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A55363 Annotations upon the Holy Bible. Vol. I wherein the sacred text is inserted, and various readings annex'd, together with parallel scriptures, the more difficult terms in each verse are explained, seeming contradictions reconciled, questions and doubts resolved, and the whole text opened / by the late reverend and learned divine Mr. Matthew Poole. Poole, Matthew, 1624-1679. 1683 (1683) Wing P2820; ESTC R39678 6,571,344 1,258

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the same phrase Gen. 48. 15. 1 King 8. 25. Psal. 116. 9. and be thou ‖ Or upright or sincere perfect c i. e. sincere universal and constant in thy belief of my promises and obedience to my commands See Gen. 6. 9. 2. And I will make my covenant between me and thee d I am come to renew establish and enlarge that covenant which I formerly made with thee and will multiply thee exceedingly 3. And Abram fell on his face e Partly in self-abasement and an humble sense of his own undeservedness of such favours and partly in reverence and worship to God and a thankful acknowledgment of his marvellous kindess Compare Levit. 9. 24. Ezek. 43. 3. and God talked with him saying 4. As for me behold my covenant is with thee and thou shalt be a father of † Heb. multitude of Nations many nations f Both literally or after the Flesh of the Israelites Ismaelites Edomites c. and spiritually of all Believers of all Nations to whom Abram hath in some sort the place of a Father Rom. 4. 12 17. Not only as he was the great example and teacher of that faith by which they are all saved as the instructers of others are called their Fathers both in Scripture as Gen. 4. 20 21. and in profane Authors but as he was made by God the head of the Covenant by or through whom the Covenant-right was conveyed to all his natural seed and afterwards to the spiritual seed all Gentile-Believers 5. Neither shall thy name any more be called Abram but thy name shall be Abraham g i. e. The Father of a multitude Ham in the Hebrew being put for Hamon which signifies a multitude by a figure called Apocope which is usual in proper names * Rom. 4. 17 for a father of many nations have I made thee 6. And I will make thee exceeding fruitful and † Heb. I will make thee Nations I will make * Chap. 35. 11 nations of thee and Kings shall come out of thee h So did the Kings of Israel and Iudah of Edom of the Saracens and the Messias who is King of Kings and Lord of Lords 7 And I will establish my covenant between me and thee and thy seed after thee in their Generations for an everlasting covenant to be a God unto thee i i. e. Whatsoever I am or have all that shall be thine and shall be employed for thy protection consolation and Salvation This phrase contains in it the confluence of all blessings Temporal Spiritual and Eternal See Levit. 26. 12. Psal. 33. 12. and 144. 15. Ier. 31. 33. and to thy seed after thee 8 And * Chap. 12. 7. I will give unto thee and to thy seed † Unto thee not in thy own person but in thy Seed See Gen. 13. 15 17. after thee the land † Heb. of thy sojournings wherein thou art a stranger all the land of Canaan for an everlasting possession k Upon condition of their obedience to God as is oft expressed Wherein seeing they so notoriously failed it is no wonder if they possessed it but a little while as the Prophet complains Isa. 63. 18. and I will be their God 9 And God said unto Abraham Thou shalt keep my covenant therefore thou l The agreement is mutual My part was expressed before now follows thy part and the condition to which my promise and blessing is annexed and thy Seed after thee in their Generations 10 This is my covenant m Circumcision is here called the Covenant by an usual Metonymy because it is the condition sign and seal of the Covenant the pledge of Gods promise and mans duty And upon the same grounds the cup i. e. the Wine is called the New Testament in Christs blood Luke 22. 20. Or which is all one Christs Blood in the New Testament Matth. 26. 28. which ye shall keep between me and you and thy Seed after thee every * Acts 7. 8. man-child n It is evident that Women as well as Men were comprehended in this Covenant from Gen. 34. 14. Exod. 12. 3 4. Ioel 2. 15 16. Yet Circumcision is given only to the Males partly because it could not at least not conveniently be administred to Females partly because man is the principal cause of the propagation of Children and consequently of the propagation of that original corruption which cleaves to them partly to signifie that all persons begotten by man should be polluted by sin though not all conceived by a Woman as Christ was And partly because Man is the Head of the Woman and of the Family upon whom all their concerns are devolved and from whom the distinction of Families and People comes among you shall be circumcised 11 And ye shall circumcise the flesh of your fore-skin o i. e. By an usual Hypallage the fore-skin of your flesh And the word Flesh is here put for the Genital part as it is Levit. 15. 2 19. Ezek 16. 26. and 23 20. and elsewhere This part God singled out for this Ordinance because it is and was a great instrument both in the commission of actual sins and in the propagation of original sin and therefore it was very proper to apply to it the seal of Gods gracious Covenant for the remission of sins past and the extirpation of sin for the future and it shall be a * Act. 7. 8. Rom. 4. 11. token of the covenant p i. e. A sign evidence and assurance both of the blessing promised by that God who appointed this Ordinance and of mans obligation to the duties required which is signifyed by his acceptance of and submission to this Ordinance And here we have the nature and definition of a Sacrament viz. that it is a figure or token of Gods Covenant betwixt me and you 12 And † Heb. a son of eight days he that is eight days old q Not before that time because of the Childs weakness and imperfection and impurity too Exod. 22. 30. Levit. 12. 3. for which reason also Beasts were not to be offered to God before the eigth day Exodus 22. 30. * Levit. 12. 3. Luke 2. 21. John 7. 22. shall be circumcised among you every man-child in your generations r Successively until the Messias come who shall circumcise your hearts and change this Ordinance for another he that is born in the house or bought with money of any stranger s These were of two sorts 1. Children who being entirely his possession and having not understanding to discern nor will to chuse or refuse were to be circumcised 2. Grown persons who were not to be compelled to be circumcised but if they refused it were not to be permitted to dwell in his Family lest they should infect others but were to be sold to strangers as the Hebrew Doctors teach But as for Abrahams Servants here they were
Gentiles to receive thee as the true Messiah and Saviour of the World and the Holy One of Israel and he shall choose thee d And although thou shalt be rejected by thine own People and refused by their Builders or Rulers as was Prophesied Psal. 118. 22. and for a time and in some respects forsaken by God himself Mat. 27. 46. yet God will return to thee and chuse thee again and manifest unto the World that thou and thou onely art the Person whom God hath chosen to be the Redeemer of mankind and whom in spight of all opposition he will make the head-stone of the Corner For the Phrase see on Isa. 48. 10. But these words are well rendred by others who will chuse or hath chosen thee the conjunction and being put for the pronoun relative as Isa. 44. 14. and in many other places as hath been observed before 8. Thus saith the LORD e God the Father unto Christ. * 2 Cor. 6. 2. in an acceptable time f Heb. In a time of good will in that time when I shall have and in a special manner manifest my good will to the Sons of men in the day of my Grace and of mans Salvation as this Phrase is explained in the next clause in the time of the Gospel which is in the time of Gods good Will towards men as the Host of Heaven declared at the Birth of Christ Luk. 2. 14. In the dayes of thy flesh when thou didst offer up Prayers and Suplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save thee from death as we read Heb. 5. 7. which text is a good comment upon this place have I heard thee g Though not so as to deliver thee from death and from the sence of my wrath yet so as to keep thee from sinking under these burdens and so as thou shouldest not be holden under the Pains or Power of Death Act. 2. 24 and so as to Crown thee with Glory and Hono●…r and a blessed success of all thy labours and sufferings and in a day of salvation have I helped thee and I will preserve thee i Upon earth till thy work be finished and unto that eternal Kingdom and Glory which is prepared for thee and give thee for a covenant k To be the Mediator and Surety of that Covenant which is made between me and them as Christ is called Heb. 7. 22. and 8. 6. to renew and confirm the Covenant which the Messiah is said to do Dan. 9. 27. by his own blood by which God and men are reconciled and united one to the other And therefore he may well be called the Covenant by a known Metonymy which is very usual in such cases as upon the same account Circumcision the sign of the Covenant is called Gods Covenant Gen. 17. 10. and the Paschal Lamb is called the Passover Exod. 12. 11. and the Sacramental Cup is called the New Testament Luk. 22. 20. and the Communion of the Blood of Christ 1 Cor. 10. 16. of the people l Indefinitely of all my People not onely Iews but also the Gentiles as may be gathered from the context and by comparing this place with Isa. 42. 6. Where the same Phrase is used From both which places it is most manifest that the Messiah is designed and not Isaiah to whom this and divers other Phrases here used cannot be ascribed without great force ‖ Or raise u●… to establish the earth m To compose and settle the Earth and the Inhabitants thereof by making peace between God and men and between Iews and Gentiles and by establishing Truth and Righteousness and Holiness upon Earth and by subduing those Lusts and Passions which are the great disturbers of Humane Society which was the design of God in sending and of Christ in coming into the World to cause to inherit the desolate heritages n That desolate Places may be repaired and repossessed That Christ may possess the Heathen according to Psal. 2. 8. who were in a spiritual sence in a most desolate and forlorn condition h In the time of grace and of the Gospel which I have appointed for the working out of mans Salvation by thee 9. That thou mayest say o To wit with power and effect as when God said Let there be Light c. * Chap. 42. 7. to the prisoners p To the Gentiles who are fast bound by the cords of their sins and taken Captive by the Devil at his will as this same Phrase is understood Isa. 42. 7. Go forth q Come forth to the light receive Divine illumination and consolation to them that are in darkness Shew your selves they shall feed in the wayes and their pastures shall be in all high places r They shall have abundant provision in all places yea even in those which commonly are barren and unfruitful and such are both common roads and high grounds 10. They shall not * Rev. 7. 1●… hunger nor thirst neither shall the heat nor Sun smite them s They shall be supplied with all good and necessary things and kept from all evil occurrents for he that hath mercy on them shall lead them t God who hath magnified his mercy to them will conduct them with safety and comfort even by the springs of water shall he guide them 11. And I will make all my Mountains a way and my high wayes shall be exalted u I will remove all hinderances and prepare the way for them by levelling high grounds and raising low grounds of which see on Isa. 40. 3 4. 12. Behold these shall come from farr x My People shall be called and gathered even from the most remote parts of the earth He speaks here and in many other places of the Conversion of the Gentiles with allusion to that work of gathering and bringing back the Iews from all parts where they were dispersed into their own Land and loe these from the North and from the West y From the several parts of the world which are here synecdochically expressed as they are in many other places and these from the land of Sinim z Either of the Sinites as they are called Gen. 1●… 17. who dwelt about the Wilderness of Sin which was Southward from Iudea Or of Sin a famous City of Egypt called the strength of Egypt which may be synecdochically put for all Egypt and that for all southern parts And so he here mentions the several quarters of the World where the generality of the Iews were dispersed the North which is every where named as the chief place of their banishment and dispersion as Ier. 16. 15. and 31. 8. and elsewhere the West the western Countries and Islands and the South 13. Sing O Heavens and be joyful O Earth and break forth into singing O Mountains for the Lord hath comforted his People a God hath now sent that
countenance have been upright and pleasant which now is sad and dejected And if thou doest not well sin lieth at the door t Sin is here taken either 1. Properly so the sense is sin will be growing upon thee one sin will bring in another and that mali●… and purpose of revenge against thy Brother which now lies hid in the secret chamber of thy Mind and Heart lies at the door ready to break forth into the view of the World in open Murder Or 2 For the punishment of sin as it is taken Gen. 19. 15. Levit. 5. 1. and 2●… 20. Numb 18. 1. 2 King 7. 9. Zach. 14. 19. So the sense is if thou wilt go on in sin and execute thy wicked purpose which I perceive lies working in thy Heart be sure thy sin will find thee o●…t as is said Numb 32. 23. Thou shalt not long enjoy the Fruits of thy wickedness but a dreadful judgment shall tread upon the heels of thy sin and lie like a furious Mastive-dog at the very door of thy house to seize upon thee at thy first coming in or going out For that person or thing which is very near to us or at hand is said to be at the doors Matth. 24. 33. Iam. 5. 9. And ‖ Or subject unto thee unto thee shall be his desire and thou shalt rule over him u Those two clauses may relate either 1. To sin which may be here spoken of as a person as it is Rom. 7 8 9 11 c. So the place may be rendred and expounded thus The desire of sin is to thee i. e. to assault seduce conquer and destroy thee As it is said Luke 22. 31. Satan hath desired to have you that he may sift you c. Or thus its desire objectively not subjectively taken i. e. Thy desire intention or resolution of smning that evil motion of thy heart against thy Brother shall be against as the Hebrew particle el oft signifies thee i. e. howsoever at present it pleaseth thee yet it is really not only against him but against thy self and will certainly turn to thy own ruine But for so the particle and is commonly taken If thou be wise give no place to it but resist it do thou rule for the future tense is oft put imperatively as in the Ten Commandements and it frequently signifies not what a man can or shall do but his duty or what he ought to do as is evident from Gen. 20. 9. Mal. 1. 6. Luke 3. 