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A50050 Annotations upon all the New Testament philologicall and theologicall wherein the emphasis and elegancie of the Greeke is observed, some imperfections in our translation are discovered, divers Jewish rites and customes tending to illustrate the text are mentioned, many antilogies and seeming contradictions reconciled, severall darke and obscure places opened, sundry passages vindicated from the false glosses of papists and hereticks / by Edward Leigh ... Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1650 (1650) Wing L986; ESTC R20337 837,685 476

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profaned and abused the Sacrament how and in what manner it is not so cleare but so that the Apostle tels them in this Verse they came together not for the better but for the worse and vers 20. This is not to eate the Lords Supper We commonly say that is not done which is not rightly done saith Calvin Illegitime edere non est edere Pareus And therefore the Apostle saith twice Vers. 22. I praise you not a Miosis I dispraise I blame you Then having blamed them for doing amisse he instrusts them and useth very strong perswasions to make them reform and do aright He rehearseth unto them Christs institution and explaines it he lets them know how hainous a thing in its own nature and how dangerous in respect of the consequence it is to communicate unworthily Consider three thing in generall 1. The rehearsall of Christs institution of the Sacrament Vers. 23 24 25. Then the Apostles explication of it Vers. 26. And 3. his application Vers. 27 28 29 30. Vers. 18. For first of all when you come together in the Church c. Some take Church here per coetu fidelium Yet Theophylact and all Greek Writers generally expound it the ministeriall place of meeting See v. 22. Divisi●ns Or Schismes Schisme is a difference about rites or externall discipline heresie is a difference about doctrine and faith Schismes many times degenerate into Heresies Vers. 19. For there must be also heresies among you There is not any need of them for any good in themselves they are the diseases of the Church but there are sufficient causes alwaies in blind and corrupt judgements He saith not it is possible but necessary that heresies be as fire to try and purge the Gold It behoves that there be heresies in the Church as it is necessary there should be poyson and venomous creatures in the world because out of them God will worke medicines See Matth. 18.7 That they which are approved sincere in the faith may be made manifest among you That is known to be sincere by their constancy Vers. 20. The Lords Supper so called partly from the Authour and partly from the free circumstance of the evening time 1 Cor. 10.21 11.23 See Grotius Eate The Papists goe about to establish their administration of the Lords Supper under one kind from the Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but that word is used generally for the whole action of the Sacrament viz. the distribution of the bread and Wine and the Syriack propounds it more distinctly rendring it Comedentes vos bibentes Waltherus in officina Biblica Vers. 22. Despise ye the Church of God That is the place where Gods people come together for his service Vers. 23. For I have received of the Lord that which also I delivered unto you And as he received what he delivered so he delivered what he received he kept nothing back Acts 20.27 That the Lord Iesus Onely he is sufficient to institute the Sacrament who can conferre the grace of it If we either respect Christ as Lord or Jesus if either our duty to him or safety by him then let us also respect this Sacrament The same night Christ did institute the Sacrament at night because immediately after the Passeover Matth. 26.19 20 26. and by the Law the Passeover was to be eaten at night Exod. 21.6 8. In which he was betrayed Greek signifies delivered or given up into the hands of his adversaries who condemned and crucified him The word is often used of Iudas who did it treacherously and so betrayed him Matth. 