at a poore mans house, before the royall dainties of a great mans Table? they might very well: In like manner, may not they be as deservedly shent, that shall preferre their earthly commodities, their fleshly vanities, nay, their diabolicall impieties, before these supernaturall meates, and spirituall bitts of the Word and Sacraments? Knowest thou of whose providing they are? art thou aware for whom they be prepared? are they not of the King, Christ? are they not for the Church? and can that be course fare, which is of so royall a preparer, and for so royall partakers? Verily, I may say to thee, as Elihu to Iob; Thy soule abhorreth daintie meate Iob 33.22.. Let me expostulate a little with thee. Why can the doctrine of salvation, relish no better in thy pallate? How is it that the [Page 24] Temple cannot hold thee, while the Childe is a Baptizing, but out thou must be running, as if it were an Ordinance concerned thee not? Why wilt thou chuse rather to liue in wilfull malice with thy brother, then come and partake of the Lords Supper? Or wherefore art thou so seldome at it, when as thou maiest so often haue it? If I were but acquainted with thy maladie, I would apply a remedy, according to the skill the Lord hath giuen me. Oh that I knew but what would get thee a better stomacke. If thou wouldest but provoke thy selfe, to vomit out the loue of the world, and of thy lusts, which like poysonous crudities lie cloddering vpon thy stomacke, thou wouldest haue a better appetite; and this honey-combe would not be loathed by thee. But if thou beest past cure, then I haue done with thee; Goe thy wayes to thy huskes with the filthy Swine, to thy Venison with prophane Esau; sell thy birth-right for pottage; make excuses; frame pretences to keepe thee from this Feast, yet I must be terrible in my wordes vnto thee, This King that makes this Banquet, will be wroth with thee,Mat. 22.7. and will send forth his Armies to destroy all such as thou art.
Vse 2 But now in the second place, as for thee whom counsell is like (by the blessing of God) to prevaile withall, thee doe I perswade, yea, earnestly entreate, to frequent this Table, these Ordinances; neither thy age, sex, condition, gifts, inward or outward, can excuse thy absence, or preiudice thy admittance. Hither thou must come, the King doth enioyne thee; hither thou maiest come, he will accept thee; on these dainties thou maiest feed, thy meannesse need be no impediment to thee; on these dainties thou must feed, thy greatnesse can be no plea for the contrary. And for thy encouragement hereto, know thou:
Motiue 1.First, That Christ will set no base fare vpon his Board, for his best beloued Bride. If the Cookes doe marre it sometimes in the dressing, (as Fryer-like Preachers doe, powdering the Word with the dust of their owne inventions; or as the Papist-like Prelates doe, adding creame, salt, [Page 25] oyle, spittle, and the like trash to Water in Baptisme, and defiling the Lords Supper with that abhominable idoll of the Masse) yet the fault of that is not in the King, and Kezar of the Church. It is sweet, it is excellent as it comes out of his handes,Psal▪ 19.10. sweeter then the honey; ofIob 28.1 [...]. price aboue Rubies; more to be desired then gold, yea, then much fine gold: The costliest meates, the delectablest drinkes that are, are but course in comparison of it. God forbid then thou shouldest abhorre it. Get thee to a good Cooke; abhorre the Masse; Baptize not thy Childe by a Seminary; and come but to this Table, stay but at this Table with a reverent regard, and thou shalt finde that I tell thee no lie, such sweetnesse shalt thou taste, such goodnesse shalt thou see in the meanest of these Ordinances, euen by thine owne experience.
Secondly, Consider,Motiue 2. that it cannot be sayd of this foode as Paul spake of indifferent meates and drinkes,1 Cor. 8. [...] ▪ Neither if we eate, are we the better, nor if we eate not, are we the worse. For thy admission to the Church, if thou beest not yet called, thy growing vp in grace, if thou beest converted, hangs vpon these Ordinances, as vpon secondary necessary helpes; Sayd I not before, this meate the Feast-maker provideth for the growth of the Church? How can the Church then grow in number one the more for thee, if thou despise Prophesying? How canst thou grow in measure, if thou carest not for Preaching, makest no vse of thy Baptisme, prouest a superficiall and seldome guest at the Lords Table. As then thou tenderest thy conversion to grace, thy confirmation in grace, so delight to be a guest at this Board which Christ spreadeth, take pleasure to make vse of those Ordinances, which like spirituall provision, he hath made readie for his Church, in the Sermons which are Preached, in the Sacraments which are administred amongst vs; knowing that to be a truth, which a Father saith;Chrysost. in Math hom. 70. Cum spiritualia, v [...]cant, nulla occupationis excusatio est. When spirituall things doe call vs, no excuse of subordinate busines will serue the turne.