14. over it i. e. conquer and subdue it which is thy duty or thou shalt rule over it i. e. by my grace assisting thy endeavours thou shalt be enabled to subdue thy evil concupiscences and passions and so over-rule prevent or remove those punishments which otherwise sin will infallibly bring upon thee Or 2. To Abel and so the sense is And as for thy Brother Abel to whose Faith and Piety I have given this publick and honourable testimony which thy naughty heart makes an occasion of envy and malice and intention of Murther that thou mayst not by a mistake be led to the perpetration of so horrid a crime know that this favour of mine concerns only his spiritual priviledge and the happiness of the Life to come which thou despisest but it makes no change in civil rights nor doth it transfer the domimon from thee whose it is by Birth unto him nor doth he so understand it for notwithstanding this unto thee shall be his desire subject i. e. he shall and will nevertheless yield to thee as his Superiour and thou according to thy own hearts desire shalt rule over him If it be said the name of Abel is not here mentioned it may be answered that this is sufficiently included in the pronouns his and him and it is not unusual to put those relative pronouns alone the antecedent being not expressed but to be gathered either from the foregoing or following words of which see my notes on Gen. 3. 1. 8. And Cain † Heb spake to c. talked with Abel his Brother x Either 1. Familiarly and friendly as he used to do thereby to make him secure and careless Or by way of expostulation and contention And it came to pass when they were in the Field y Into which Abel was led either by his own employment or by Cains perswasion this being a fit place for the execution of his wicked purpose that Cain rose up against Abel his Brother and * Matth. 23. 35. 1 John 3. 12. Jude 11. slew him z Possibly with stone or club or with some Iron tool belonging to Husbandry 9. And the LORD said unto Cain where is Abel a Not that God was ignorant where he was but partly to convince him of his sin and to lead him to Repentance and partly to instruct Judges to enquire into causes and hear the accused speak for themselves before they pass sentence thy Brother b Whom nature and near relation obliged thee to love and preserve And he said I know not Am I my Brothers Keeper c Why dost thou enquire of me concerning him who is of age to look to himself Is he such a stripling that he needs a Guardian Or didst thou ever make me his Guardian 10. And he said what hast thou done d I hear thy words but what say thy actions What an hideous crime hast thou committed In vain dost thou endeavour to hide it or deny it The voice of thy brothers † Heb. bloods Blood e In the Hebrew it is Bloods either to aggravate the crime Or to shew the plenty of the blood spilt Or to charge him with the Murder of all those that might naturally have come out of Abels loyns which was a far greater crime in the nonage of the World when the World greatly wanted people * Rev. 6. 10. crieth unto me from the ground f Upon which it was spilt by thy bloody hands 11. And now art thou cursed g As the earth was cursed for thy Fathers sake so now art thou cursed in thy own person from the Earth h Or In regard of the Earth which shall grudge thee both its Fruits and a certain dwelling place which hath opened her mouth to receive thy Brothers blood from thy hand i Which had more humanity to thy Brother than thou hadst for it kindly received and covered that blood which thou didst cruelly and unnaturally shed upon it 12. When thou tillest the ground k Or That ground which doth or shall fall to thy share which besides the first and general curse inflicted upon the whole Earth shall have this peculiar curse added to it it shall not henceforth yield unto thee her strength l i. e. It s vertue and fruit in such proportion as it hath hitherto done A fugitive and vagabond m Banished from thy own Land and Kindred and fathers house and from
unclean see on chap. 7. 2. Levit. 11. 2. c. 21. And the Lord smelled † Heb. a savour of rest a sweet savour x i. e. Graciously accepted the Person and Faith and Praise-offering of Noah and was as well pleased therewith as men use to be with a sweet smell and the Lord said in his Heart y i. e. Determined within himself and expressed so much to Noah The Hebrew preposition el sometimes signifies in as Gen. 6. 6. 1 Sam. 27. 1. Others said to his Heart i. e. spake to the Heart of Noah who is mentioned ver 20. To speak to the Heart in Scripture use signifies to comfort I will not again curse the ground z i. e. The whole Earth with this kind of curse with another deluge Otherwise God doth not hereby tye his hands that he may not either destroy a particular Land by a deluge which hath been done since or destroy the World by Fire when he sees fit as he hath declared he will do any more for mans sake for the * Chap. 6. 5. Matth. 15. 19. imagination of mans Heart is evil a The reason is this since all mens Hearts are naturally corrupt and from that filthy spring wicked actions will be continually flowing forth into the World and consequently if I should be severe to punish men according to their sins I should do nothing but send one deluge after another Or these words may be joyned with the former and the sense may be this I will not again destroy the Earth with a deluge for mans sake or for mans sin or because the imagination c. i. e. because his heart is corrupt and his actions are agreeable to it which was the cause of the last deluge Or the particle chi may be rendred although as it is frequently taken as Exod. 5. 11. and 13. 17. and 34. 9. Ios. 17. 13. Psal. 25. 11. and 41. 5. and so the sense is plain I will not again destroy the Earth although the imagination c. i. e Although I have just cause to do so from his youth Neither will I again smite b i. e. Kill or destroy as the word smiting is taken Exod. 21. 18. Numb 14. 12. and 35. 16. Deut. 28. 22 27. Amos 4. 9. any more every thing living as I have done ‖ Or From his very childhood and infancy as the Chaldee and Greek interpreters Translate it 22. † Heb. as yet all the days of the Earth While the Earth remaineth c In this estate For though it seems probable that the substance of the Earth will abide for ever after the dissolution of the World by fire yet that will be in another manner and for other purposes and then there will be no need of Seed-time or Harvest c. Seed-time and Harvest and Cold and Heat and Summer and Winter and Day and Night d Which distinction in a manner ceased in the Ark the Heavens being covered and all its lights eclipsed by such thick and black Clouds as never were before no●… since shall not cease CHAP. IX 1. AND God blessed a i. e. Renewed the old blessing and grant made chap. 1. 28. which might seem to be forfeited and made void by mans sin and by Gods Judgment consequent upon it Noah and his Sons and said unto them * Chap. 1. 28. and 8. 17. be fruitful and multiply and replenish the Earth 2. And the fear of you and the dread of you shall be upon every Beast of the Earth and upon every Fowl of the Air upon all that moveth upon the Earth and upon all the Fishes of the Sea ‖ Before they loved and reverenced you as Lords and Friends now they shall dread you as Enemies and Tyrants into your hand are they delivered * For your use and service I restore you in part to that Dominion over them which you for your sins have forfeited 3. Every moving thing b Which is wholesome and fit for food and clean An exception to be gathered both from the nature of the thing and from the distinction of clean and unclean Beasts mentioned before and afterwards that liveth c This is added to exclude the use of those Creatures which either died of themselves or were killed by wild Beasts which is here forbidden implicitely and afterwards expresly See Exod. 22. 31. Levit. 22. 8. shall be meat for you d It is not a command that we must but a permission that we may eat of them A grant possibly given before the Flood but now expressed either because the former allowance might seem to be forfeited or because as men now grew more infirm and needed better nourishment so the Earth was grown more feeble by the Flood and its fruits yeilded less and worse nourishment even as the * Chap. 1. 29. green herb have I given you all things † Understand this with the limitation above mentioned The green Herbs were given before chap. 1. 29. 4. * Levit. 17. 14. Deut. 12. 23. Act. 15. 20. But Flesh with the † Heb. Soul Life thereof e i. e. Whilst it lives or taken from the Creature before it be quite dead Which was an antient practice and an effect either of luxury or cruelty which is the blood thereof f i. e. Which life or soul hath its seat in and its support from the blood and the spirits contained in it It is certain Blood is the thing which is here principally minded and forbidden and so the words may be thus translated and understood but flesh i. e. the Flesh of living Creatures hereby allowed you with the Life thereof that is to say with the blood thereof wherein its life consists Or But Flesh whilst it hath in it its Life or Soul or which is all one its Blood shall you not eat g God thought fit to forbid this partly that by this respect shewn to the blood of Beasts it might appear how sacred a thing the blood of man was and how much God abhorred the sin of Murther and principally because the Blood was reserved and consecrated to God as was the means of atonement for man which reason God himself gives Levit. 17. 11 12. and did in a special manner represent the Blood of Christ which was to be shed for the Redemption of mankind 5. And * Or For as the particle is oft taken This being the reason of the foregoing prohibition surely your blood of your † Heb. Souls Lives h Or Of your Souls i. e. Of your persons the word Soul being oft put for Person Or your Blood which is for your lives i. e. which by the spirits it generates is the great preserver and instrument of your lives and of all your vital actions and the great bond which ties your Souls and Bodies together The sense of the place is If I am thus carefull for the blood of Beasts
be assured I will be much more solicitous for the blood of men when it shall be shed by unjust and violent hands will I require i I will make inquisition for the Author of such bloodshed as I did after Cain and consequently punish him For this phrase of requiring implies punishment See Gen. 42. 22. Deut. 18. 19. compared with Acts 3. 23. Psal. 9. 13. If Magistrates neglect this duty I my self will avenge it by my own hand At the hand of every Beast will I require it k Not for the punishment of the Beast which being under no Law is not 〈◊〉 of sin nor punishment but for caution to men for whose use seeing they were made it is no abuse of them if they be destroyed for mans benefit Compare Exod. 21. 28. Levit. 20 15. and at the hand of Man at the hand of every mans Brother l This is added either 1. as an aggravation of the crime because the man slain was the Brother of the Murderer all men being made of one bl●…od Act. 17 26. And having one Father even God Mal. 2. 10. and Adam too Upon which accounts all men are frequently called one anothers 〈◊〉 as is manifest from Gen. 26. 31 and 29. 4. Levit. 19. 17. and 25. 14. and 26. 37. and from many other places of Scripture Or 2. As an assurance of the punishment of the Murderer without any exception of the nearest relation which though it makes the sin greater yet many times is a security against punishment the murtherer easily finding favour and pardon from his Parents and dear Friends But the former sense seems the better will require the † Heb Soul Life of Man 6. * Matth. 26. 52. Revel 13. 10. Whoso sheddeth ‖ Or the blood of man in man mans blood m Willfully and unwarrantably For there is a double exception to this Law 1. Of casual Murder expressed Numb 35 31. Deut. 19. 4. 2. Of death inflicted by the hand of the Magistrate for crimes deserving it mentioned in the following words and elsewhere by man n i. e. By the hand of man namely the Magistrate Rom. 13. 4. Who is hereby impowered and required upon pain of my highest displeasure to inflict this punishment See Exod. 21. 12. Levit. 24. 17. Matth. 26. 57. 〈◊〉 For that Man i. e. For that mans sake whose blood he hath shed which cries for vengeance shall his blood be shed * Chap. 1. 2●… For in the image of God made he man o So that Murder is not only an offence against man but also an injury to God and a contempt of that image of God which all men are obliged to reverence and maintain and especially Magistrates who being my Vice-gerents and Servants are therefore under a particular obligation to punish those who d●…face and destroy it 7. And yet be ye fruitful and multiply p i. e. As for you I do not repent of that former blessing I gave to your Parents Gen. 1. 28. but do hereby renew it to you and ●…your Seed after you bring forth abundantly in the Earth and multiply therein 8. And God spake unto Noah and to his Sons with him saying 9. And I behold I establish my Covenant q i. e. My promise For the Beasts included in this Covenant ver 10. are not capable of a Covenant properly so called And the word Covenant is oft used for a simple promise as we shall see hereafter with you and with your Seed r i. e. Your posterity as that word is frequently taken as Gen. 12. 7. Exod. 28. 43. c. after you 10. And with every † Heb. living soul. living Creature that is with you of the Fowl of the Cattle and of every Beast of the Earth with you from all that go out of the Ark to every Beast of the Earth ‖ To wit which shall hereafter be in the Earth So they are distinguished from these which were now with them 11. And * Isai. 54. 9 I will establish my Covenant with you neither shall all Flesh be cut off any more by the Waters of a Flood neither shall there any more be a Flood s i. e An universal deluge For particular inundations there have been whereby Towns and Countries have been overwhelmed with all their inhabitants to destroy the Earth 12. And God said This is the token of the Covenant t This i. e. The bow mentioned in the next verse I appoint to you for a sensible sign and evidence to assure you that I shall perform this Covenant or Promise which I make between me and you and every living Creature that is with you for perpetual Generations 13. I do set ‖ Heb. I have given i. e. I will from time to time give and place my Bow u God calleth it his Bow partly because it was his workmanship and chiefly because it was his pledge and the seal of his promise in the Cloud x A proper seat for it That they might now fetch an argument of Faith from thence whence before they had matter of just fear and that which naturally was and is a sign of Rain might by this new appointment of God be turned into an assurance that there should be no such overflowing Rain as now had been and it shall be for a token of a Covenant between me and the Earth 14. And it shall come to pass when I bring a Cloud over the Earth y Not always but very frequently which is sufficient for this purpose that the Bow shall be seen in the Cloud 15. And I will remember my Covenant which is between me and you and every † Heb. every living Soul in all flesh living Creature of all Flesh and the Waters shall no more become a Flood to destroy all Flesh. 16. And the Bow shall be in the Cloud and I will look upon it that I may remember the Everlasting Covenant z i. e. This Covenant made with all succeeding Generations of men and Beasts This and the like speeches are oft ascribed to God after the manner of Men who being forgetfull need helps for their memory between God and every living Creature of all Flesh that is upon the Earth 17. And God said unto Noah This is the token of the Covenant a The same thing is so oft repeated for the strengthning of the Faith of all men and especially of Noah and his Sons whom the remembrance of that dreadful deluge which they had experience of had made exceeding prone to fears of the like for time to come which I have established between me and all Flesh that is upon the Earth 18. And the Sons of Noah that went forth of the Ark were Shem and Ham and Iapheth And Ham is the Father of † Heb. Chanaan Canaan b Which is here mentioned to make way for the following relation 19. These are the three Sons