27.3 Marke 14.21 Luke 22.22 Iohn 18.2 but sometimes it is used of God himselfe Rom. 8.32 sometimes indefinitely Rom. 4. ult so here it may be taken Took bread off the Table setting it apart for a holy use Exod. 12.5 6 21. This signifies that Christ by the eternall purpose and decree of God was separated and set a part to be made a sacrifice and offering for us Here and in the 26 27 28 verses the Apostles cals it Bread after consecration therefore the substance of Bread doth remain after the words of consecration Vers. 24. And when he had given thanks He gave thanks to God for his mercy towards mankind and the inestimable benefit of redemption by his death the Sacrament whereof he was instituting This teacheth us to come with thanksgiving to the Lords Table hence the Sacrament is termed the Eucharist Calvin This is my body a figure signe and representation of my body the signe put for the thing signified because of the analogy between them See Gen. 7.10 Exod. 2.11 1 Cor. 10.4 Tit. 3.5 The Fathers generally expound it the Sacrament of his body Cornelius a Lapide on Esay saith if Christ had not been incarnate the Priests pronouncing of these words hoc est corpus meum would have incarnated him and on this place he saith Sanè in hora mortis in die illa terribili cum sistemur tribunali Christi de fide vita examinandi si me roget Christus cur credidisti corpus meum in Eucharistia fidenter dicam Domine credidi quod in dixisti quod me docuisti tu verba tua per tropum non explicuisti nec ego per tropum explicare ausus sum This doe in remembrance of me By vertue of these words not onely power and authority is given Ministers but a necessity is imposed upon them to celebrate the Sacrament The words are not permissive but mandatory Vers. 25. After the same manner also he took the Cup After the same manner and to the same end he tooke the cup into his hands that he had formerly taken the Bread When he had supped Or after having supped This Cup is the New Testament in my blood Here are two metonymies 1 A metonymie of the subject Cup for the Wine contained in the cup and the Wine in the Cup is not the New Testament but a Sacrament of the New Testament made and confirmed by the blood of Christ. Is That is sealeth and confirmeth Vers. 26. Eat this Bread Still bread even after consecration bread though not ordinary and common but this bread yet bread And drink this cup Drink this as well as eat that Ye do shew forth the Lords death Hence the Sacrament was termed by the Ancients a Sacrifice viz. representative and commemorative but not properly Till he come This shews the perpetuity of the Sacrament the Passover remained till Christs first comming his death this must remain till his second comming unto judgement Vers. 27. Vnworthily Ignorantly unreverently or prophanely He that comes unto the Sacrament and receives it in an unfit manner without that due regard which belongs unto such an holy action Vers. 28. Let Not spoken by way of permission but injunction not here as 1 Cor. 7.6 36. A necessity is laid upon us necessitas praecepti for it is a plain and peremptory
profitable living and when they are dead so the Saints they live and dye to the Lord. The Goate on the other side is refractary wanders up and downe and is not for the Shepheards voyce 2. Is a noisome stinking uncleane creature Vers. 34. Blessed viz. In Christ who was made a curse for us Gal. 3.13 inherit or possesse by lot therefore because adopted he doth not merit Kingdom prepared for you from the beginning of the world What then could they deserve these are the causes of salvation that which he addes Vers. 35. I was a hungred c. Are the signes of true faith Christ chooseth workes of the second Table because they are most manifest to the world and pronounceth sentence according to them because they are more visible than faith The causall conjunction for implies the meritoriousnesse of workes saith Bellarmine Answer It is note of consequence and order not of the cause as we say Summer is come for flowers do spring and it is a good tree for it bringeth forth good fruit See Luke 7.47 1 Iohn 3.14 Bellarmine urgeth that go you cursed for you have done so and so there is a great deale of difference between the evill and good we do our evills are truely ours and fully evill but our good things are not ours and but imperfectly good Vers. 41. Depart from mee There 's rejection Yee cursed There is malediction Into fire There is the vengeance of that element And everlasting fire There is the continuance of it therefore they dreame that say the Devill shall be delivered at last No naturall but metaphoricall fire that is sharpe punishment for the worme which Esay joynes with it is metaphoricall Esay 66.24 and the Prophet declareth it to be a metaphoricall speech 30. and 33. verses when he compares the Spirit of God to a paire of bellowes wherewith the fire is kindled and addeth also brimstone CHAP. XXVI Verse 2. YE know that after two dayes is the feast of the passeover and the Son of man is betrayed to be crucified Gods will was that his Sonne should be offered on the day of the pasover that the old figure might give place to the onely sacrifice of eternall redemption and that all Israel might be witnesse to it Act. 2.23 and 4.22 Vers. 11. The poore you have alwaies with you The world abounds with such therefore you may alwayes do good to them but I am to dye shortly and you can never after performe any such office to mee Vers. 12. She did it for