Vse 3 Lastly, Hath Christ made such spirituall provision for his Church? then from hence, to their singular comfort, [Page 26] may all Gods people, that are pinched with penury, assure themselues, they shall neuer starue, for want of needfull sustenance. He that can giue the Kingdome, with the righteousnesse of that, can cast all other outward necessaries vpon vs: He that can and doth spread his Table for the soule, will prepare victualls for the bodie. He can provide a Table for his Israel in the Wildernesse. Dauids soule can he satisfie with Marrow and Fatnesse, in a dry and thirstie LandPsal. 63.15.. It is his honour to be franke and royall to his owne. And indeed he that hath bin so liberall as to giue himselfe, must needs with himselfe giue all things else. Thou complainest thou hast not so full a purse, so ouer-flowing a Table as others haue; knowest thou not that Sheepe, when they goe vp to the belly in pasture, are in danger of rotting, and that barer Common were better for them? Thy Shepheard sees it is better safetie for thy graces, to furnish thee with a mediocritie, rather then fill thee with a superfluitie of outward blessings. Tell me, hast thou not provision for the soule, the Word, the Sacraments? If Yea; this is aGen. 43.34. Beniamins messe, fiue times better then thy brethrens messes, which haue nothing but the world in store for the time of life, and wrath in store against the day of death. The fruition of the greater and better should alwayes counteruaile the want of the lesser, and worser. Browne bread and the Gospell (said Mr Bradford) is good cheere. Say thou poore Christian, Is not thy body as strong to labour, and thy children as well liking as theirs that haue more abundance? thou canst not deny it. Plucke vp a good heart then, and say with David; Psal. 23.1. The Lord is my feeder, therefore I shall not want. He lets not my soule starue, therefore he will not let my body famish. Resolue on this, I say. For it is a greater dishonour to his bountie, then thou art aware off, to thinke that he will with-hold any needfull good thing from any that lead an holy, pure, and vpright life Psal. 84. vlt. ver..
The third circumstance in the first part.We haue now done with the second thing, which the Church commendeth her husbands greatnesse by. The last remaineth to be handled, which is his presence and [Page 27] residence with HER, implied by HIS Sitting at Table.
THis circumstance subdiuideth it selfe into two members. 1. The fruition the Church hath of Christs sight and sitting, couched vnder the terme of Sitting at Table. 2. The fruit Shee gets by it, and returneth for it, in the smell that her Spikenard sendeth forth.
We will set these ioynts together in the meaning, and not handle them a-part, because they come vnder the same particular head.
Sitteth]. The Rabbines, who (as I remembred before,The Interpretation. by King, vnderstand Iehovah, and by Table, Mount Sinai) doe by Sitting at Table, take to be meant, the presence or residence of the Lord vpon that Mount with Moses, when he delivered the Law vnto him. Others, referre it to the presence of2 Chron. 1 [...] ▪ Asa, when he was in the middest of the Israelites, congregated and gathered together, to make a Covenant with the Lord. But thou knowest (READER) I haue shunned these paths from the beginning. Others, expound it of the presence of Christ, alluding to the presence of Salomon with his Bride, on the day of his marriage. And amongst these, I finde some difference; one vnderstanding his gloriousPiscator. Dun [...] fruitur gaudijs Calestibus. Metaphora qualis. Mat. 8.11. presence in heauen, where he Sitteth, partaking of caelestiall ioyes:Merc. Another his gracious presence with his Church in this world. Now that the presence of Christ is here signified, it is probable, yea, very probable: Because a man cannot sit at the same Table with another, but they must enioy the presence of one another. But, whither his glorious presence alone, or his gracious alone, or both be here meant, that's the question. For mine owne part, albeit I dare not peremptorily exclude his presence in glory, (because whiles he is at Table with his Saints on earth, he is as [Page 28] well at repast with his Saints in heauen, and whiles the one hath his gracious presence here, the other hath his glorious there) yet I doe rather encline to his presence by grace here: And that for these reasons.
The reasons of the meaning of the word, Sitting.First, Because it is held generally, that this verse is the speech of the Church militant, speaking and shewing what her husband is to her, and doth for her, euen in this life.
Secondly, Because of the end of her speech, which is to invite the daughters of Ierusalem, (that is) them that are without the Church, to come to Christ. But what stronger argument, to this purpose, could shee vse, then one taken from the enioying of his presence, as well by grace here, as in glory hereafter. For little courage to come to Christ would men haue, if so be there were no comfortable sight and presence of him to be had in this life, as well as in that which is to come. So then by Table, being vnderstood (as hath beene alreadie shewed) the Word and Sacraments; by his Sitting at this Table, is meant his presence by grace with his Church by his Ordinances.
One of the Iewes by Spikenard here, vnderstands the worship which the Israelites did yeeld vnto the golden Calfe; and by the smell that it cast forth, the noysome sauour that this Idolatry sent vp to the Lord, whiles he was with Moses on the Mount, which was so strong and loathsome, that the Lord was faine in hast to send Moses downe vnto them. Another, by Spikenard, vnderstandes the couenant it selfe, which the Tribes made before the Lord, in the 15. yeare of Asa's raigne: and by the sending forth the smell thereof, he meaneth the sounding forth of that2 Chron. 15.14. Vow with a loud voice, with Trumpets and Cornets, and such like Instruments of Musicke. But letting these passe,Ambros in Psal. 119. Nunc autem redolet fides: Ideo (que) dicit Ecclesia: Nardus mea dedit odorem suum. others doe by Spikenard vnderstand Faith alone;P [...]sc. others Good workes alone;Mercer and Geneb. others, both Faith and Good workes. This last iudgement I follow, in regard of the resemblance betwixt Spikenard and Faith, betwixt Spikenard and Good workes.How Faith resembleth Spikenard. First, for the [Page 29] resemblance betwixt Faith and it. Spikenard is a very sweete and fragrant herbe, with a tender roote, full of leaues vpon the top, of which eares spring forth, full of fruit; Of this herbe an ointment is made, (which it seemes was in much vse in Salomons time) which hath a threefold, or rather fourefold vertue, to comfort the heart, to helpe against the weaknesse of the stomacke, defects of the braine andDiosc. lib. 1. cap. 6. eyes. And is not faith much like.