oxen than for sheep Ans. 1. Because it argued greater boldness and customariness in the thief to steal that which might more easily be discovered 2. Because besides the intrinsecal worth of the oxe the labour of the oxe was very considerable to his owner Prov. 14. 4. and therefore the loss greater 2 If a thief be found breaking up d To wit an house which the Chaldee here addes and by night as appears from the next verse and be smitten that he die there shall no bloud be shed for him e i. e. For the thief though he be killed by a man in his own defence Because in that case the thief might be presumed to have a worse design and the owner of the house could neither expect or have the help of others to secure him from the intended violence nor guide his blows with that discretion and moderation which in the day-time he might use 3 If the Sun be risen upon him there shall be blood shed for him f He that kills him shalt be put to death because he punished him more than his crime deserved and might have been otherwise either secured or righted and in that case it is probable the thief designed not murder but theft onely But if it were evident that the house-breaker designed murder he might doubtless kill him in his own defence for he should make full restitution if he have nothing then he shall be sold g Either so long till his service was worth the thing stollen or rather for the ordinary time of six years because this was not a simple thief but an house-breaker which was much worse Quest. How can he be sold who is supposed to be killed Ans. The Hebrew word may be better rendred should be sold as the foregoing word of the same future time is rendred should make restitution to wit if he were not killed and therefore the killer of him being sufficiently secured against this injury was more culpable in killing him without necessity for his theft 4 If the theft be certainly found in his hand alive h Not killed nor sold as ver 1. whether it be oxe or ass or sheep he shall restore double i Not more 1. because in that case it was presumed either that he intended to restore it or at lest that he was but raw and unexercised in the trade of stealing and so should be more gently punished 2. because the right owner recovered his goods with less charge and trouble or 3. because it was but a single crime whereas the other ver 1. was an aggravated and complicated crime where one sin and injury was added to another Obj. It is said he shall restore seven-sold Prov. 6. 31. Ans. 1. Seven-sold is put for abundantly as that word is oft used as Gen. 4. 24. Ps. 12. 6 79. 12. and a learned man observes it is never used for that definite number Ans. 2. This seven-sold or seven-times may relate not to the proportion of his restitution but to the number of his Thefts or rather of his detections and the sence is this Though he be found guilty of theft seven times all his punishment is that he shall restore as the law prescribes Whereas adultery of which he there speaks in the following verses is a crime of that nature that if a man be once found guilty of it restitution cannot be made nor will it serve his turn but he falls into all the mischiefs there reckoned up 5 If a man shall cause a field or vineyard k Or Orchard or other things of like nature which is generally to be observed in Laws to be eaten and shall put in his beast and shall feed in another mans field of the best of his own field and of the best of his own vineyard shall he make restitution 6 If fire break out and catch in thorns so that the stacks of corn or the standing corn or the field be consumed therewith he that kindled the fire l Whether wilfully for such a purpose or carelesly in such a time or place as was dangerous shall surely make restitution m Which if he were not able to do it is probable he was to be sold for it as in like cases was provided 7 If a man shall deliver unto his neighbour money or stuff n Heb. Vessels garments utensils or any kind of houshold stuffe to keep and it be stollen out of the mans house if the thief be found let him pay double 8 If the thief be not found then the master of the house shall be brought unto the Judges to see o That they may examine all circumstances and use all means to find out the truth by offering him his Oath or otherwise whether he have put his hand unto his neighbours goods p Either to take and reserve them for his own use or to dispose of them to another for his own advantage 9 For all manner of trespass q To wit about matters deposited upon trust and lost of which alone this place speaks whether it be for oxe for ass for sheep for raiment or for any manner of lost thing which another challengeth to be his r Or when or concerning which he shall say this is it viz the thing that I have lost Or rather this is he to whom I committed it and whom I suspect and charge as guilty the cause of both parties shall come unto the Judges and whom the Judges shall condemn s Whether the person with whom the things were deposited if they judged him guilty of Theft or the depositor if he were convicted of a false-accusation he shall pay double unto his neighbour 10 If a man deliver unto his neighbour an ass or an oxe or a sheep or any beast to keep t As his servant not freely but for wages and it dye or be hurt or driven away no man seeing it 11 Then shall an Oath of the LORD u So called here as also 1 Kings 1. 43. because it is taken by his authority and appointment and for his honour and in his name alone God being made both witness and judge and avenger thereby be between them both x i. e. Shall ●…nd the difference between them both the one shall give his Oath and the other shall accept of it Or be taken by them both by the one that he did deliver them to him upon agreement and for hire by the other that he put not his hand to them that he hath not put his hand unto his neighbours goods and the owner of it shall accept thereof and he shall not make it good 12 And if it be stollen from him y Heb. from with him which is an emphatical expression and notes that this was taken away either 1. From those things which were with him or which were his i. e. from the midst of his own goods which supposeth fraud in him Or 2. From under his
that day shall the priest make an atonement for you to cleanse you that ye may be clean from all your sins before the LORD 31 It shall be a sabbath of rest y Observed as a sabbath day by cessation from all worldly and servile works and diligent attendance upon Gods worship and service unto you and ye shall afflict your souls by a statute for ever 32 * And the priest whom he shall anoint z He●… i. e. either God who commanded him to be anointed as men are oft said to do what others do by their command or the High-priest who was to anoint his successour Or the third person is here put indefinitely or impersonally for who shall be anointed chap. 4. 3 5 6. and whom he shall † consecrate to minister in Heb. fill his ●…d the priests office in his fathers stead shall make the atonement and shall put on the linen clothes even the holy garments 33 And he shall make an atonement for the holy sanctuary and he shall make an atonement for the tabernacle of the congregation and for the altar and he shall make an atonement for the priests and for all the people of the congregation 34 And this shall be an everlasting statute unto you to make an atonement for the children of Israel for all their sins * once a year And he Exod 30 10. ●…b 9. 7. did as the LORD commanded Moses CHAP. XVII 1 AND the LORD spake unto Moses saying 2 Speak unto Aaron and unto his sons and unto all the children of Israel and say unto them This is the thing which the LORD hath commanded saying 3 What man soever there be of the house of Israel that killeth a Not for common use or eating for such beasts might be killed by any person or in any place but for sacrifice as manifestly appears both from ver 4. where that is expressed and from the reason of this law which is peculiar to sacrifices ver 5. and from Deut. 12. 5 15. 21. an oxe or lamb or goat in the camp b In Canaan the city answered to the camp and so it forbids any mans doing this either in the city or in the country or that killeth it out of the camp b In Canaan the city answered to the camp and so it forbids any mans doing this either in the city or in the country 4 And bringeth it not unto the door of the tabernacle c This was appointed partly in opposition to the heathens who sacrificed in all places partly to cut off occasions of Idolatry partly to prevent the peoples usurpation of the Priests office and partly to signify that God would accept of no sacrifices but through Christ and in the Church of both which the Tabernacle was a type See Heb. 9. 11. and according to his own prescript But though men were tyed to this law God was free to dispense with his own law which he did sometimes to the Prophets as 1 Sam. 7. 9. and 11. 15. c. and afterwards more fully and generally in the days of the Messiah Mal. 1. 11. Ioh. 4. 21 24. of the congregation to offer an offering unto the LORD before the tabernacle of the LORD blood shall be imputed unto that man d He shall be esteemed and punished as a murderer both by God and by men See Isa. 66. 3. The reason is because he sned that blood which though not mans blood yet was as pretious being sacred and appropriated to God and typically the price by which mens lives were ransomed he hath shed blood and that man shall be cut off from among his people e By death either by the hand of God in case men do not know it or neglect to punish it or by men if the fact was publick and evident 5 To the end that the children of Israel may bring their sacrifices which they f Either 1. the Egyptians and other idolatrous nations which commonly sacrificed to Idols or Devils in fields or any places who are not here named but may be designed by the particle they in way of contempt as if they were not worthy to be named as that particle is used Luk. 14. 24. and 19. 27. Ioh. 7. 11. and 8. 10. Or rather 2. the Israelites now mentioned and plainly understood in the following they who before the building of the Tabernacle took the same liberty herein which the Gentiles did from which they are now restrained offer in the open field even that they may bring them unto the LORD unto the door of the tabernacle of the congregation unto the priest and offer them for peace-offerings g He nameth these not exclusively to others as appears from the reason of the law and from ver 8 9. but especially because in these the temptation was more common in regard of their frequency and more powerful because part of these belonged to the offerer and the pretence was more plausible because their sanctity was something of a lower degree than others these being onely called holy and allowed in part to the people when the other are called most holy and were wholly appropriated either to God or to the Priests unto the LORD 6 And the priests shall sprinkle the blood h This verse contains a reason of the foregoing law because of Gods propriety in the blood and fat wherewith also God was well pleased and the people reconciled And these two parts onely are mentioned as the most eminent and peculiar though other parts also were reserved for God upon the altar of the LORD at the door of the tabernacle of the congregation and burn the fat for a * Exod. 29. 18. chap. 4. 31. sweet savour unto the LORD 7 And they shall no more offer their sacrifices unto devils i So they did not directly or intentionally but by construction and consequence because the Devil is the author of idolatry and is eminently served pleased and honoured by it And as the Egyptians were notorious for their Idolatry as appears by the testimony of Scripture and of all antient writers so the Israelites were infected with their leaven Ios. 24. 14. Ezek. 20. 7. and 23. 2 3. And the name of Devils is commonly given in Scripture to Idols yea even to those which seemed most innocent as to Ieroboams Calves 2 Chron. 11. 15. by which he and the people designed and professed to worship the true God as is manifest from the nature of the thing and from many places of Scripture and the worshippers of Idols are esteemed and called worshippers of Devils See Deut. 32. 17. Psal. 106. 37. 1 Cor. 10. 20. Rev. 9. 20. The Hebrew word rendred Devils signifies goats either because goats were eminently worshipped by the Egyptians as Herodotus Strabo and others note and diverse of the Idols of the Heathens were of that or a like form or because the Devil did oft appear to the Heathens in that shape as their own
this being no matter of religious priviledge but of common right and agreeable to the Law of nature and practise of wise heathens and for the sojourner among them that every one that killeth any person unawares may flee thither 16 * 〈◊〉 12 14. And if he smite him with an instrument of iron n Wittingly and wilfully though not with premeditated ma lice or design as appears by comparing this with ver 20 21 22 23. so that he die o To wit suddenly not so if he walked abroad afterward Exod. 21. 19 20. he is a murderer the murderer shall surely be put to death p Yea though he were fled into the City of refuge 17 And if he smite him † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with throwing a stone q Heb. with the stone of 〈◊〉 hand i. e. cast by the hand and that knowingly as appears by ver 23. wherewith he may die and he die he is a murderer the murderer shall surely be put to death 18 Or if he smite him with an hand-weapon of wood wherewith he may die and he die he is a murderer the murderer shall surely be put to death 19 The revenger of blood himself shall slay the murderer r Either 1. By himself as the following words shew so it is onely a permission that he may do it without offence to God or danger to himself Or 2. By the Magistrate from whom 〈◊〉 shall demand justice so it is a command as may appear by comparing this with ver 31. and Deut. 19. 12 13. when he meeteth him he shall slay him 20 But * Deut. 19. 11. if he thrust him of hatred or hurl at him by laying of wait that he die t Through sudden passion or provocation Or by 〈◊〉 or unawares 21 Or in enmity smite him with his hand that he die he that smote him shall surely be put to death for he is a murderer the revenger of blood shall slay the murderer when he meeteth him 22 But if he thrust him suddenly s * Exod. 21 1●… without enmity or have cast upon him any thing without laying of wait 23 Or with any stone wherewith a man may die seeing him not and cast it upon him that he die and was not his enemy neither sought his harm 24 Then u If the man slayer flee to the city of refuge the congregation shall judge between the slayer and the revenger of blood according to these judgments 25 And the congregation shall deliver the slayer out of the hand of the revenger of blood and the congregation shall restore him to the city of his refuge whither he was fled and he shall abide in it x Be confined to it partly to shew the hatefulness of wilful murder in Gods account by so severe a punishment as this in many cases might prove inflicted upon the very appearance of it and partly for the security of the manslayer least the presence of such a person and his conversation among the kindred of the deceased might occasion reproach and blood-shed unto the death of the high priest y Partly because the publick grief for the loss of so publick a person was likely to asswage the private griefs and passions of men the rather because by this example they were minded of their own mortality and thereby withheld from taking vengeance and principally to shew that the death of Christ the true High-Priest whom the others did evidently and eminently represent and typifie is the onely mean whereby sins are pardoned and sinners are set at liberty * Exod. 29. ●… Lev. 4. 