my buriall By this Christ would declare that the precious ointment was accepted not for the savour of it but only in respect of buriall and shew that his grave should yeeld forth a pleasant savour Vers. 13. Wheresoever this Gospell shall be preached in the whole world there shall also this that this woman hath done be told for a memoriall of her She shall enjoy the honour of it in all the Churches for ever so long as the Gospell shall continue in the world which will be as long as the world it self continues By this Sentence the calling of the Gentiles is testified Vers. 14. Iudas Iscariot Iudas signifyeth a Confessor Iscariot either of the village where he was born or of the Tribe of Issachar Iachar signifies wages or hire noting unto us Iudas nature by his name Vers. 15. Thirty peeces of silver Zach. 11.12.3 pound 15 shillings as some suppose the price of a servant Vers. 21. And as they did eate he said verily I say unto you that one of you shall betray me That he might make the trayterousness of Iudas the more to be detested he setteth forth the vilenesse of the same by this circumstance that when he sate together with him at the Table he devised treason Vers. 24. It had been good for that man if he had not been borne That is not been A temporall miserable being at the worst is better than a not being but an eternall miserable being is worse than a not being in a Theologicall notion what ever it be in Metaphysickes or Philosophy Vers. 26. As they did eate Word for word they eating which we must interpret out of the words of St Paul 1 Cor. 11. that saith after supper so Luke the Sacrament succeeded the Passover This is my body A Sacramentall phrase the sign for the thing signified as Circumcision is called the Covenant Gen. 17. And the Lambe the Passeover Exod. 12. Baptism the Laver of Regeneration Tit. 3.5 Vers. 27. And he tooke the cup and gave thanks and gave it to them saying drinke ye all of it Christ in this seemes to have reference to the custome of the Jews for it is an expresse Law among them that of foure Cups all that are present at the Passeover should drink whether they be men or women of perfect age or children especially of the fourth and last Cup. Vers. 28. My bloud of the New Testament That is a Sacrament or Signe in remembrance of his bloud powred out Vers. 29. I will not drink henceforth of the fruit of the vine untill that day when I drink it new with you in my Fathers kingdom Christ seems to have taken occasion of this from the custome of the Jews in which it was forbidden the Cup being drank up to taste any more wine that night Christ therefore saith that in this he will do nothing against their traditions but so that not only he will drinke no more wine that night but all that time that he is to continue in the world Expositors interpret that of drinking wine new in his Fathers kingdom two waies Chrysostome and some others understand by the kingdom of the Father Christs Resurrection and by the new wine that corporall eating and drinking of Christ with his Apostles after his Resurrection Luk 24.43 Acts 10.40 41. 2. More probably by the kingdom of the Father is meant the kingdom of glory after this life and by the wine he would drink with them that celestiall liquor of sweet joy and eternall comfort which the Saints partake therein with Christ. Vers. 30. When they had sung a hymme c. A hymme is a verse sung for the praise of God Their opinion doth not seeme to be vaine who think that the Apostles at that time sung a great hymme which consists of sixe Psalmes 113 114 115 116 117 and 118. The Hebrews certainly sing this song in the night of the Passeover after the Lamb is eaten Paulus Burgensis thinks that the Apostles rehearsed this hymme according to the custome of the Jews after the Passeover and that this place is to be understood of that which is very probable for since in other things it is manifest that Christ with his Apostles observed the rite of the Jews in eating the Passeover it is not unlikely that he might follow them in this also Grotius saith learned men think that the hymmes were sung by Christ which were wont to be sung at