First, It is a very sweete and fragrant vertue, it perfumes whatsoever we doe, without which it isHeb. 11.6. impossible to please God.
Secondly, It hath a tender roote, it springs vp in a broken heart, in a conscience wounded, bruised, and preparedPerk. Catechis..
Thirdly, It comforteth the heart, by the apprehension, and application of the promises.
Fourthly, It availeth against the diseases of the stomacke, it keepeth from casting vp the spirituall food, asDios. l. 1. c. 6. Spikenard from casting vp the corporall, it helpeth against carnall and earthly diseases, it moderates the affections.
Fiftly, It is full of leaues, he that hath it makes profession of Religion.
Neither is it, in the last place, void of fruit, for faith makes a man as well to practise as professe.
Now as Faith in All of these, How good Workes resemble Spikenard. so Good workes in Some of these things are like to Spikenard also: and chiefely in respect of the comforting qualitie of it. For Good workes doe comfort occasionally, not onely the hearts of the doers themselues, as the example of Iob proueth (who drew comfort from his holy life, when he was almost at the doore of death,) but also the hearts of others, who desire the glory of God, and credit of the Gospell; as the fruits of loue in doing, and patience in suffering, amongst the Thessalonians, were a great refreshing and crowne of reioycing to the holy Apostle, yea, made both Paul, Siluanus, and Timotheus, to glory of them in the Churches 2 Thess. 1.3.4.. Thus we see, what is to be meant by Spikenard; so that [My Spikenard] is as much as, The [Page 30] Faith and Good workes of me the Church militant. Now in that shee speakes of Sending forth the smell thereof, we must know that Salomon alludes to the custome of his dayes, in the Easterne parts of the world, where the Hebrewes were, whose manner was at their Nuptialls and Banquetts, for the Brides and Wiues, to besweeten themselues with sweet oyntments, whereof Spikenard was one, that they might savour all ouer their Boardes, to giue not onely other sitters by, but also (and that chiefely too) their husbands content; and it seemes, the abuse and excesse of this the Prophet Amos taxeth very sharply;Amos 6.4.6. Woe to them that eate the Lambes out of the Flocke, and the Calues out of the middest of the Stall, that drinke Wine in Bowles, and Annoynt themselues with the chiefe Oyntments. It seemes (I say) that Salomon alludes to this, to note out vnto vs, that the Faith and Good workes of the Church, doe smell sweetly in Christs nostrills, and cast forth a savour vnto others. Will you now, at length, haue the summe of all in a word? take it thus.
Paraphrase. So long as my Kingly husband, Christ Iesus, is present in his Ordinances, with me the Church militant, the faith and good workes of my members, doe sauour sweetly before God, and amongst men. The poynts that offer themselues hence to our consideration, are these three.
1. That in his Word and Sacraments, Christ is present with his Church.
2. That whiles he is so present with her, shee sendeth forth the sauour of Faith and good Workes.
3. That they which haue sound faith, and bring forth good fruit, may lawfully professe, and speake of the same.
Doct. 3. Christ is present with his Church in his Ordinances.TO beginne with the first; While the Church enioyeth the Word and Sacraments, shee enioyeth the presence of her Beloued. For as Table importes the provision he makes for her, so doth his Sitting at Table, his presence with her. He deales not with his people as a man that invites guests to his house to a feast, who, when they are come goes his way from them, beares them no company; but as He bringeth them hither, [Page 31] so He is with them here. Where two or three are gathered together in my name, I will be in the middest amongst them Mat. 18.20.. In the Parable before cited, we reade, that the King came in to see the guests Mat. 22.11.; not onely (as it is likely) to marke their carriage, but also to beare them company. It is the speech of the Church, in the mouth of the Prophet;Hos. 6.2. The third day we shall liue in his sight. Where, by the third day, some vnderstand, the time of the Gospell, and, by liuing in his sight, Christ his presence in the Gospell, with the Spouses readinesse to heare his sayings Zarch. in Hos. ad loc. Praeste eius dictis audientes. Ioh.. Looke as Gods presence was in Israel with the Arke, so is it amongst his people, with his Word, and Sacraments; I am with you to the end of the world, as he told his Disciples, and can he be absent in his Ordinances?
But here the onely Question is,Qu: 1. How Christ is present in the Word. Answ. How he is present with his people in these Ordinances? How in the Word? How in Baptisme? How in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper?
For the first, follow but me in tracing out the Metaphor, and you shall haue satisfaction.