3. and 21. 10. which was anointed with holy oyl 26 But if the slayer shall at any time come without the border of his city of refuge whither he was fled 27 And the revenger of blood find him without the borders of the city of his refuge and the revenger of blood kill the slayer he † Heb. 〈◊〉 bl●…d shall be to 〈◊〉 shall not be guilty of blood z i. e. Not liable to punishment from men though no●… free from guilt before God because he ki●…s an innocent person as appears from Deut. 19. 10. This God ordained to oblige the man-slayer to abide in his city of refuge See ver 22. 28 Because he should have remained in the city of his refuge until the death of the high priest but after the death of the high priest the slayer shall return into the land of his possession 29 So these things shall be for a statute of judgment unto you throughout your generations in all your dwellings 30 Whoso killeth any person the murderer shall be put to death by the * Deut. 17. 6. and 19. 15. Mat. 18. 16. 2 Cor. 13. 1. Heb. 10. 28. mouth of witnesses but one witness shall not testifie against any person to cause him to die a No Judge shall condemn any man to death upon a single testimony 31 Moreover ye shall take no satisfaction for the life of a murderer b No intercession nor ransome shall be accepted to save his life or procure him a pardon which is † Heb. faulty to die guilty of death but he shall be surely put to death 32 And ye shall take no satisfaction for him that is fled to the city of his refuge that he should come again to dwell in the land untill the death of the priest c Whereby God would signifie the absolute and indispensable necessity of Christs death to expiate sin and to redeem the sinner 33 So ye shall not pollute the land wherein ye are for blood it * Mic. 4. 11. defileth the land and † Heb. there can be no expiation for the land the land cannot be cleansed of the blood that is shed therein but by the blood of him that sheddeth it d These words are added as a reason not of the last Law ver 32. for in that case the land was cleansed without the blood of the man-slayer but of the Law next foregoing that verse 31. in which case it holds and the sense is if you shall spare the murderer or take any satisfaction for him you do together with your selves involve your Land and People in guilt and will certainly bring down Gods vengeance upon your selves and them 34 Defile not therefore the land which ye shall inherit e Be not cruel to your own Land by making it a den of murderers wherein I dwell for I the LORD dwell among the children of Israel CHAP. XXXVI 1 AND the chief fathers of the families a Who had the care and management of the publick affairs of that Tribe committed to them of the children of Gilead the son of Machir the son of Manasseh of the families of the sons of Joseph came near and spake before Moses and before the princes the chief fathers of the children of Israel 2 And they said * chap. 26. 55. the LORD commanded
Name of the LORD if the thing e Which he gives as a sign of the truth of his prophecy He means the prediction of some strange and wonderful event as appears by comparing this with Deut. 13. 1 2. follow not nor come to pass that is the thing which the LORD hath not spoken f The falshood of his prediction shews him to be a false prophet though the truth and accomplishment of his prediction had not proved him to be a true Prophet as is evident from Deut. 13. 2 3. but the prophet hath spoken it presumptuously g Impudently ascribing his own vain and lying fancies to the God of truth thou shalt not be afraid of him h i. e. Of his predictions or threatnings so as to be scared from doing thy duty in bringing him to deserved punishment CHAP. XIX 1 WHen the LORD thy God * chap. 12. 29. hath cut off the nations whose land the LORD thy God giveth thee and thou † Heb inheritest or possessest succeedest them and dwellest in their cities and in their houses 2 * Exod. 21. 13. Num. 35. 10. 11. Josh. 20. 2. Thou shalt separate three cities for thee in the midst of thy land a To wit beyond Iordan as there were three already appointed on this side Iordan Numb 35. 14. He saith in the midst of the land either for in the land as in the midst of the city Ier. 52. 25. is the same with that in the city 2 King 25. 19. or to design the places that they should be scituated in the midst of the several parts of their land to which they might conveniently and speedily flee from all the parts of the land which the LORD thy God giveth thee to possess it 3 Thou shalt prepare thee a way b Distinguish it by evident marks and make it plain and convenient to prevent mistakes and delays and divide the coasts of thy land which the LORD thy God giveth thee to inherit into three parts c Not into more because it was fit that these places should as far as it was possible be at some considerable distance from the friends of the slain person least the sight of the manslayer might have provoked their passion and occasioned his ruine that every slayer may flee thither 4 And this is the case of the slayer which shall flee thither that he may live whoso killeth his neighbour ignorantly whom he hated not † Heb. fro●…●…terday the 〈◊〉 day in time past 5 As when a man goeth into the wood with his neighbour to hew wood and his hand fetcheth a stroke with the ax to cut down the tree and the † Heb. 〈◊〉 head slippeth from the † Heb. 〈◊〉 helve and † Heb. 〈◊〉 lighteth upon his neighbour that he die he shall flee unto one of those cities and live 6 Lest the avenger of blood pursue the slayer d This verse is to be joyned with ver 3. as is evident the 4th and 5th verses coming in as a parenthesis which is usual in Scripture and other authors while his heart is hot and overtake him because the way is long and † Heb. 〈◊〉 him in 〈◊〉 slay him e Which is supposed but not allowed as appears from the following words But the avenger of blood is not to be punished with death for killing the manslayer in case he found him without the borders of the city of refuge after he had been received there Numb 35. 26 27. because then he was guilty of a new crime to wit a contempt of Gods ordinance and a gross neglect of the duty of self-preservation and therefore deserved death from God who might permit it to be inflicted by the avenger of blood whereas he was not worthy of death inasmuch as he hated him not † Heb. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in time past 7 Wherefore I command thee saying Thou shalt separate three cities for thee 8 And if the LORD thy God * chap. 1●… 〈◊〉 enlarge thy coast f As far as Euphrates See Gen. 15. 18. Exod. 23. 31. Deut. 1. 7. as he hath sworn unto thy fathers and give thee all the land which he promised to give unto thy fathers 9 If thou shalt keep all these commandments to do them which I command thee this day to love the LORD thy God and to walk ever in his wayes * Josh. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then shalt thou add three cities moe for thee beside these three 10 That innocent blood be not shed in thy land which the LORD thy God giveth thee for an inheritance and so blood be upon thee 11 But if any man hate his neighbour and lie in wait for him and rise up against him and smite him † Heb. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in life mortally that he die and fleeth into one of these cities 12 Then the elders of his city g Either of the slain person who were most likely to prosecute the murderer or of the murderer because God would oblige even his own fellow citizens to prosecute him to death that it might appear how hateful murder and the murderer is to God and ought to be to all men shall send and fetch him thence h Demand him of the Elders of the city of refuge who upon the hearing of the cause and the evidence of the murder were obliged to deliver the offender to justice and deliver him into the hand of the avenger of blood that he may die 13 Thine eye shall not pity him but thou shalt put away the guilt of innocent blood from Israel that it may go well with thee 14 * chap. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thou shalt not remove thy neighbours † Heb. 〈◊〉 land-mark i By which the several portions of lands distributed to several families were distinguished one from another See Iob 24. 2. Prov. 22. 28. Hos. 5. 10. which they of old time have set in thine inheritance which thou shalt inherit in the land that the LORD thy God giveth thee to possess it 15 * N●…m 35. 〈◊〉 chap. 17. ●… Mat. 18. 1●… Joh. 8. 17. 2 Cor. 13. ●… Heb. 10. 〈◊〉 One witness shall not rise up k Or not stand or not be established accepted owned as sufficient it is the same word which in the end of the verse is rendred be established against a man for any iniquity or for any sin in any sin that he sinneth at the mouth of two witnesses or at the mouth of three witnesses shall the matter be established 16 If a false witness l A single witness though he speak truth is not to be accepted for the condemnation of another man but if he be convicted of false witness this is sufficient for his own condemnation rise up against any man to testifie against him ‖ Or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which is wrong 17 Then both the men between whom the controversie is shall stand before the LORD before the priests and the judges
for David d He that wisheth David good success against Sheba and against all Rebels Whereby he implies that though this Fact of his was done against the Kings Command yet it was for his Interest and Defence let him go after Joab 12 And Amasa wallowed e Heb. rolled himself being in the Pangs of Death yet having so much Life left as to move himself a little though not to raise himself up from his place in blood f In his own blood which was shed there in the midst of the high-way and when the man saw that all the people g To wit the Soldiers which were upon their March stood still h Wondering at the Spectacle and enquiring into the Author and occasion of it he removed Amasa out of the high-way into the field i Perceiving that it both incensed them against Ioab and hindred the Kings present Service and cast a cloth upon him when he saw that every one that came by him stood still 13 When he was removed out of the high-way all the people went on after Joab to pursue after Sheba the son of Bichri ¶ 14 And he k Either 1. Ioab who pursued Sheba through all the Tribes as far as Abel Or rather 2. Sheba who was last mentioned who Marched from Tribe to Tribe to stir them up to Sedition and to him the following words seem best to agree went through all the tribes of Israel unto Abel and to Beth-maachah l Or rather to Abel even to Bethmaachah i. e. unto Abel-beth-maachah as this place is called here in the Hebrew text ver 15. and 1 King 15. 20. 2 King 15. 29. to distinguish it from other Abels and to signifie that this was that Abel which was in the Tribe of Napthali in the Northern border of Canaan towards that part of Syria called Maachah 2 Sam. 10. 8. and all the Berites m Such as lived in the City or Territory of Beeroth of Benjamin Iosh. 18. 25. who being of the same Tribe if not City with Sheba and his greatest Acquaintance and Friends or being most Implacable against David adhered to Sheba and followed him through all the Tribes of Israel and they n to wit the Tribes of Israel i. e. a considerable Number of them as might well be expected when the discontents were so high and general were gathered together and went also after him o i. e. After Sheba 15 And they p i. e. Ioab and his Army which is easily understood both from the foregoing and following Verses came and besieged him in Abel of Bethmaachah and they cast up a bank against the city q From whence they might either batter the Wall or shoot at those who defended it against them who should Assault it See 2 King 19. 32. Ier. 32. 24. and 33. 4. Otherwise they threw down the bank of the City which they had raised up to Defend the City on the weakest side and ‖ Or it stood against the outmost Wall it stood in the trench r i. e. The Bank stood in or near to the Trench or the Wall of the City so that the City was in great danger of being taken Otherwise the City stood within the Trench or Wall being Defended onely by a single Trench or a weak Wall the Bank which was raised up there to Defend it being thrown down and all the people that were with Joab † battered the wall to throw it down ‡ Heb. marred to throw down 16 ¶ Then cried a wise woman out of the city Hear Hear say I pray you unto Joab Come near hither that I may speak with thee 17 And when he was come near unto her the woman said Art thou Joab And he answered I am he Then she said unto him Hear the words of thine handmaid And he answered I do hear 18 Then she spake saying ‖ Or They plainly speak in the beginning saying Surely they will ask of Abel and so make an end They were wont to speak in old time saying They shall surely ask counsel at Abel and so they ended the matters s According to this Translation the sence is This City which thou art about to Destroy is no mean and contemptible one but so honourable and considerable for its Wisdom and the Wise People in it that when any differences did arise among any of the Neighbours they used Proverbially to say We will ask the Opinion and Advice of the Men of Abel about it and we will stand to their Arbitration and so all parties were satisfied and Disputes ended But there is another Translation in the Margent embraced also by some others which seems to be the best They i. e. The Citizens of this City plainly or commonly spake among themselves in the beginning to wit when Sheba and his Men first came into the City and they were informed That Ioab was pursuing him saying Surely they will ask of Abel and so make an end i. e. They will peaceably Expostulate the business with us and enquire Why we received Sheba into our City and whether we would deliver him up into their hands and would inform us of the reason of their Hostile Attempt upon us and offer to us Conditions of Peace which by Gods Law Deut. 20. 10. they were to do even to strange and much more to Israelitish Cities So she doth both modestly reprove Ioab for the neglect of his Duty and oblige him to the Performance of it 19 I am one of them that are peaceable and faithful in Israel t Or I to wit the City of Abel in whose Name and Person she speaks this am one of the peaceable and faithful Cities of Israel Whatsoever Sheba may design whom we have innocently received into our City before we well understood the matter We of this City abhor the thoughts of Warring and Rebelling against the King as having had no hand in Absalom's late Rebellion which is probable enough considering both their Scituation in the utmost Borders of the Land very remote from the Seat of that Civil War and their open Profession of their Peaceableness and Fidelity or Loyalty to the King which had been Impudent if they had been so lately Involved in the last War and Rebellion thou seekest to destroy a city and a mother u i e. A Mother City for great Cities are commonly called Mothers as lesser Towns or Villages subject to them and depending upon them for Direction and Defence are called their Daughters as Ezek. 16. 27 46. in Israel why wilt thou swallow up the inheritance of the LORD x i. e. A considerable part of that Land which God hath chosen for his peculiar Possession The Destruction which thou art about to bring upon us is an injury also to Israel and to the God of Israel 20 And Joab answered and said Far be it far be it from me that I should swallow up or destroy 21 The matter is not