taken Matth. 24.32 Marke 3.23 It is used for any thing uttered more obscurely and figuratively Matth. 15.15 For a proverb Luke 4.23 For a type of the Old Testament prefiguring something in the New Testament Heb. 9.9 and 11.19 But properly and strictly it is taken for the artificiall narration of a thing as it were done to signifie another thing so it is taken here Our Saviour used Parables and similitudes Matth. 13.3.24.31.33.41.45 Marke 4.33.34 Christ alwayes observed this in Parables saith Chemnitius either he himselfe interpreted them or at least in the beginning or end of the Parable he added some sentence which is as a key to open the true sense of the Parable that thence the genuine interpretation may be taken There are many reasons given why Christ speakes so often in similitudes either because the people of the East were accustomed of old to propound their doctrine under such representations as we see in many passages of the Old Testament or because the divine oracles had foretold that the Messiah should open his mouth in Parables or because supernaturall objects insinuate themselves more easily into the Spirit and make more lively impressions there being conveighed by those things which are obvious to the senses Vers. 13. To catch him in his words In Greeke a metaphore from hunters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sicut scilicet venator captat feram Piscat Matthew useth another metaphore from the hunting after birds Vide Bezam Vers. 14. For thou regardest not the person of men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Regarding of mens persons is where we more favour this man than another not for difference in the cause but of the person I am the God I am that God ego sum Deus ille it is an emphaticall article noting an excellent thing and known to the common people as if he should say that God which appeared to those holy Fathers and gave them certaine promises making a Covenant of grace with them Piscat Vers. 29. The first of all the commandements is The first not of order in the Decalogue but by reason of weight and dignity because it is the speciall commandement and most momentous Capell Spicileg Vers. 34. Discreetly The word is significant as one having a reasonable soule 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi dicas Habendo mentem id est cum mente Piscat Vide Bezam Vers. 37. And the common people heard him gladly Libenter willingly Beza and the Vulgar Because that which is done with pleasure is done willingly Vers. 44. Even all her being When a poore man offers any thing hee seemes to offer his soule or certainely it is as gratefull to God as if he offered his soule that is his life Life is put for foode 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all her life so Luke 8.43 CHAP. XIII Vers. 1. WHat manner of stones Interrogatio admirantis as if he should say these stones viz. of the Temple what and how great are they how faire and how great Luke expresly mentions their fairenesse Marke their greatnesse in the answer of Christ. Vers. 11. Take no thought before hand what ye shall speake neither do ye premeditate Our Saviour forbiddeth his Apostles both to take care and to take thought before hand when they were to appeare before great persons both to forecast with themselves what to speak when they come before them and to forethink how that they shall speak will be taken when they have spoken it Vers. 30. This generation shall not passe The word signifieth the space of an hundred yeares albeit this came to passe before fifty yeares Vers. 32. But of that day and houre knoweth no man no not the Angels which are in heaven neither the Son but the Father To know here is the same with to teach what soever things he might teach he did but it did not agree to his office to declare the day of his comming as 1 Cor. 2.2 to know is taken for to teach as it is commonly said in French Vn ministre ne doit scavoir que sa Bible He knew it not as he was man or in his state of humiliation he did not precisely know it although he knew it as he was God or he knoweth for himself although he will not reveale it unto us CHAP. XIV Verse 5. IT might have been sold for more than three hundred pence Which amounts to above nine pounds seven shillings and sixe pence of our money Mary Magdalene saith à Lapide was more liberall in annointing Christ than Judas in betraying him Vers 8. She is come before hand to annoint my body to the burying The Greeke word signifieth to annoint with sweet aromaticall ointments Kings bodies were annointed with pretious oyntments the piety of Mary Magdalene perswaded her to annoint Christ with such who was more worthy than all Kings Vers. 21. The Son of man indeed goeth as it is written of him The Greeke word rendred goeth signifies properly se subducere to withdraw himself Christ used the same word John 8.22 when he spake of his going to heaven as if the Crosse was as much desired by Christ as heaven it selfe Vers. 23. When he had given thankes The Greeke word is to blesse which is here taken only to give thanks as Luke and Paul interpret it and Marke also speaking of the Cup. Vers. 24. And he said unto them This is my bloud of the new Testament which is shed for many That is a sign and seale of it to all penitent Beleevers The word Testament signifieth properly the last will of a man by which he disposeth of his estate It is used here to signifie the Covenant of God made