A King sits at Table with his Queene, not onely to feed with her, but also to carue to her, to conferre, and to be merry with her. So Christ is present with his owne, in the Preaching of the Word. 1. as a caruer, 2. as a conferrer, 3. as a comforter. First, (I say) as a caruer, for doth not he proportion his Doctrine in the mouthes of his Ministers, to the capacitie and necessitie of his hearers? Cutting such a bit out of such a Text, and such an one out of another, directing his Stewards wisely, and aptly to apply their studies in private, their Sermons in publique, to the occasions of their hearers? He carues resolution to her in her doubts, confutation in her errors, correction for her disorders, &c. Secondly, doth he not in his Word familiarly confer with his Bride, reuealing his minde plainely to her in those matters that are mysteries to the world.A similie. A man that sits at the vpper end of the Table with his Wife, talkes in her eare, happily the rest heare the sound of his voice, but yet know not, conceiue not the scope of his speech, shee onely vnderstands [Page 32] his meaning, and is acquainted with his will; So, reprobates heare the Word as well as the elect, but the elect haue Christ whispering that in their eare out of his Word, that the reprobate can neuer attaine vnto, though he goes as farre as a temporary faith can carry him, so that though both haue the sound, yet but one hath the sence, the sence (I say) in a right apprehension of the meaning of it, in a liuely feeling of the operation of it. For (asZanch. Tom. 5 in Epist. ad Ephes. p. 152. Verbum enim sinceris auribus auditum, imprimitur in corde Electorū per Christum: b. e. per Spiri [...]um Christi. One sayth) The Word which is heard with pure eares, doth take IMPRESSION in the hearts of the ELECT alone, by Christ, or the spirit of Christ. Thirdly, Christ is present in the Preaching of the Word, as a comforter. For whiles the Doctrine of the free fauour of God in Christ, of reconciliation with God by Christ, of the excellent priviledges of the faithfull, remission of sinnes, salvation in the heavens, &c. is sounded and preached, are not the soules of beleevers many times ravished, comforted, refreshed, by the inuisible working of the holy Spirit?
Qu: 2. How Christ is present in Baptisme. Answ. For the second Question, thus may we answere it, that Christ is not present in Baptisme, to take away the roote of originall sinne, as if it could not remaine in the partie Baptized; nor to conferre inuisible grace, simply by the element of Water, as if grace were necessarily tyed to the Sacrament, and none could haue it, except they were Baptized, nor yet thirdly to imprint an indelible Character in the soule, that can neuer be blotted out, as the Schooles would haue it. He is not (I say) either of these wayes present in Baptisme. But, first to seale vnto vs our admission into the couenant of his grace, and communion with himselfe, and with his SaintsAct. 2.39. Gal. 3.27.: Secondly, to represent vnto vs, and Sacramentally to show vs, by the outward washing of Water, the inward cleansing of our soules by his blood, that is, by iustification Polan. Synt. l. 6. c. 55., and by his Spirit, that is, by sanctification Id. ibid. Ablutio per sanguinem Christi, est iustificatio. Ablutio per spiritum Christi est regeneratio.. Thirdly, to put vs in minde of our repentance, new obedience, courage, and care, to show our selues his Souldiers, by warring and fighting against the Deuill, the world, and the flesh. So then, you see, that three wayes Christ is present in Baptisme. [Page 33] 1. As a sealer of the mutuall couenant betwixt Him and his Church. 2. as a representer of the benefits he will bestow on his Church, if shee keepe her conditions. 3. as a remembrancer of the duties shee owes to him, if shee would haue him keepe his conditions.
Lastly, to answere the third Question,Qu: 3. How Christ is present in the Eucharist. How Christ is present in the Lords Supper? We must know, that he is not there Transubstantially, as though the Bread and Wine were turned into the body of Christ, flesh, blood, and bones, as our adversaries the Papists hold; nor yet Consubstantially, Existentia ve [...] absconsione corporis invisibilis in, sub, cum, pane. by an existence or hiding his inuisible body, in, with, vnder the Bread, as if there were no figure in the Sacrament, as the Vbiquitarians holdChemnit Har. Evang. cap. 83. col. 1586. At verò hinc inferre velle. Ergo in Doctrina Sacramenti, propositio (panis est corpus meum) etiam est figuratae, hoc verò absurdissimū, & Christi ingenio prorsus contrarium est. Vide etiam. Col. 1587. 1588.; but these wayes first to keepe vs mindfull of his death, which he endured for vs, in which regard, some haue called the Lords Supper, [...] Sacrificium. a Sacrifice of remembrance. Secondly, to strengthen our faith, in the assurance of the continuance of his loue, and to ratifie, the pardon of our sinnes, our title of adoption, our interest in grace, our right to glory, to our soules. Thirdly, to arme vs against Idolatry, that partaking of the Lords Table, wee may not communicate at the Table of Deuills1 Cor. 10.21.. Fourthly, to preserue vs in the way of obedience. Fiftly, to assure vs of the resurrection of our bodies at the last day, according to Christs owne speech;Ioh. 6.54. He that eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, hath eternall life, and I will raise him at the last day. And lastly, to signifie vnto vs, and ascertaine vs of our vnion with himselfe, as Paul declareth, when he sayth; The cup of blessing which we blesse, is it not the communion of the bodie of Christ 1 Cor. 10.16.. Thus we see, not onely THAT, but also HOVV Christ is present with his Church in his holy and sacred Ordinances. Let vs now consider, to what end the Doctrine serueth, and what vses it affoordeth, which are divers.
Vse 1 First, It informeth vs of the reason, why Gods people doe so diligently frequent the house of God, are so often present at his Ordinances; (to wit) because they meete their husband, their King, their Sauiour, in such places, at such exercises.