at least from the Execution of his Office For some think that he was thrust from his Office before David's Death when Zadok was formerly made Priest i. e. High-priest in his stead 1 Chron. 29. 22. But that seems to be a mistake for although that passage immediately follows the History of what was done in the time of David's Life and Health when he was in a capacity of going into the Publick Congregation yet it manifestly belongs to another time and was done after it for he there speaks of Solomon's being made King the second time and he was made King but twice once undoubtedly before this 1 Chron. 23. 1. and again 1 King 1. 39. When David was Bedrid and Adonijah's Usurpation made a second Unction necessary And therefore what is said 1 Chron. 29. 22. of Zadok's being made Priest was done after Abiathar's Deposition and upon that occasion that he might * 1 Sam. 2. 31. 35. fulfil the word of the LORD n For what hinders but Solemon might intend this not onely as a Punishment for his Treason but also as a means to accomplish God's Word which he spake concerning the house of Eli o i. e. Concerning the Translation of the Priesthood from the House of Eli and of Ithamar unto that of Eleazar which being threatned 80 years ago is now Executed So Divine Vengeance though sometimes it be slow is always sure in Shiloh 28 ¶ Then tidings p Concerning Adonijah's Death and Abiathar's Deposition came to Joab for Joab had turned after Adonijah though he turned not after Absalom and Joab sled unto the Taberna cle of the LORD q Which then was at Gibeon 1 King 3. 4. compared with 2 Chron. 1. 3 5. and caught hold on the horns of the altar r Of which see before Chap. ●… 50. 29 And it was told king Solomon that Joab was fled unto the tabernacle of the LORD and behold he is by the altar then Solomon sent Benaiah the son of Jehoiada saying Go fall upon him s To wit if he will not come thence as I foresee he will not 30 And Benaiah came to the tabernacle of the LORD and said unto him Thus saith the king Come forth t That the King gave him this Command though it be not mentioned before is evident both from the nature of the thing for Solomon would not pollute the Altar without necessity and from Benaiah's Affirmation of it for why should he tell a lye without a cause and from his return to the King for new 〈◊〉 upon Ioab's Resolution not to come thence And he said Nay but I will die here u For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 either that Solomon would not defile that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Blood or that he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to it as he had done Adonijah or he had a superstitious conceit that his dying there might give his guilty and miserable Soul some advantage And Benaiah brought the king word again saying Thus said Joab and thus he answered me 31 And the king said unto him Do as he hath said x Either 1. Kill him in that place and for so doing Solomon might seem to have Warrant from God Exod. 21. 14. and might further design by this just severity to deter future Offenders by shewing that no place nor person should protect them from the stroak of Justice Or rather 2. let him Die as he is resolved kill him though he be there take him by violence from that place and then kill him for Exod. 21. 14. doth not command the Ruler to kill the Murderer there but to remove him thence to take him from the Altar that he may die And seeng this might be done why should Solomon unnecessarily stain the Altar with his Blood and fall upon him and bury him that thou mayst take away the innocent blood y i. e. Both the Guilt of it which would rest upon my Fathers and my Family if it went unpunished and the scandal and reproach of it that neither this nor following Ages may imagine that it was done by David's secret instigation or with his consent which Joab shed from me and from the house of my father 32 And the LORD shall return his blood z i. e. The guilt of the Blood which he shed upon his own head who sell upon two men more righteous and better than he a Of more ingenuous and generous Tempers abhorring from all such Treacherous Practises and both of them then devoted to and employed in my Service and slew them with the sword my father David not knowing thereof to wit * 2 Sam. 3. 27. Abner the son of Ner captain of the host of Israel and * Amasa the son of Jether 2 Sam. 20. 10. captain of the host of Judah 33 Their blood therefore shall return * 2 Sam. 3. 2●… upon the head of Joab and upon the head of his seed for ever b Either as long as he shall have a Posterity or for a long time as that Phrase is commonly used but upon David and upon his seed and upon his house and upon his throne shall there be peace for ever from the LORD c In and by this Execution of Justice upon him and such 〈◊〉 my Throne shall be Established and God will bless me and m●…ne with Peace and Prosperity 34 So Benaiah the son of Jehoiada went up and tell upon him and slew him and he was ●…uried in his own house in the wilderness d Places which have but few Houses and Inhabitants a●…e oft so called in Scripture as Isa. 42. 11. Ier. 25. ●…4 Ezek 34. 25. 35 ¶ And the king put Benaiah the son of Jehoiada in his room over the host and Zadok the priest did the king put in the room of Abiathar e He now put him in the execution of that Office to which he may seem to have been Anointed before 1 〈◊〉 29. 22. But of that see my notes here on ver 27. 36 ¶ And the king sent and called for * 〈◊〉 Shimei and said unto him Build thee an house in Jerusalem and dwell there and go not sorth thence any whither f This Solomon ordered partly for his own security that being removed from that place where his Kindred and Estate and Interest lay to a place where he was but a stranger and sufficiently odious for his former and never-to-be forgotten Insolency towards his Lord and King he might be uncapable of raising any Tumults and Seditions partly as a penalty for his former Wickedness wherein yet there was more Mercy than Justice and from which David had not promised him any security but onely given him his Life and partly That being in this Publick Theatre all his Words and Actions might be narrowly observed which considering his busie and covetous and wicked Temper was likely to give Solomon the advantage which he sought for and this very Prohibition would probably inflame his desire of
and † 〈◊〉 set a 〈◊〉 upon the land put the land to a tribute k To wit a Yearly Tribute whereby they should acknowledge him to be their Superior and for which he would be their Protector when they needed his help of an hundred talents of silver and a talent of gold 34 And Pharaoh-nechoh made Eliakim the son of Josiah l Whom he perceived to be of a more mild and peaceable disposition king in the room of Josiah his father and turned his name to * Matt. 1. 11. called Io●…im Jehoiakim m Because the giving of Names was accounted an act and sign of Dominion which therefore Parents did to their Children and Conquerors to their Vassals or Tributaries Compare Chap. 24. 17. Dan. 1. 7. and took Jehoahaz away n Partly as a Punishment for him and partly that he might give no disturbance to his Brother and he came to Egypt and died there 35 And Jehoiakim gave the silver and the gold to Pharaoh but he taxed the land to give the money according to the ‡ Heb. mouth commandment of Pharaoh he exacted the silver and the gold of the people of the land of every one according to his taxation to give it unto Pharaoh-nechoh 36 ¶ Jehoiakim was twenty and five years old when he began to reign o Either 1. When he began to Reign alone and with full Power or after Iehoahaz his Death till which the people would not disown him whom they had Anointed King which was esteemed a great tie 2 Sam. 19. 10. nor own or accept Iehojakim as their King but only as his Brothers Vice-roy though Pharaoh had by violence forced him upon them And so Iehoahaz might be his Elder Brother and the same who is called Iohanan and is first mentioned as the eldest son 1 Chron. 3. 15. though he may be placed first not in regard of his Birth but of his Dignity the Crown being first put upon his Head Or 2. When he was first set up by Pharaoh and so this was the Elder Brother though by popular Violence put by his Right See on ver 31. and he reigned eleven years in Jerusalem and his mothers name was Zebudah the daughter of Pedaiah of Rumah 37 And he did that which was evil in the sight of the LORD p By Idolatry the Oppression of his People and the Persecution of the Prophets and other good men Ier. 26. 20. Ezek. 19. 5 6 7. according to all that his fathers had done CHAP. XXIV IN * 2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his days a i. e. In Iehoiakim's Reign in the end of his third Year Dan. 1. 1. or the beginning of his Fourth Ier. 25. 1. Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon b The son of Nabopolassar who quite subdued the Assyrian first his Lord and then his Competitor and made himself Absolute Monarch of all those parts of the World came up c To wit against Iehoiakim as the Friend and Confederate of Pharaoh whose Forces he had lately Conquered Ier. 46. 2. and Jehoiakim became his servant three years then he turned and rebelled against him d By the instigation of the Egyptian who threatned him if he did not Rebel and promised him his utmost Assistance if he did 2 And the LORD sent against him bands of the Caldees and bands of the Syrians and bands of the Moabites and bands of the children of Ammon e For Nebuchadnezzar's Army was made up of several Nations who were willing to Fight under the Banner of such a Puissant and Victorious Emperor and sent them against Judah to destroy it * Chap. 〈◊〉 and 23. 〈◊〉 according to the word of the LORD which he spake ‡ Heb. by the hand o●… by his servants the prophets 3 Surely at the commandment of the LORD came this upon Judah to remove them out of his sight for * Chap. 〈◊〉 and 2●… 〈◊〉 the sins of Manasseh f Properly and directly for their own sins and occasionally for the sins of Manasseh which had never been charged upon them if they had not made them their own by their impenitency for them and repetition of them according to all that he did 4 And also for * Chap. 〈◊〉 the innocent blood g To wit of those Prophets and Saints who either reproved or would not comply with his Idolatrous Worship that he shed for he filled Jerusalem with innocent blood ‡ Heb. 〈◊〉 God 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 or ●…e ●…rable 〈◊〉 which the LORD would not pardon 5 ¶ Now the rest of the acts of Jehoiakim and all that he did are they not written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah 6 So Jehoiakim slept with his fathers and Jehoiachin h Called also Iechoniah 1 Chron. 3. 16. as Iehojakim also was by comparing this with Matt. 1. 11. and in way of contempt Choniah Ier. 22. 24. his son reigned in his stead 7 And the king of Egypt came not again any more out of his land i To wit in this Kings days nor until Zedekiah's time Ier. 37. 6 7. nor to any purpose He could not now come out to Protect the King of Iudah being scarce able to defend his own Kingdom for * Jer. 4●… ●… the king of Babylon had taken from the river of Egypt unto the river Euphrates all that pertained to the king of Egypt 8 ¶ Jehoiachin was eighteen years old when he began to reigh k Object He was then but Eight years old 2 Chron. 36. 9. Answ. 1. Both are true in his Eighth Year he began to Reign with his Father who made him King with him as divers other Kings of Israel and Iudah had done in the like times of trouble and in his Eighteenth Year he Reigned alone 2. He is called a son of eight years when he began to reign 2 Chron. 36. 9. because this was the Eighth Year not of his Age but of the Babylonish Captivity or Bondage under which both he and his Father had been just so long for it began in the Fourth Year of Iehojakim as it is affirmed Ier. 25. 1. and continued all his Reign which lasted Eleven Years Chap. 23. 36. and so the First Year of Iehojakim was precisely the Eighth Year of that Captivity And this is certain That the Years of Kings mentioned in Scripture are not always accounted from the beginning of their Age but from some other Remarkable Time or thing thus Saul when at Man's Estate is called the son of one year 1 Sam. 13. 1. of which see my notes there and Ahaziah whose Father lived onely Forty Years 2 Chron. 21. 20. is called a son of forty and two years when he began to reign 2 Chron. 22. 2. because that was the Forty and second Year of the Reign of Omri's Family as most think And therefore it cannot seem strange if the Years of this King be computed not from liis Birth but from the beginning of so great
lest the Angel in the mean time should destroy Ierusalem for the prevention whereof he thought it most proper to continue to worship God in that place which he had consecrated by his special Presence and gracious Acceptance CHAP. XXII 1 TThen David said a Partly by his Observation of this gracious and glorious Appearance of God and his Command to erect an Altar and his Acceptance of a Sacrifice offered in this place and partly by the Instinct and Direction of Gods Spirit by which as he is said to have had the pattern of the house porch altar c. 1 Chron. 28. 11 12 19. so doubtless he was also instructed as to the place where the House should be built * Deut. 12. 5. 2 Sam. 24. 18. This is the house of the LORD God b This is the place appointed by God for the building of his Temple and Altar and this is the altar of burnt-offering for Israel 2 And David commanded to gather together the strangers that were in the land of Israel c The same persons whom Solomon afterwards employed in the same Work of which see 1 King 5. 15. compared with 1 King 9. 20 21. and he set masons to hew wrought stones d Wherein he could not do much being prevented by death but Solomon carried on and perfected what David had begun to build the house of God 3 And David prepared iron in abundance for the nails for the doors of the gates and for the joynings e To be used together with melted Lead for the joyning of th●…se great and square Stones together and brass in abundance without weight 4 Also cedar-trees in abundance for the Zidonians and they of Tyre brought much cedar-wood to David 5 And David said f Within himself or in his own thoughts * Ca. 2●… 1. Solomon my son is young and tender g And therefore through youthful Vanity and Folly and Unsettledness may not use that Care and Consideration and Diligence in making such Provisions as this great Work requires Of Solomons ●…ge see 1 King 3. 7. and the house that is to be built for the LORD must be exceeding magnifical of fame and of glory throughout all countries I will therefore now make preparation for it So David prepared abundantly before his death 6 Then he called for Solomon his son and charged him to build an house for the LORD God of Israel 7 And David said to Solomon My son as for me * ●… Sam. 〈◊〉 it was in my mind to build an house * 〈◊〉 12●… ●… 11. unto the name of the LORD my God 8 But the word of the LORD came to me saying * Ch 〈◊〉 1 King 5. ●… Thou hast shed blood abundantly and hast made great wars thou shalt not build an house unto my name because thou hast shed much blood upon the earth h Not that Wars either now are or then were simply Unlawful or that David sinned in shedding the Blood of War for it is manifest that Davids Wars were undertaken by Gods Command or with his Leave and were attended with his Blessing but partly because Davids Military Employments did for a good while fill his Head and Hands and gave him no leisure for Temple Work and principally for mystical Sgnification to teach us that the Church whereof the Temple was a manifest and illustrious Type should be built by Christ the Prince of Peace Isa. 9. 