with mankind in Christ concerning the remission of their sins sanctifying of their hearts and saving of their soules for his sake which is called a Testament because it was made good ratified and confirmed by the death of Jesus Christ and a new Testament in opposition to the old Covenant of workes made with Adam or to the old Covenant shadowed with Ceremonies unto the Jewes for God made two Covenants with men one with Adam in his Innocency in which he required of him perfect obedience to all his Commandements and promised him life everlasting as a reward of his obedience This is called the Covenant of works The other was made with Adam faln in Christ wherein God undertooke to give unto Adam for Christs sake the pardon of his sins and life eternall notwithstanding his sins and required of him faith in Christ and repentance for his sins consisting in sorrow for them and carefull amendment of them This was delivered to the Fathers with divers Ceremonies of the bloud of Bulls and Goates signifying Christs Bloud and this is called the old Covenant It is delivered to us without shadow and sealed by the bloud of Christ which all those Sacrifices represented and it is called the new Covenant Vers. 33. And began to be sore amazed That
a suitable disposition into the heart to what the Law requireth 3. In Conversion the Lord puts the whole Law into the heart there is a conformity to the Law in all things 4. The Lord so puts it there that he writes it by which expression he signifies that it shall for ever ever abide there It is an allusion saith Estius unto the two Tables of the Law They were first written by the finger of God and then put into the Arke so God first writes the Law in our hearts and then puts it in our minds Vers. 11. And they shall not teach every man his neighbour The teaching of men shall not be laid aside but they must not depend on it the teaching of God shall make it effectuall to them See Estius All Gods people little and great weake and strong shall know him by knowing is not meant a bare apprehension and notion of his being and nature but a knowledge of acquaintance a knowing him to be ones God reconciled to him in Christ so Hos. 2.20 Vers. 12. For J will be mercifull to their unrighteousnesse and their sinnes and their iniquities will I remember no more Here are two things 1. There conciliation of God with his people I will be mercifull to their unrighteousnesse He will be mercifull or propitious appeased and pacified toward them which hath respect to the ransome and satisfaction of Christ. 2. He will pardon them completely here are three words unrighteousnesse sinnes and iniquities to shew that he will forgive all kinds and degrees of their sinnes 1. The number of words implies the number of sinnes 2. Some of these words are of a higher nature God will pardon the most haynous sinnes God himselfe undertakes all in the Covenant of Grace as we may see in the 10 11. and this 12. v. He will put his Law into our mind he will be to us a God he will teach us and pardon our sinnes Christ is the Mediatour and surety of this Covenant he undertakes with God that we shall be his people and with us that God shall be our God He had three Offices to make good this all implyed in these three verses Vers. 12. I will be mercifull Or pacified by that propitiation the High Priest shall make there is his Priestly office v. 11. He teacheth his Church outwardly by his word inwardly by his spirit there is his propheticall office v. 10. He saith he will put his Lawes in their minds there is his Kingly office he is as King to see that we shall be obedient to God CHAP. IX Vers. 4. WHerein or in which was the golden Pot that had Manna and Aarons Rod that budded and the Tables of the Covenant He saith that there were three things laid up in the Arke the Pot of Manna Aarons Rod and the Tables of the Covenant They conceit it well that say the Arke is the Church the Tables the word the Manna the Sacraments and the Rod the discipline Ob. 1 Kings 8 9. and 2 Chron. 5.10 It is said there was nothing in the Arke save the two Tables of Stone Paul saith besides these there was Aarons Rod and the golden Pot having Manna Sol. 1. Which here hath relation say some to the remote antecedent which Tabernacle not Arke Pareus saith this is a forced construction 2. Others say that they were not included in the body of the Ark but conveniently placed about it this seemes most probable for may be interpreted not onely in but with neer about as Iudges 18.12 Luke 9.31 and 13.33 and so it may be rendred with or about which Pareus gives this answer God Commanded the two Tables to be placed in the Arke Exodus 25.21 Deut. 10.5 He commanded the Pot of Manna to be kept before the Arke of the Testimony and there Aaron is said to have put it