If a poore man, comming to a great mans house, findes the Master of the house to bid him well come, to beare him company, to entertaine him with good cheere, merry talke, and kind invitations to come oftner; would you wonder to see that poore man euer and anon at that rich mans Table? So it is with the children of God. A great many marvaile at them, what they meane to run so to Sermons as they doe; Once a day (say they) cannot content them, but they must heare twice; (say they) the Saboth cannot suffice them, but they must out on the weeke day. If Baptisme be administred, they will not out of the Church by any meanes; If there be a communion euery moneth, they must be at it euery time, as though once, or twice in a yeere, were not sufficient, wee wonder at it. Doe you so? it is because you know not, whom they see, whom they finde present, whom they meete withall here. They see the King here, even the King of heauen and earth. And although they haue his presence in their houses, shops, fields, walkes, and closets, yet they know here, He is present after a speciall and peculiar manner, to conferre with them about deepe secrets, to carue bitts to them, according to their necessities. If they be erroneous in their iudgements, they finde him here to informe them, if scrupulous in their consciences, they find him here to resolue them, if they be drowsie in his seruice, they finde him here to rowse them, if fallen into any sinne, they finde him here present to rayse them, if heauie in their hearts, here he is to accheere them, if they haue mistaken their way, here he is to direct them. In these Ordinances, they finde their faith strengthened, the couenant of Gods grace sealed, their vnion with Christ ratified, their assurance of persevering in grace, of raising from death, and raigning in glory, confirmed; and what not? Marvaile you then, what they doe frequenting such places, where the Word is Preached, and the Sacraments administred?
What wife that loues her husband, doth not delight daily to converse with him at his Table? Marvaile therefore at thy selfe, rather that thou and thy companions take no more delight in such places, at such exercises, then you doe: and cease [Page 35] wondering at them, who come hither to be recreated, and accheered with the gracious presence of their great Bride-grome. Albeit, I deny not, but some doe (as the people in Christs dayes did) follow him for theIoh. 6. loaues, some for his miracles, some for one corrupt end, some for another, yet there is an holy and chosen generation, who follow him in his Ordinances, because they know he Sitteth at Table in the same, and doth communicate vnto them such gracious glaunces of his countenance, as Reprobates are like neuer to partake off.
Vse 2 Secondly; Is Christ present with his Church in his Ordinances; What meane the Papists then to take vpon them so tedious a taske, as to runne to Compostella to see his holy coate (which they say is there, though no man knowes how it came there) and to Ierusalem, to visit his Sepulchre? Oh folly to be pittied, if not to be derided. Thinke they to finde Christ in his coate, finde his presence in the graue? Is this one of their meritorious actions? See Christians, see their simplicitie. Christ sits not there, is not so present there, as he is in his Church, and with his Church. If Christians who goe but halfe a mile to heare a Sermon Preached vnto them, to be made partakers of the Sacrament, doe not make a better Pilgrimage then this is, and meete not with their well-beloued Spouse, Christ, sooner, then these simple deluded soules, by making such superstitious Voyages can, then note me for a teacher of lyes?
Vse 3 Thirdly, This poynt may be applyed by way of reproofe to a great number, who care neither how vnpreparedly they come to Gods publique Ordinances, nor how irreligiously they behaue themselues at the same. A man may say (and say truely too) there is no Table of mortall man more taken vp with vnmannerly guests, with rude, with vnciuill company, then this Table, whereat Christ sitteth, and affordeth his presence.
First, Concerning the comers to his Word, 1. Vnreuerent comers to the Word. it would make a Christian heart to bleed, to consider what manner of people; and after what manner most people come to the Preaching [Page 36] of that. One comes with his eyes scarce open, closed vp with that excrementall moisture of ignorance, which the spirituall sleepe in sinne breedeth, with an vnderstanding so darkened, that let the King by his servants lay bitts before him, he cannot see them, Preach as plainely as they can, he cannot vnderstand them; Another comes without his knife, and when he is at the Table here, his hand is in his Pocket, and so benummed, that he cannot pull it out, to take and cut the meate that is set before him, I meane he comes without faith, without will to beleeue the Word, without an heart to apply the same to his necessitie, according to the nature of the doctrine which is deliuered. A third comes with the old Grecian disease, the Athenian itch in his eares, that except the Preacher doth amaze his hearers with strange & vncouth straines, aboue the reach of plaine people, or tell of some strange thing, he is not for their humour; If he striues with himselfe to speake to the capacitie of the meanest hearer, and to knocke vpon the conscience of the wickedest liuer, in the plaine euidence and demonstration of the spirit, as, that learned Doctor of the Gentiles, Saint Paul did1 Cor. 2.1., how nestles he, how lookes he on the glasse? The itch doth so trouble him, his Athenian desires doe so distemper him, that he thinkes euery quarter an houre till the plaine fellow hath done: and it may be, he will haue the manners (as the manner of some is) to rise from the Board while the best dish is a caruing, the best point in handling, which might doe him most good, if he would but stay and take it with him. A fourth comes with a dirtie face, and hands imbrued in blood, a drunkard, a swearer, a lyer, a deceiuer, an Vsurer, a mercilesse oppressor, and knowne to be so, as manifestly as the dirt is to beseene vpon the face, that it hath defiled, and blood on the handes (without a gloue) that are besmeared with it. A fift sort, come all vnbraced before (I had almost said, with brests layd out like Whores and Iezebells) but I am sure, with breasts open, with hearts naked, vnarmed, vnfenced against the least assault, for want of due preparation; insomuch, that if the Deuill [Page 37] doth but shoot the dart of pleasure, the world of vaine profit, and the flesh play its part, while the Minister is speaking and they hearing, they are so stricken, so intoxicated, so vainely busied, that they get no more good to their soules, then they to their bodies, who, sitting at a Kings Table, doe so dreame of honours and preferments, which shall neuer be, that they minde nothing lesse then the bits that are carued them, and the meate which is before them, and so rise without tasting one bit of the feast. A sixt comes without his girdle, without sinceritie, hypocritically, formally, for fashion, company, and custome. A seaventh commeth in the Deuills habite (if the Deuill hath any habite) in a strange dresse, proud like the Deuill, and craftie like the Deuill. So proud, that he thinkes, he knowes as much as any can teach him; and therefore if the Preacher trips a little, and doth not carry his matter smoothly and Scholler-like before him (as all cannot, for all haue not an equall gift of Art and vtterance) he laughs in his sleeue; or else so craftie, that he comes to catch the Minister, as the Scribes to trap our Sauiour and entangle him in his talke, not with a simple, and honest heart, to learne Gods will, and to haue a sight of Christ, to supply the necessitie of his soule. And lastly, who amongst vs all doe not come many times with dirtie feete, with impure affections, into Gods Sanctuary, bringing a great deale of worldlinesse, a great deale of drowsinesse with vs. And albeit, we haue smarted for it (in being sent away from many a Sermon, without the sweet bits we were wont to haue, as a iust desert of our negligence to prepare our selues) yet we haue not so shaken off our slightnesse of preparation as we should; Who, who of vs (I say) fayle not this way? If our husband were not extraordinarily in loue with vs, and willing sometimes to beare with vs in our night-attire, as well as to respect vs in our handsomer dresse, he might euen say to vs that are dearest vnto him; What doe you here in my presence at my Word, so disordered, so distempered, so vnprepared?