6. and that it should be gathered and built up not by might or power or by force of Arms but by Gods Spirit Zech. 4. 6. and by the preaching of the Gospel of Peace in my sight i Which I have taken particular notice of And this expression may possibly be added in reference to Uriah and the rest of the Israelites who were slain at the Siege of Rabbah by Davids contrivance which peradventure David had in his Eye Psal. 51. 4. where David confessing this Sin useth this very Expression I have done this evil in thy sight 9 Behold a son shall be born to thee who shall be a man of rest and I will give him rest from all his enemies round about for his name shall be ‖ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Solomon and I will give peace and quietness unto Israel in his days 10 * 2 Sam. 〈◊〉 1 Ki●… ●… ●… Ch. 1●… 〈◊〉 He shall build an house for my name and he shall be my son and I will be his father and I will establish the throne of his kingdom over Israel for ever k Of this see my Notes on 2 Sam. 7. 13. 11 Now my son the LORD be with thee and prosper thou l Go on prosperously in carrying on this Work Or the Lord give thee that Rest and Prosperity which is necessary for it and build the house of the LORD thy God as he hath said of thee 12 Onely the LORD give thee wisdom and understanding and give thee charge concerning Israel m i. e Give thee Instructions or Direction rightly to manage and rule his People Israel Or and set thee over Israel as the Syriack renders it whom the Arabick follows Or when as the Hebrew va●… is oft used he shall set thee over Israel i. e. when thou shalt be King for then Solomon would need this Wisdom for which therefore he prayeth 1 King 3. 9. that thou mayest keep the Law of the LORD thy God 13 Then shalt thou prosper if thou takest heed to fulfill the statutes and judgments which the LORD charged Moses with concerning Israel Be strong and of good courage dread not nor be dismayed 14 Now behold ‖ Or i●… my po●… in my trouble n This he alledgeth as a Reason why he could do no more because of the many Troubles and Wars both Foraign and Civil whereby much of his Treasures was exhausted I have prepared for the house of the LORD an hundred thousand talents of gold o A Talent of Gold in the first constitution was 3000 Shekels as may be gathered from Exod. 38. 24 25 26. and so this amounts to a very vast Sum yet not Impossible for David to get considering how many and great Conquests he made and what vast Spoils and Presents he got and that he endeavoured by all just and honourable ways to get as much as he could not out of Covetousness or for his own Ends 〈◊〉 meerly out of Zeal for Gods House And whereas some object that this quantity of Gold and Silver was sufficient though the whole Fabrick of the Temple had consisted of Massy Gold and Silver it is to be considered that all this Treasure was not spent upon the Materials of the Temple but a very great part of it upon the Workmen which were nigh 200000 whereof a great number were Officers which being employed for so long time together would exhaust a considerable part of it and what was not employed in the building of the Temple was laid up in the
sowed together not upon my other garments but next to my skin as was done in great Calamities as 2 Kings 6. 30. So far am I from stretching out my hands against God whereof I am accused Chap. 15. 25. that I have humbled my self deeply un●…er his hand and defiled my horn in the dust q I have willingly parted with all my Wealth and Power and Glory as the horn oft signifies in Scripture as Ps●…lm 75 5. 132. 17 Luke 1. 69. and been contented to lie in the dust and to endure the contempt which God hath brought upon me 16 My face is foul with weeping and on my eye-lids is the shadow of death r i. e. A gross and terrible darkness My sight is very dim and dark as is usual in case of fore Diseases or excessive grief and weeping Lam●…nt 2 11. and especially in the approach of death Compare Psalm 6. 7. 38. 10. Lament 5. 17. 17. Not for any injustice in mine hands s And all this is not come upon me for any injurious dealing with others by oppression or deceit or bribery wherewith I am implicitely charged Chap. 15 16 20 34. but for other reasons known to God onely for I cannot discover them also my prayer is pure t I do not cast off God's fear and service as I am accused to do Ch●…p 15. 4. I do still pray and worship God and my Prayer is accompanied with a sincere Heart and ●…defiled Conscience See Psalm 109 7. Prov. 28. 9. 1 Tim. 2. 8. So that I have lived in●…ffensively towards God and towards men And therefore your Assertion is both uncharitable and false that eminent Afflictions are peculiar to ungodly men 18. O earth cover not thou my bloud u So called not actively to wit his own blood but passively or ob●…ctively i. e the blood of others shed by him and lying upon his Conscience The Earth is said to cover that blood which lies undiscovered and unrevenged Of which see on Gen. 4. 10 11. Isa. 26 21. But saith Iob. if I be guilty of destroying any one man by Murder or Oppression as I am traduced O Lord let the Earth disclose it let it be brought to light that I may suffer condign punishment for it and let my cry x Either 1. passively to wit the cries and groans which I have forced from others by my Oppressions Let those Cries have no place to hide them Or rather 2. actively the Cry of my Complaints to men or Prayers to God let them find no place in the Ears or Hearts of God or men if this be true Or no place i. e. no regard or no power or success in which sense God's Word is said not to have place in evil men Iohn 8. 37. And Esa●… not to find place of repentance Heb. 12. 17. i. e. All his Intreaties and Tears could not prevail with his Father to repent of and retract the Blessing given from him to Iacob have no place 19. Also now behold my Witness is in Heaven y Besides the Witness of Men and of my own Conscience God is Witness of my Integrity and my Record † Heb. in the high places is on high 20. My Friends z Who should defend me from the Scorns and Injuries of others † scorn me a So this word is used Psal. 119. 51. Prov. 3. 34. 19. 28. but mine Eye Heb. are my ●…orners poureth out tears unto God b I pour forth my Prayers and Tears to God that he would judge me according to my Innocency and plead my righteous cause against you 21. * Ch. 31. 35. Eccl. 6. 10. Isa. 45. 9. Rom. 9. 20. O that one might plead for a man * with God c O that either I or some faithful Advocate might be admitted to plead my Cause either with God or rather with you before God's Tribunal God being Witness and Judge between us But this Verse is and that very agreeably to the Hebrew Text otherwise translated and Interpreted either 1. With respect to Christ And he i. e. God last mentioned to wit God the Son Christ Jesus will plead for a man i. e. for me against whom you plead He modestly speaketh of himself in the third Person as is usual with God to wit with God the Father and the Son of man as Christ is oft called will plead for his Friend or Companion or Neighbour i. e. For a man whom he hath taken into that Relation to himself It is plain that the mystery of Mans Redemption by Christ was known to the ancient Patriarchs as hath been oft noted before and to Iob among others Ch. 19. 25. Or 2. as the matter for which he prayed and cried to God That so the Hebrew Vau is frequently used he i. e. God would plead or judge or give sentence for a man i. e. for me or in my cause with God i. e. with himself the Noun being put for the Pronoun as Gen. 2. 20. 4. 15. Lev. 14. 15 16. and elsewhere or at his own Tribunal to which I have appealed as a man pleadeth for his Friend or Neighbour with or before an earthly Judge and Tribunal This seems most agreeable to the scope of the place which was to maintain his own Integrity against his Friends before God as a man pleadeth for his ‖ Or friend Neighbour 22. When † Heb. years of number a few years are come then I shall go the way whence I shall not return d i. e. To the state and place of the dead whence men do not and cannot return to this Life The meaning is my death hastens and therefore I earnestly desire that the cause depending before God between me and my Friends may be searched out and determined that if I be guilty of these things whereof they accuse me I may bear the shame and blame of it before all men and if I be innocent that I may live to see my own Integrity and the credit of Religion which suffers upon this occasion vindicated that so I may die in peace with God and may leave the favour of a good name behind me CHAP. XVII 1. MY ‖ Breath is corrupt a i. e. It stinks as it doth in dying persons Or my Spirit is corrupted or spent or lost i. e. My vital Spirits and natural Powers are wasted my Soul is ready to leave the Body my days are extinct b The lamp of my Life is wasted and upon the point of going out and that in a Snuff Or my Spirit is spent the Graves c i. e. The Grave the plural number being put for the singular as Sepulchres 2 Chron. 21. 20. Cities Judg. 12. 7. Asses Zech. 9. 9. are put for one of each of these are ready for me d Open their mouths as ready to receive me The sense and scope of this Verse is the same with the former 2. Are there not Mockers with
or Error and in their Effect as guiding and directing men in the right and ready way to eternal Happiness Which also reflects upon that knowledge of Divine things which men have by the light of Nature and works of God or by the Doctrines of the Philosophers or others that wanted or neglected the light of God's word wherein there is a great deal of darkness and uncertainty and Error and Danger rejoycing the heart m Partly by that clear and certain knowledge of Divine things which it gives for knowledge is pleasant to the Soul Prov. 2. 10. and partly by the discoveries of God's Love and Grace to sinful men in Offers and Promises of Mercy therein contained the commandement of the LORD n i. e. All his Commands is * Psal. 119. 140. pure o Without the least mixture of Error or injustice or Deceit Which cannot be said of humane Laws enlightning the eyes p To wit of the Mind with an evident and compleat manifestation of God's Will and Man's Duty both which the works of Nature and all the Writings of men discover but darkly and imperfectly 9. The fear of the LORD q By which he understands not the Grace of God's fear as this Phrase is commonly taken nor the whole Worship of God as it is taken Psal. 34. 9. 11. Mat. 1●… 9. but the Law and Word of God which is the only thing that is h●…re commended and which is meant by all the other parallel Titles of his Testimony and Statutes and Commandements and Iudgments and consequently by this of his ●…ear which is as it were hemmed in within them And this may well be so called by an usual Metonymy because it is both the Object and the Rule and the Cause of this Grace of holy Fear as God himself is called Fear for the like reason Gen. 31. 53. and in the Hebrew Psal. 76. 11. is clean r i. e. Sincere not adulterated with any mixture of Vanity or Falshood or Vice not requiring no●… allowing any uncleanness or wickedness as the Religion of the Gentiles did enduring for ever s Constant and unchangeable the same for Substance in all the Ages of the Church and the World Which is most true both of the moral Law and of the Doctrine of God's Grace and Mercy to sinful and miserable man which two are the Principal part●… of that Law of which he here speaks as is Evident from the whole Context For as the difference between the Old and the New Testament that lyes only in Circumstantial and Ceremonial or Ritual things which are not here intended and that Alteration also was foretol●… in the Old Testament and consequently the accomplishment of it did not destroy but confirm the certainty and constancy of God's word This also is opposed to humane Laws wherein there are and ought to be manifold Changes according to the difference of Times and People and Circumstances the judgments of the LORD t i. e. God's Laws frequently called his Iudgments because they are the Declarations of his righteous Will and as it were his legal o●… judicial Sentence by which he expects that men should govern themselves and by which he will judge them at the last day are † Heb. truste true and righteous altogether u. 10. More to ●…e desired are they than gold * Psal. 1●…9 12. 127 Prov. 8. 11. 19. yea than much fine gold x Than Gold of the best quality and in the greatest quantity * Psal. 119. 103. sweeter also than honey y Which was most sweet in those Eastern Countries and † Heb. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 the honey comb z Than that Honey which the Bees have most diligently wrought in their Combs and which freely flows from them which is sweeter than the rest 11. Moreover by them is thy servant a I thy servant though a King and a Prophet and of some Repute for Wisdom and Knowledge yet I am daily taught by them Or 〈◊〉 as Dan. 12. 3. or clearly admonished as this word signifies 〈◊〉 18. 20. 2 Kings 6. 10. Eccles. 4. 13. 〈◊〉 3. 17 c. and 33. 3. 9. It is a faithful and excellent Monitor to shew me my Duty in all Conditions and to preserve me from falling into sin and danger and Mischief warned and in keeping of them b To those that make it their great Design and care to conform their whole Lives to them For he speaks not of a Legal and perfect keeping of them which no man attaineth to in this Life 〈◊〉 7. 20. G●…l 3. 10 11 12. 1 Ioh. 1. 8. but of doing it in an Evangel●…al Sence with the allowances which God through Christ makes for Humane infirmities there is great reward c In this Life and especially in the next 12. * Psal. 40. 12. Who can understand d This may be here added Either 1. As a further Proof of the Excellency and necessity of God's Law because mens Errors are so many and hard to be discovered and prevented that they indispensably need such a Friend and Counsellor as the Law is to give them the true knowledge of themselves and of their sins Or 2. As a just and sorrowful Censure of himself upon the Consideration of the exact Purity of God's Law and the Comparing of his Life with it Thy Law O Lord is Holy and just and Good But I am a poor sinful Wre●…ch falling infinitely short of it and Condemned by it Or 3. As a signification of the insufficiency of God's Law strictly so called for the healing and saving of mens Souls and of the necessity of further supplies of the Gospel and grace of God whereby the eyes of their Minds may be enlightned to see that light which shines in God's Law and their Hearts may be renewed to yield universal Obedience to it for which therefore he prays in the following words And withal he implies that he did not expect that reward which he last mentioned as a just Recompence to his Obedience which he confesseth to need a Pardon more than to deserve a reward but only as an effect of God's grace and goodness his Errors e Either 1. His sins of ignorance of which this word is used Levit. 4. 2 22 27. 〈◊〉 5. 6. Or rather 2. His sins in general ●…●…ich afterwards he divides into secret and presumptuous sins Or all deviations from God's Law which are thus called 1 Sa●… 26. 21. Psal. 119. 67 118. Heb. 9. 7. Iam. 5. 20. The Sence is I cannot comprehend the numbers or the several kinds or all the Hainous Aggravations of my sins cleanse thou me f Both by justification or the Pardon of my sins through the Blood of thy Son which is to be shed for me and by Sanctification through thy holy Spirit co-working in and with thy Word to the further Renovation of my Heart and Life For these are the two ways of c●…eansing Sinners