v. 34. Also he commanded Aarons greene Rod to be laid before the Arke for a Signe to the Rebels Numb 17.10 And it is unquestionable that these three were kept in or neer the Ark as long as the Tabernacle continued But the Temple being built by Salomon onely the Tables are said to have been kept in the Ark the other things being fitly disposed in the holy place ●he Apostle therefore having respect to the first disposition which was in the Tabernacle before the Temple was built relates nothing strange from the History Vers. 7. But into the second went the High Priest alone once every yeer not without bloud which be offered for himselfe and the errours of the people The High Priest onely once a yeare viz. on the day of expiation might enter into the Sanctum Sanctorum and that not without incense and pretious sacrifices See Levit. 16.2.29.33 That by this meanes both the High Priest and people might be struck with a reverence of the place and God dwelling there saith Menochius This bloud here mentioned was a type of the bloud of Christ wherewith the Church is to be cleansed as the High Priest himself was a type of Christ saith Eslius Vers. 10. And carnall Ordinances Such as carnall men might easily performe and as were very suitable to the disposition of a carnall heart Mr. Hildersam Vntill the time of reformation Greek the time of correction that is the time of Christs revealing who was the body of all those shadowes Vers. 14. Through the eternall Spirit That is the divine power of his Godhead Purge your conscience That is free you 1. from the guilt and punishment of sinnes the guilt of sinne lies heavy on the conscience 2. the dominion of sinne to serve it in the lusts thereof From dead works Sinnes are called dead works 1. Workes because the soule is busie about sinne as a man about his work So Eph 5.11 1 Iohn 3.8 2 Dead partly to make the comparison more compleat they were ceremonially dead by touching dead carcasses so inwardly by sinne and as a dead carcasse is loathsome and odious so sinne Ezek. 36.31.2 In respect of the effects they bring forth death Rom. 6.21 they leave a sentence of death upon the conscience till the vertue of Christs blood be applied To serve the living God Here is the end of their purging we are not washed by Christ that we should defile our selves again but our purity must serve to Gods glory and nothing can come from us which will be acceptable to God untill we be purged with the blood of Christ and it is an elegant between dead works and the living God Vers. 23. With better Sacrifices then these Then those of the old Testament not in substance but in manner of exhibiting Christ was then slain onely in types and figures in the new Testament there is a reall and personall offering up of Christ himselfe Bulkley on the Covenant Vers. 24. Now to appeare in the presence of God Verbum forense an expression borrowed from the custome of humane courts for
her even as she rewarded you and double unto her double according to her works God doth not command here that Babylon should be twice punished for the same sin that were not according to the rules of divine justice Double here hath reference to Babylons dealings with the Church Shee did greatly afflict Sion and now God would have Babylon to have double affliction to that Babylon did unjustly in oppressing Sion Sion should do righteously in destroying Babylon Vers. 8. She shall be utterly burnt with fire See 17.16 Harlots by the Law of God were to be burnt with fire Gen. 38.24 but Babylon 17.1 2 5. is a Harlot 2. By the law of retaliation she must be consumed with fire for she hath adjudged many of Gods Saints to the fire For strong is the Lord God who judgeth her Babylon must needs fall when God himselfe opposeth her Vers. 10. Alas alas that great City Babylon 1. Great in splendor and beauty as set upon seven hills for which she is famous in all the world 2. Great in power and authority the metrapolitane of all the earth then They have little cause to boast of their Temporall felicitie and greatnesse Vers. 11 12. The Merchants of the earth shall weep and mourne over her for no man buyeth her merchandise any more The merchandise of gold and silver and precious stones c. This cannot be understood literally there shall be merchandizing after Romes destruction but that kind of merchandizing Rome trades 1. In the things of God his doctrine worship 2. In the sins of men 3. The souls of men v. 13 Sets to sale the truths ordinances of God sins and soules of men It is well called nobile emporium rerum Spiritualium Vers. 14. And the fruits that thy soule lusted after are departed from thee The Greek word signifieth autumn fruit their second services suckets sweet meates and delicate confections Vers. 21. And a mighty Angell tooke up a stone