As thus many come vnmannerly to his Word, so as many come as rudely to, 2. Irreuerence and irreligion at Baptisme taxed. and carry themselues as irreverently at his Sacraments. How many simple soules bring their Children to Baptisme, scarce knowing wherefore Baptisme serues, what vse it ought to be off to themselues, what vse in time it may be off to their littles ones? How many are present at that Sacrament, when it is administred, who neither can, nor care to meditate vpon such things, as then and there, are to be thought vpon: their eyes are so taken vp with gazing, their tongues sometimes with talking with those that sit next them, and their hearts with such wandering thoughts, that there is no roome for diuiner meditations, suiting the occasion, about the Vow made in Baptisme, about the benefits offred in Baptisme, and the ends of Baptisme; no faith, no prayers set a worke for the good of the partie Baptized, and the like.
3. Abuse of the Lords Supper.And lastly, for the Lords Supper, how many come to that, who are partakers at the Table of Devills. It is lamentable to consider, what ignorant, vnbeleeuing, irrepentant, disobedient Communicants, thrust themselues vpon this Ordinance, that haue neither skill, nor conscience, to examine and prepare themselues before receiuing; that know not what to doe, how to behaue themselues in the time of receiuing, not how to set their faith a worke towards God, in the apprehension of his loue, not how to set their loue a-worke towards beleevers, whom they communicate withall, that know not what to doe after receiuing; frequenting this feast for custome and fashion, partaking after a grosse and carnall manner, not discerning the Lords body, not making any difference betwixt common Bread, and common Wine, and Sacramentall. Well then, (beloued) this irreuerent and irreligious frequenting of Gods publique, sacred, Ordinances, by such multitudes of people, duely considered, can a word of reproofe come out of season? I am sure, here wants no ground for it in the Doctrine wee haue now in hand.
Are we well advised, who is here? who trow we is present at the Word, at the Sacraments? Is not the King himselfe? And what King? Why, the King of glory, the great magnificent Spouse, and Bride-grome of the Church; His royall, his stately, his honourable, his comfortable presence is there; There he sits, and there he communicates what euer he sees needfull for his Brides salvation. Shall wee then dare to come so rudely, not feare to goe so irreligiously into HIS presence? Is he present while his Ministers Preach? and shall we come to the Word with sleepie eyes, itching eares, dirtie faces, proud conceits of our owne knowledge, craftie intentions, to catch the Preacher, naked hearts, without grace to beleeue, without will to apply the things that are taught vs? Come we hither like hypocrites? come hither to scoffe, to sleepe, to laugh? Is Christ present in Baptisme? and shall wee presume to neglect all meditation for our selues, all inuocation for the partie Baptized? Is he lastly, present in the Eucharist? And dare wee to goe to that feast without our wedding garment, without knowledge, faith, repentance, obedience, and loue? dare we goe to that without any due examination of our soules before hand, concerning the forenamed graces, whither we haue them or no? dare wee receiue grossely and carnally at that, and not shew our selues thankefull, by our new obedience, after we haue eaten of this Supper? Will these things (thinke wee) be well taken at our hands? Is it not greatly to the dishonour of the King? An earthly King will not endure it, that any of HIS guests should come with dirtie shooes into HIS DINING ROOME, lesse can he abide, that they should come vnhandsomely, vncomely to his owne TABLE. Doth not this heauenly King stand as much vpon his honour as an earthly? He doth. Oh folly to be reproved, oh impudency to be condemned then, to goe so vnpreparedly to, to be so vnreuerent at, the Preaching of the Word, and partaking of the Sacraments, which is the Table whereat Christ sitteth. Verily, if this rebuke availes not with vs, to humble vs for the dishonour thus offered to this Sitter at this Board with his Church, [Page 40] wee may be sure he will deale with vs, as the King in the Gospell did with him whom he found at the feast without a wedding garment: Binde vs hand and foote, and cast vs into vtter darkenesse, where is weeping, and wayling, and gnashing of teeth Mat. 22..