and that sometimes he speaks in both these Capacities in the same Psalm as hath been noted before And this seems to be the Condition of this Psalm wherein there are some Passages which cannot belong to Christ as v. 13. and some which do not properly belong to David or to that time and state of the Church but onely to Christ and to the Times of the New Testament as v. 6 7. To the chief musician A Psalm of David 1. I † 〈◊〉 in wait 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 waited patiently a Heb. I●… waiting I waited which doubling of the Word notes that he waited diligently and earnestly patiently and perseveringly until God should please to help him for the LORD and he inclined b Or ●…wed to wit himself as this very Word is rendred Iudg. 16. 30. or his Ear as it is more fully expressed Psal. 17. 6. and 31. 2. Such Ellipses or Defects are frequent in Scripture as Psal. 3. 6. and 10. 1. E●…les 6. 3. and 7. 15. unto me and heard my cry 2. He brought me up also out of † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pit of 〈◊〉 an horrible pit c Or out of a sounding Pit so called Either from the Clamours of Men or Beasts falling into it Or from the many Waters which fall down into it not without a great Noise I was not onely upon the brink but in the very bottom of the Pit i. e. In desperate Dangers and Calamities as this Phrase signifies Psal. 18. 16. and 69. 1 2. * 〈◊〉 69. 1. 2. out of the miery clay d In which my feet stuck fast and set my seet upon a rock e A place of strength and safety and established my goings f Or my steps i. e. Kept me from stumbling or falling into Mischief 3. And he hath put a new song in my Mouth g Partly by giving me new Matter or Occasion for a Song and Partly by inspiring me with the very Words of it even praise unto our God many shall see it h i. e. Shall observe Gods wonderful Mercies vouchsafed to me and fear i i. e. Shall stand in awe of that God whom by this instance they see to have so great Power either to save or to destroy and Tremble at his Judgments and give him that Reverence and Worship and Obedience which he requires and shall trust in the LORD k Yet their Fear shall not drive them from God or bring them into Despair but shall draw them to God and be attended with trusting in God 4. Blessed is that man that maketh the LORD his trust l i. e. His onely Trust or Refuge as appears from the following Words I said many shall trust in the Lord and they shall not be loosers by it nor disappointed of their Hope but they are and shall be Blessed and respecteth not m Heb. Looketh not towards to wit with Love and Delight and desire to imitate them Or with Confidence and Expectation of Relief from thence as this Phrase is o●…t used as Psal. 25. 15. and 69. 3. and 121. 1. and 141. 8. and as the Opposition of this Clause to the foregoing seems to imply the proud n Or the mighty i. e. The great and Proud Potentates of the World to whom most men are apt to look and trust and in whom the Psalmist forbids us to put ou●… Trust Psal. 146. 3. nor such as turn aside o To wit from God in whom alone they ought to trust to lyes p i. e. To lying Vanities such as World ly Power and Wisdom and Riches and all other Earthly things or Persons in which men are prone to Trust Which are called ●…yes here and Psal. 4. 2. and 62. 9. Mich. 1. 14. and elsewhere because they promise more than they can perform See also Psal. 7. 14. and 119. 118. Hos. 10. 13. and 12. 1. 5. * 〈◊〉 9. 〈◊〉 10. Psa. 71. Many O LORD my God are thy wonderful works q For which I and the rest of thy People included in the Pronoun plural us have abundant cause to Praise thee and to trust in thee as was said v. 3. And by which it will appear that he that trusteth in thee is in a most Blessed and safe Condition as he said v 4. And this Verse wherein he passeth from the singular Number to the plural may seem to be interposed as a Wall of Partition between that which David speaks in his own Person and that which he speaks in the Person of the Messias in the following Verses which thou hast done and * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 92. 5. 〈◊〉 ●…39 17. 〈◊〉 thy thoughts r i. e. Thy gracious Counsels or Contrivances which are to us-ward s i. e. To me and to the rest of thy People with whom David oft joyns himself in this Book But these Words may be and are by some joyned to the following Words and the place thus rendred It is not with us or in our Power i. e. It passeth our skill and reach to order or to reckon them up in Order unto thee because indeed they are innumerable and therefore cannot be digested into any order ‖ 〈◊〉 none can 〈◊〉 them unto 〈◊〉 they cannot be reckoned up in order unto thee if I would declare and speak of them t So the Particle if or when is wanting and to be supplied here as it is Psal. 39. 11. and in many other places Heb. Yet I will declare and speak to wit some part of them which accordingly he doth in the following Verses they are more than can be numbred u Although I am not able to express or Reckon them all 6. * Psal. 50. 8. 51. 16. Isa. 1. 11. 66 3. Hos. 6. 6. Mat. 12. 7. Heb. 10. 5. Sacrifice and offering thou didst not desire x These and the following Words may in an improper Sence belong to the Person and time of David when God might be said not to Desire or Require Legal Sacrifices Comparatively as negative Expressions are frequently understood as Mat. 9. 13. 1 Cor. 1. 17. and in this very Case of Sacrifices as Psal. 51. 16. Ier. 7. 22 23. H●…se 6. 6. So the Sence is thou didst desire Obedience more or rather than Sacrifices as was said 1 Sam. 15. 22. But in a Proper and Literal and full Sence they belong onely to the Person and times of the Messias in whose Name David uttereth these Words And so the Sence of the place is God did not desire or require them for the Satisfaction of his own Justice and the Expiation of Mens sins which could not possibly be done by the Blood of Bulls or Goats as is said Heb. 10. 4 5 6. But onely by the Blood of Christ which was Typified by them and which Christ came into the World to shed in pursuance of his Fathers Will as it here follows v. 7 8. So here is a Prediction concerning the Cessation and Abolition
by the influences of his Government upon his People under him But this Phrase doth much better agree to Christ who was yet to come and who did come down from Heaven and brought or sent down from Heaven his Doctrine which is oft Compared to Rain and the sweet and powerful influences of his Spirit like rain upon the mown grass o Which it both refresheth and improveth or causeth to grow and flourish and therefore was very acceptable especially in Canaan where Rain was more scarce and more necessary than in many other places because of the scorching Heat and the natural dryness of the Soyl and the want of Rivers to overflow or water the Land as showers that water the earth 7 In his days shall the righteous flourish p As the wicked shall be discountenanced and punished so good men shall be encouraged and advanced and multiplyed and abundance of peace † Heb. till there be no Moon so long as the moon endureth q i. e. As long as time and the World shall last Which neither was nor could be true of Solomon who lived not long and the Peace of whose Kingdom was sadly disturbed and in a manner wholly lost presently after his Death but was undoubtedly and Eminently accomplished in Christ who brought Peace upon Earth Luk. 2. 14. and left it as his Legacy to his Disciples Ioh. 14. 27. 8 He shall have dominion also from sea to sea r Either 1. From the Dead Sea or the Lake of Sodom or from the Red Sea to the Midland Sea For so far did Solomon's Dominion extend but so did David's also and therefore in that Respect Solomon hath not that Pre-eminence which this Promise plainly seems to give him above his Predecessours Or 2. More generally from one Sea to another or in all the parts of the habitable World So it was truly and fully accomplished in Christ and in him onely and from the river s To wit Enphrates which was the Eastern border of the Kingdom of Canaan allotted by God Exod. 23. 31. Numb ●…4 3. but enjoyed onely by David and Solomon and afterwards by Christ. Of whose Kingdom this may be here mentioned as one of the Borders Partly because the Kingdom of Christ is here described under the Type and shadow of Solomon's Kingdom whose bound this was and Partly because though Christ's Kingdom did for a time extend it self beyond Euphrates yet the chief part and almost the whole Body of it both did and doth lye on this side of it and things do generally receive their Denomination from the greatest part unto the ends of the earth t Either 1. Of the Land of Canaan Or 2. Of the World 9 They that dwell in the wilderness u In solitary places Even rude and barbarous People who lived without Order and Government among themselves Of which sort great numbers submitted to Christ and received the Gospel shall bow before him and his enemies shall lick the dust x i. e. Shall prostrate themselves to the ground in token of Reverence and Subjection as the Custome of the Eastern People was See Isa. 49. 23. Mich. 7. 17. 10 * 〈◊〉 45. 12. 〈◊〉 29. The kings of Tarshish and of the isles y Or of the Sea as Tarshish is understood 1 Kings 22. 48. Psal. 48. 7. and Or that is for that Conjunction is oft used Exegetically of the Isles i. e. Of remote Countries to which they used to go from Canaan by Sea all which are frequently called Isles in Scripture as hath been noted before The Kings that Rule by Sea where Solomon had no great Power or by Land shall bring presents the kings of Sheba and Seba z Two Arabia●… Countries unless the one be Arabia and the other Ethiopia beyond Egypt shall offer gifts 11 Yea all kings shall fall down before him all nations shall serve him a Which cannot be said of Solomon with any Truth or Colour but was unquestionably verified in Christ of whom therefore this must be understood For what is said 1 Kings 4. 21. that Solomon Reigned over all Kingdoms is there limit●…ed to them that Reigned from the River unto Egypt Whereas the Expressions here are unlimitted and universal 12 For he * 〈◊〉 ●…9 12. shall deliver the needy when he cryeth the poor also and him that hath no helper b The Fame of his just and merciful Government shall induce multitudes Either to put themselves under him or to shew great Respect and Reverence to him 13 He shall spare the poor and needy and shall save the souls c Properly so called this being Christ's proper Work to save Souls Or the Lives which Oppressours shall indeavour to take away of the needy 14 He shall redeem their soul from deceit and violence d The two ways whereby the Souls or Lives of Men are usually destroyed and * Psal. 116. 15. precious shall their blood be in his sight e He will not be Prodigal of the Lives of his Subjects casting them away meerly to gratifie his own Revenge or Covetousness or in●…atiable Desire of enlarging his Empire as earthly Kings commonly do but like a true Father of his People will tenderly preserve them and severely avenge their Blood upon those who shall shed it 15 And he shall live f To wit long and Prosperously as Solomon did yea Eternally as Christ did Other Kings must lose both their Lives and Kingdoms but this King whom Solomon typified shall Live for ever and his Kingdom shall have no end and to him † Heb. one shall 〈◊〉 ●… shall be given of the gold of Sheba g As a Present or Tribute This was done to Solomon 1 Kings 10. 15. and to Christ Mat. 2. 11. and afterwards as need required Although such Expressions as these being used of Christ and his Kingdom are commonly understood in a spiritual Sence prayer also shall be made for him continually and daily shall he be praised h His Subjects shall be obliged and excited by his righteous and happy Government to pray heartily and frequently for him Either 1. For Solomon Or 2. For Christ not so much for his Person which needed not their Prayers as for the Protection and Propagation of his Kingdom and Gospel and Interest in the World 16 There shall be an handful of corn i Which intimates the small beginnings of this Kingdom●… and therefore doth not agree to S●… whose Kingdom was in a manner as large at the beginning of his Reign as at the End but it exactly agrees to Christ and hi●… Kingdom 〈◊〉 13. 31 32. in the earth k Sown in the Earth upon the top of the mountains l In the most Barr●…n grounds and therefore this was an Evidence of extraordinary and prodigious Fertility the fruit thereof shall shake like Lebanon m It shall ●…ield such abundance of Corn that the Ears being thick and high
Lord awaked as one out of sleep m For God by giving up not onely his people but his Ark to the contempt and insolency of the Philistins might seem to be asleep and insensible of his own honour and interest till by a sudden and unexpected blow he convinced his enemies of the contrary and like a mighty man that shouteth by reason of wine m Whose spirit and courage is revived and inflamed by a liberal draught of generous wine Which comparison is no more injurious to the Divine Majesty than that of a thiefs coming in the night to which Christ's second coming is compared 1 Thess. 5. 2. 66 And * 1 Sam. 5. 6. and 6. 4. he smote his enemies in the hinder parts n With the Disease of the Emerods which was both painful and shameful he put them to a perpetual reproach o He caused them to perpetuate their own reproach by sending back the Ark of God with their golden Emerods the lasting monuments of their shame 67 Moreover p And as he smot●… his enemies for their sins so he punished his own people for the same cause he refused the tabernacle of Joseph q Either 1. He rejected the Kingdom of the ten tribes whereof Ephraim was the Head But this Psalm reacheth not so far as the erection of that Kingdom Or rather 2. He would not have his Ark to abide longer in the Tabernacle of Shiloh which was in the Tribe of Ioseph or Ephraim See 1 Sam. 6. 12. and 7. 1 2. Ier. 7. 12 14 and 26. 6 9. and chose not the tribe of Ephraim r The same thing repeated in other words after the manner 68 But chose the tribe of Judah s Either 1. For the seat of the Kingdom Or rather 2. For the seat of the Ark and of God's Worship Obj. Ierusalem was in the Tribe of Benjamin Jos. 18 27 Ans. 1. It was so in part and part of it was in Iudah as appears from Ios. 15. 63. To which Tribe Zion belonged by special reason because David the Head of that Tribe conquered and took it 2. Benjamin after the division of the two Kingdoms was incorporated with Iudah and is oft comprehended under the name of Iudah the mount Zion which he loved 69 And he built his sanctuary t The Temple by Solomon like high palaces u Magnificently and gloriously like the earth which he hath † Heb. ●…ounded established for ever x Not now to be removed from place to place as the Tabernacle was but as a fixed place for the Arks perpetual residence unless the people by their Apostacy should cause its removal 70 * ●… Sam. 16. 11. ●… Sam. 7. 8. He chose David also his servant and took him from the sheep-fold 71 † Seb. from af●… From following the ewes great with young y By which employment he was inured to that care and diligence and self-denial which is necessary in a King or Governor and instructed to rule his people with all gentleness and tenderness he brought him * ●… Sam. 5. 2 1 Chr. 11. 