like a great milstone and cast it into the Sea saying Thus with violence shall that great City Babylon be throwne downe The Angell expresseth it by this signe 1. To shew the difficultie of putting down Babylon 2. The violence of it 3. The irrecoverablenesse of it Vers. 22. And the voyce of harpers and musicians and of pipers and trumpeters shall be heard no more at all in thee See Ier. 25.10 The Jews were wont to have musick at their feasts Isay 5.11.24 especially at marriages See Luke 15.25 v. 23. of this Chapter Vers. 23. For thy Merchants were the great men of the earth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Princes of the earth for their great riches See 33. Deut. 19. Vers. 24. And in her That is Babylon now Rome Was found the bloud of Prophets Namely of the New Testament they were killed at Jerusalem Ribera They were not all killed within the precincts of the City of Rome but all which for Religions sake were put to death by her authority or instigation were delivered to death Romes cruelty will cause her ruine CHAP. XIX Vers. 1. IN heaven Not the Church but the innumerable company of glorified ones in heaven say some others interpret it of the Church and say praise is given to God in the Church in the Hebrew tongue because the Jews the Hebrew people shall acknowledge the Lord Jesus with us Vers. 2. For he hath judged the great whore That is Rome called whore as before because of her Apostatizing from the truths of God and her former covenant the great whore because of her universall poisoning of the earth Vers. 4. And the foure and twenty Elders That is the Church and the foure beasts That is the Ministers Vers. 8. For the fine linnen is the righteousnesse of Saints Righteousnesses Greek This say some signifieth a double righteousnesse given unto us 1. The righteousnesse of justification whereby we are justified before God 2. The righteousnesse of sanctification by which we evidence our justification to men Others say it is an hebraisme rather by the plurall righteousnesses noting the most absolute righteousnesse which we have in Christ so the Hebrew word is used Esay 45.24 Vers. 9. Blessed are they which are called unto the marriage supper of the Lambe By this marriage-supper is meant the great generall wedding feast in heaven after the resurrection where the King of glory and the Angels are where the Lambes wife v. 7 8. and all shall meete at which are all the creatures in their greatest glory See thou do it not The prohibition is much more emphaticall in the originall see not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is an ellipsis of the word doe or worship saith Alsted I am thy fellow servant and of thy brethren that have the testimony of Jesus This is the first reason against the worshipping of Angels We are equall in office Therefore thou owest not to mee religious but sociall worship The other reason followes worship God because to him alone religious worship is due as belonging to the first Table of the Decalogue CHAP. XX. Vers. 1. AND I saw an Angell come downe from heaven See the 12. ch 9. v. Our Lord Jesus Christ. Primasius Austen and others The Angell of the Covenant Mal. 3● Iohn 3.13 He descends from heaven by his incarnation Pareus He hath the key of the bottomlesse pit that is the power of hell and death which Christ ascribes to himselfe 18.18 and binds Satan which is proper to Christ. Pareus And a great chaine in his hand By which he bound the Devill the moderne Expositors interpret it the inevitable and binding power of the divine majesty a long and strong chaine to bind a most cruell enemy 12.13 Vers. 2. And bound him a thousand yeares That is he should not stirre up the lusts of men to make warre against the Saints of God See 8 9. verses What he was hindred from when he was bound he attempted to do when loose And shut him up and set a seale upon him That is upon the dore of the bottomlesse pit lest hee should breake out before his time Vers. 6. Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection and shall reigne with him a thousand yeares There are two common interpretations Some understand the first resurrection from the death of sin and a reigning in heaven a thousand yeares they interpret eternity and a further degree of glory for such as are called forth to suffer Secondly others understand it literally that then shall be a corporall resurrection of all the Martyrs to live with Christ a 1000. yeares First it cannot be a reigning with Christ in heaven because it is something peculiar to those that are beheaded a resurrection which followes that they rise from sin before they dye besides the 9. and 10. verses shew it cannot be meant of heaven Secondly it cannot bee understood of the corporall resurrection the dead in Christ rise first yet so