Vse 4 That I may therefore in the fourth place (and not vnfitly) subioyne a word of Exhortation, let the thought of this presence of Christ in these Ordinances, stirre vs vp to that reuerence and preparation, that the former reproued number doe want. Be wee to goe but to a feast at an ordinary Gentlemans house, if we know the master of the family will beare vs company at it, wee are very carefull to brush our garments, to robe our selues with our holi-day cloathes, to put on cleane linnen, to wash our face, eyes, and handes, to scoure and sharpen our kniues, that so, for want of handsomnesse in our attire, or by meanes of hackling our meate with blunt kniues, we may neither offend the guests that sit with vs, nor grieue the master that bad vs, nor shame our selues; The like spirituall care let there be in vs to fit our selues when wee come to Wisedomes dainties. When the Israelites were to haue the Lord to descend amongst them on Mount Sinai, I readeExod. 9.10. they were to wash their cloathes, and sanctifie themselues. Their course must wee imitate when we ascend to Gods Mount, and goe vp to his house (where he is present) to heare his Word, or receiue the Sacraments. We must be cleansed, and sanctified, that so when wee are there, we may giue him the honour of his holy presence, and neither dishonour him, nor disgrace our selues.
Doct. 4 WEE will now proceed to the second poynt, That while Christ is present with his Church in his Ordinances, shee sendeth forth the sauour of Faith and good Workes. Compare a few places of Scripture together, and you shall see this to be very firme. In the Acts of the Apostles wee may reade, that Christ had beene present by the Ministry of Paul at Phillippi Act. 16.14., at Thessalonica Act. 17.2., at Rome Act. 28.31.. And Saint Paul in his writings vnto the Saints, in these places, speakes [Page 41] of their Faith and good Workes Rom. 1.8. Phil. 1.7.9.16.11. 1 Thes. 1.7.8., which like a precious oyntment, did diffuse themselues in their Odour ouer the world.
Vse 1 I propound this (in the first place) for a rule of tryall, whereby to examine our selues, whither we be members of the true Church, yea or no. This great Bridegrome indeed, Christ Iesus, hath spread a Table amongst vs, and a plentifull one too. But, haue wee Faith? What are our fruits? Wee heare much, wee pray oft, wee frequent the Table of the Lord, wee discourse many times; but are all these perfumed with beleeuing? Doe wee endeuour so to walke, that our Faith may be spoken off; and that throughout the whole course of our liues, wee may send forth a sweete odour to refresh the nostrills of the godly, though the wicked (who can thinke well neither of the wayes, nor workers of righteousnesse) be offended with the same? If yea, then Christ by his grace hath beene present with vs in his Ordinances, hath contracted vs vnto himselfe, and giuen himselfe as an husband vnto vs, betwixt whom and vs, all the powers of darkenesse are not able to force a divorcement. But if otherwise; though wee haue beene neuer so oft at this Bride-gromes Table, heard hundreths of Sermons, oft communicated at the Supper of the Lord, yet we are but onely visible members of the outward assemblyes, no spirituall limmes of the misticall body.
Vse 2 Therefore, secondly, this doth notably confound the foolish conceit of all them, who brag that Christ is their husband, and they be betrothed vnto him, and yet are nothing, but full of infidelitie, and impietie, of vnfaithfulnesse, and vnfruitfulnesse in their hearts, in their liues. Our dayes afford store of such, in whose vessels, there is not one dramme of Spikenard, to cast forth any sweete sauour, either to GOD, or godly men, but rather (with the people in Ioels timeIoel 2.20.) their stinke goes vp (into the nostrils of God) and their wormewood sends forth the bitternesse thereof: The stinke of their sinnes diffuseth it selfe to the offending of the children of God, to the infecting of the children of men. A good man can [Page 40] [...] [Page 41] [...] [Page 42] scarce in any corner auoyde the smell of their impious and vnrighteous fruits, of their lies, slaunders, blasphemies, ribaldries, and other idle speeches; but shall be compelled to sent them in euery place, as strong, as noysome, as Brimstone; to force sighes from his heart, and teares from his eyes. And how odiously their VNBELIEFE doth affect the KINGS smell, their distrust in Gods providence, their discontentednesse in prosperitie, their impatience in adversitie, senselesnesse of, and vtter carelesnesse for, the comforts of the Spirit, doe euidently and woefully declare; And yet these people (forsooth) esteeme themselues to be the Bride of Christ. But to consider, how they are deceiued, it pitties my heart. What? know they not, see they not, that Christ his Bride is not (while her husband sits at Table) without her perfume to please him, and affect the virgins that be her fellowes? Now alas, these vaine-boasters, are as emptie of this perfume as the foolish Virgins lampes were of oyle. They haue nothing but the oyntments of Harlots in their Boxes (their soules I meane) and about their bodies. And dare they challenge Christ for their Spouse? As though he will linke himselfe with such? No, no. Let them with Barnabas get to be full of faith Act. 11.24., and with Dorcas to be full of good Workes Act. 9.36., that God and man may smell the sauour of their Spikenard, and then they may be beleeved, when they affirme themselues to belong to Christ; but while then, they doe but flatter themselues, and deceiue others.
Doct. 5 LAstly, Obserue, that Christians may sometimes lawfully speake of their owne faith and good workes. The Church had Spikenard, and here shee speakes of it, and of the sweet smell it cast forth. How oft doth Dauid speake of his faith, and his good fruits, in the Booke of the Psalmes, sometimes reporting how he trusted in GodPsal 64., sometimes how he prayed vnto himPsal. 3.4.34.4., sometimes how he confessed his sinnes vnto himPsal. 32.5., sometimes how he loued himPsal. 116.1., sometimes how he delighted in the SaintsPsal. 16.3., sometimes how he pittied his very enemiesPsal. 35.14., sometimes he speakes of his vpright walkingPsal. 18.23., [Page 43] sometimes of his holy talkingPsal. 39.1., sometimes of his zeale for Gods gloryPs. 119.139., &c. Thus also did Iob Iob 29. c. 31., Ezekiah Isa. 38.3., Paul 2 Tim. 4.7., and others of the Worthies', whom the Scripture recordeth. And good cause why.
Reason 1 For, first, God receiues much honour when wee speake of the graces, which he bestoweth vpon vs. Hence it is that wee shall finde Dauid, which reported so much of his owne graces, euer and anon, professing his resolution, to sound forth the Lords prayses.
Reason 2 Secondly, sometimes the wicked will rayse slaunders of the godly, as though they were a great deale worse then they are: and therefore to cleere themselues from those reproches, and so to vindicate the Gospell from disgrace, they may, yea, and they must make profession of their integritie, and faith. What was it which moued Paul, to speake so of his honestie, as he did; Wee haue renounced the hidden things of dishonestie, not walking in craftinesse, nor handling the Word of God deceitfully. 2 Cor. 4.2. But this, that (as it seemes) in the former Chapter, certaine false Apostles had slaundered him to be a vaine-glorious fellow? Which imputation, to free himselfe from, he spake so of his owne sinceritie as he did.
Reason. 3 Thirdly, there are many occasions giuen vnto Christians, to haue hard conceits of their brethren, partly, by reason of some infirmities they see in them, partly, by reason of some troubles that fall vpon them. And therefore it is lawfull, and sometimes needfull for them, to speake of the good things that God hath wrought in them. If you aske, wherefore Paul speakes to Timothy of his keeping the faith, and fighting a good fight 2 Tim 4.7.,Polan. Synt. Lib. 9. c. 8. Pag. 597. One answereth it, because the present trouble which he was in, by the meanes of Nero, might occasion Timothy his Scholler, and others which had beene his hearers, to question the foundnesse of his faith, and honestie, which was so rewarded wi [...]h affliction, and which faith of his was not like to procure such temporall deliuerances at the hands of God, as formerly it had done. So then, partly, that Beleeuers may honour their God, [Page 44] partly, free themselues from euill reproches cast vpon them by the wicked, and partly, prevent vncharitable conceits of themselues in their godly brethren, they may lawfully speake of their owne Spikenard, of that Faith and those good Workes which the Lord hath besweetned, both their hearts, and their lines withall.
Ʋse 1 The consideration of this, giues me iust occasion, 1. to finde fault with those Christians which will euer be talking of their infirmities, that they haue no grace, no faith, no goodnesse at all in them. And yet their consciences can tell them that such and such things the Lord hath inwardly ingrafted in them, such and such fruits the Lord hath enabled them outwardly to bring forth in their liues. They know that at such and such a Sermon, the Lord so and so affected their hearts, at such a time gaue them victory ouer such a temptation, at such a time enabled them so and so to pray, yea, so and so answered their prayers, to testifie the acceptablenes of the same; At other times, so and so accheered them with the assurance of his loue, so and so enliued them in the performance of such and such duties; yet because (forsooth) it is not alwayes alike with them, and the Deuill tells them, they are dissemblers, they cry out, I am an hypocrite, a naughtie packe, a wicked creature, nothing but euill lodgeth in me, no whit of goodnesse dwell; in mee, I haue no faith, I haue no zeale, I haue no soundnesse, no honestie, &c. Is this to honour God with, and for, the good things he hath done for thee? wrought in thee? Nay, rather is it not to dishonour him, in that thou doest not take notice of his graces, which he hath giuen thee? This is enough to expose the Gospell to disgrace amongst the enemies of the truth. This is enough to make Christians themselues thinke more hardly of thee then there is cause. For, when as thou art so peremptory in it, that thou art an hypocrite, a varlet, a wretch. What will the world say of thee, and such as make profession with thee? Even THIS; See, see, what arrant hypocrites these Gospellers are, their owne consciences accuse them, their owne mouths condemne them, there is neuer an one of them ALL [Page 45] good. Thou art much too blame then, whosoeuer thou art, that art so readie to take part with the Deuill against thy selfe, when yet the Lord in mercy, hath annoynted thy soule with the Spikenard of heaven, when both thy faith and integritie of life, haue sent forth their sweet sauour to God, and to men?
Ʋse 2 Let me perswade thee to striue against this euill, to take notice of, and (when God may haue any glory, others any good by it) make report, of what the Lord hath done for thy soule. Thou mayst lawfully doe it, yea, (and if need require) thou must doe it. Yet with this caution, avoyding pride as much as may be. Not vaine-gloriously, as Peter did, when he sayd, Master wee haue forsaken all, and followed thee, what therefore shall be giuen vs Mat. 19.37.? For this is a thing God would be displeased with, and it is the propertie of worldlings and wicked ones so to speake, viz. of that which indeed they haue not, and doe not.
But first in humilitie, as acknowledging all to come from God.
Secondly, with a desire to vindicate the Gospell from disgrace, when euill mouthes falsely doe reproch thee.
Thirdly, with a desire to reioyce the hearts of thy godly brethren.
Fourthly, to draw on others to a loue of that Word, whereby God hath wrought such good in thee.
And lastly, to cleere thine owne innocency, when that is called into question.
After this manner, and to these ends thou mayest make profession of thy graces; and with the Church. thy Mother here, tell it abroad to others; My Spikenard sendeth forth the smell thereof.