2. to feed Jacob his people and Israel his inheritance 72 So he fed them according to the integrity of his heart and guided them by the skilfulness of his hands z He commends David for the now necessary ingredients of a good Prince 1. Integrity whereby he sincerely sought the good and welfare of his people avoiding and abhorring or those counsels and courses which were contrary thereunto 2. Skillfulness whereby he managed all the publick affairs with singular prudence which is here ascribed to his hands not because it was seated in them but because it was acted and discovered by them and appeared in all his actions or administrations PSAL. LXXIX The ARGUMENT This Psalm was doubtless composed upon the sad occasion of the destruction of Judaea and Jerusalem either by Antiochus or rather by the Chaldaeans as may be gathered from 1 Macc. 7. 16 7. where in the relation of the persecution of Antiochus the second and third Verses of this Psalm are cited A Psalm ‖ Or ●…or Asaph of Asaph 1 O God the heathen are come a As Invaders and Conquerors unto thine inheritance b Into Canaan and Iudaea which thou didst chuse for thine inheritance * ●…al 74. 5. thy holy temple have they defiled c By entring into it and touching and carrying away its holy Vessels and shedding blood in it and burning of it they have laid Jerusalem on heaps d Made of the ruines of those goodly houses which they burned or threw down 2 The dead bodies of thy servants e Either 1. Of thy faithful and holy servants whom they used as cruelly as the worst of the people Or 2. Of the Jews whom though the generality of them were very wicked he calleth God's Servants and Saints because they were all such by profession and some of them were really such and the Chaldaeans did never know nor regard those that were so but promiscuously destroyed all that came in their way have they given to be meat unto the fowls of heaven f By casting them out like dung upon the face of the earth and not suffering any to bury them the flesh of thy saints unto the beasts of the earth 3 Their blood they shed like water g Plentifully and contemptuously valuing it no more than common water round about Jerusalem * Psal. 141. 7. Jer. 14. 16. and 16. 4. and there was none to bury them h Because their friends who should have done it were either slain or fled or were not permitted or durst not undertake to perform that Office to them 4 * Psal. 44. 13. We are become a reproach to our neighbours a scorn and derision to them that are round about us i We who were their terrour and scourge are now neither feared nor pityed but become the matter of their scoffs and reproaches See Psal. 80. 6. and 137. 7. Ezek. 35 2 12 c. 5 * Psal. 89. 46. How long LORD wilt thou be angry for ever shall thy jealousie burn like fire 6 * Jer. 1●… 25. Pour out thy wrath upon the heathen k Though we confess that we have deserved thy wrath yet the Heathen by whom thou hast scourged us deserve it much more as being guilty of far greater impieties than we living in gross ignorance and contempt of God and of his worship And therefore we pray transfer thy wrath from us to them that have not known thee and upon the kingdoms that have not called upon thy name k Though we confess that we have deserved thy wrath yet the Heathen by whom thou hast scourged us deserve it much more as being guilty of far greater impieties than we living in gross ignorance and contempt of God and of his worship And therefore we pray transfer thy wrath from us to them
7 For they have devoured Jacob l The posterity of Iacob whom thou didst love and with whom and his Seed thou madest a sure and everlasting Covenant whereby thou didst ingage thy self to be an enemy to their enemies Exod. 23. 22. Besides thou ha●…est cruelty especially when the wicked devour those who are more righteous than themselves Habak 1. 13. and laid waste his dwelling place 8 * Isa. 64. 9 O remember not against us ‖ Or the iniquities of them that were before us former iniquities m The sins committed by our Forefathers and by us who have filled up the measure of their sins for which we confess thou hast most righteously brought this desolating judgment upon us let thy tender mercies n Upon which all our confidence is fixed for merit and righteousness we have none See Dan. 9 7 9. speedily prevent us o Prevent our utter extirpation which we have deserved and have great reason to expect for we are brought very low p Past the hopes of all humane help and therefore the glory or our deliverance will be wholly thine 9 Help us O God of our salvation q From whom we have oft received and from whom alone we now expect salvation for the glory of thy name r Which is now obscured by the insolency and blasphemy of thine enemies who ascribe this Conquest to their Idols and triumph over thee no less than over thy people as one unable to deliver them out of their hands See Dan. 3. 15. and deliver us and † Heb. attone or expiate purge away our sins for thy names sake 10 * Psal. 42. 10. and 115. 2. Wherefore should the heathen say Where is their God! s He whom they served and of whom they boasted He is lost and gone or grown impotent or idle Let him be known among the heathen t By the expectation of his judgments upon them according to Psal. 9. 16. in our sight u That we may live to see it and praise thy name for it by the † Heb. vengeance revenging of the blood of thy servants which is shed 11 Let * the sighing of the prisoner u Of thy poor people now in prison or at least in captivity come Psal. 102. 20. before thee according to the greatness of † Heb. thine arm thy power † Heb. reserve the children of death preserve thou those that are appointed to die x Heb. the children of death i. e. Which were either designed to death or in manifest danger of it as being wholly in the power of their cruel and barbarous enemies 12 And render unto our neighbours sevenfold into their bosom y i. e. Either 1. Abundantly as this Phrase notes Isa. 65. 6 7. Ier. 32. 18. Luke 6. 38. Or 2. Sensibly so as it may come home to them and fall heavily upon them in their own persons there reproach wherewith they have reproached thee z As impotent or unfaithful or unmerciful to his own people So they intimate that this dedesire did not proceed from a revengeful mind but from a due sence of God's favour O Lord. 13 * Psal. 9●… 7. So we thy people and sheep of thy pasture will give thee thanks for ever we will shew forth thy praise † Heb. to generation and generation to all generations PSAL. LXXX The ARGUMENT This Psalm was Composed either 1. Upon the same ocasion with the former to wit the destruction of Jerusalem by the Chaldaeans as most conceive Which yet seems not probable because here is no mention of the Temple nor of Jerusalem as there is in the foregoing Psalm nor of the Tribe of Judah which was most concerned in that desolation but of Joseph Verse 1. and of the Tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh which were carried captive long before that time nor do the expressions of this Psalm import such a desolating judgment as those of the former do Or 2. Upon occasion of the captivity of the ten Tribes as some others think But why then is Benjamin named which is none of that number nor went into captivity with them but was joyned with Judah Or 3. Upon occasion of some other calamity or calamities which befel the Tribes of Israel after their division into two Kingdoms and before the captivity and destruction of either of them In which time all ●…he evils mentioned in this Psalm did befal them sometimes in one Tribe or part and sometimes in another as is manifest from their History To the chief musician upon Shoshannim-Eduth a It seems to be the name of a Musical Instrument though many separate the latter part of the word from the former and expound Eduth a testimony or witness between God and his people of his relation to them and of their dependence upon him a Psalm ‖ Or for Asaph of Asaph 1 GIve ear O shepherd of Israel b Thou who hast undertaken to seed and govern thy people of Israel as a shepherd doth his flock now perform thine Office and rescue thy ●…ock from those grievous Wolves which devour and destroy them thou that leadest c Or didst lead formerly though now thou hast forsaken them Ioseph d i. e. The Children of Ioseph or of Israel as he now said this Clause being but a repetition of the former in other words Compare Psal. 77. 15. And the name of Ioseph the most eminent of the Patriarchs both for his dignity and piety and the right of primogeniture transferred upon him from Reuben 1 Chron. 5. 1. is elsewhere put for all the ten Tribes as Ezek. 37. 16 19. Amos 5. 6 15. and 6. 6. Zech. 10. 6. And for all the Tribes as Psal. 81. 5. Obad. v. 18. like a flock thou that dwellest between the cherubims e Which were the Mercy-seat above the Ark. By which title he prudently and piously minds the ten Tribes of their revolt from God and of the vanity of their superstitious Addresses to their Calves at Da●… and Bethel and of the necessity of their returning to the true worship of God before the Ark at Ierusalem if they desired or expected any relief from him And by this title it seems more than probable that this Psalm was not made upon occasion of the Babylonish Captivity in and after which time there was no Ark nor Cherubims nor do I remember that David or any Prophets did then apply themselves to God by that Title See Dan. 9. shine forth f Out of the clouds wherein thou seemest to hide thy self Shew forth thy power and goodness to and for thy poor oppressed people in the face of thine and their Enemies 2 Before Ephraim and Benjamin and Manasseh g i. e. Before all the Tribes of Israel for whom he mentions onely these three Tribes either 1. Because of their special relation to Ioseph here named Vers. 1. Ephraim and Manasseh being his Sons and
unrighteous decrees which they have made in form of Laws Or by false pretences of law Or against law against all right and the laws both of God and men 21 They gather themselves together against the soul f Against the life as the soul commonly signifies and as the next clause explains it They are not satisfied with the spoil of their estates but do also thirst after their lives of the righteous and condemn the innocent blood g They shed the blood of those innocent persons whom they have wickedly condemned Innocent blood is here put for the blood or life of an innocent person as it is also 1 Sam. 19. 5. Mat. 27. 4. 22 But the LORD is my defence and my God is the rock of my refuge 23 And * Psal 7. 16. he shall bring upon them their own iniquity h i. e. The fruit and punishment of their sins and shall cut them off in their own wickedness i Either in the midst of their sins Or by their own wicked devices the mischief whereof he will cause to fall upon their own heads yea the LORD our God k The God of Iacob of whom they said that he did not see nor regard them but now they find the contrary proved to their cost shall cut them off PSAL. XCV The Author of this Psalm was David as is affirmed Heb. 4. 7. and although the Psalm be delivered in general terms as an invitation to mankind to yield unto the true God that praise and worship and obedience which he requireth and deserveth yet it hath a special reference to the days of the Messiah of which Christians have no great reason to doubt seeing it is so understood by the Hebrew Doctors themselves as also by the Apostle Heb. 3. 7 c. and especially Heb. 4. 3 4 5 6 7 8 9. where he not onely expounds it of those times but proves that it cannot be meant of the former times and state of the Church 1 O Come let us a He speaks to the Israelites whose backwardness to this work in the times of the Gospel was foreseen by the spirit of God which dictated this Psalm sing unto the LORD let us make a joyful noise to the rock of our salvation 2 Let us † Heb. 〈◊〉 his face Isai. 3●… 33. come before his presence b Which he will then afford us in a singular manner in his Son the Messiah in and by whom he will be visibly present with the Sons of men with thanksgiving and make a joyful noise unto him with psalms 3 For * Psal. ●…6 4. 135. 5. the LORD is a great God and a great King above * Psal. 86. 8. all gods c Above all that are accounted and called Gods Angels and Earthly Potentates and especially the false gods of the Heathens which upon Christs coming into the World were struck dumb and could no more deliver their Oracles as Platarch and other Heathens observed with admiration nor deceive the World but were forced to give place to the true God and to the knowledge and worship of him alone which was propagated among all Nations by the Gospel 4 † Heb. in 〈◊〉 In his hand d Under his Government are the deep places e Those parts which are far out of mens sight and reach and much more those that are at mens disposal of the earth ‖ Or the 〈◊〉 of the hills 〈◊〉 his the strength of the hills f The strongest or highest Mountains are under his feet and at his disposal The fence of the Verse is All the parts of the Earth whether high or low are subject to his power and providence and therefore it is not strange if all the Nations of the Earth be brought to the acknowledgment of him and if the Gentiles receive his Gospel is his also 5 † Heb. whos 's the sea is The sea is his and he made it and his hands formed the dry lands 6 O come let us worship and bow down let us kneel g By which expressions he teacheth that even in Gospel times God is to be glorified and worshipped as well with the members of our bodies as with the faculties of our Souls before the LORD our maker 7 For he is our God h In a peculiar manner and therefore it will be most unreasonable and abominable for us to forsake him when the Gentiles submit to his law and * Psal. ●…9 1●… 80. 1. 10●… 3. we are the people of his pasture i Whom he feedeth and keepeth in his own proper Pasture or in the land which he hath appropriated to himself and the sheep of his hand k Which are under his special care and conduct or government which is oft expressed by the hand as Numb 4. 28. and 31. 49. Judg. 9. 29. * Heb. 3. 7. 4. 7. to day l i. e. Forthwith or presently as this word is used Deut. 4. 4 8. and 27. 9. Ios. 22. 16 18 c. Or this day in this solemn day of grace or of the Gospel which the Psalmist speaks of as present according to the manner of the Prophets And this word though belonging to the following clause as appears from Heb. 3. 7. may seem to be thus placed to shew that it had some respect to the foregoing words also For the sence of the place may be this We Jews are or shall be the people of his pasture and the sheep of his hand God will still own us for his people this day i. e. in the days of the Messiah if this day or in that time we shall hear his voice Otherwise God will reject us and receive the Gentiles in our stead if ye will hear his voice m If you will hearken to his call and obey his further commands Which may be added as a necessary caution and admonition to the Israelites that they might understand and consider that Gods presence and favour was not absolutely necessarily and everlastingly fixed to them as they were very apt to believe but was suspended upon the condition of their continued obedience which if they violated they should be rejected and the Gentiles performing it should be received to his mercy And this clause may be connected either 1. with the former words as the condition of their interest in God as their God as was now said Or 2. with the following Verse If you are willing to hearken to Gods call delivered by his Son take the following counsel 8 Harden not your hearts n By wilful disobedience and obstinate unbelief rebelling against the light and resisting the Holy Ghost and his clear discoveries of the truth of the Gospel * Exod. 17. 2 7. Numb 14. 2●… 20. 13. Deut. 6. 16. as in the † Heb. con●… tion provocation o As you did in that hold and wicked contest with God in the Wilderness Or As in Meribah which was the
governing himself or others well and prudently 6. To understand a proverb and ‖ 〈◊〉 an elo●… speech the interpretation q i. e. The Interpretation of a Proverb by a Figure called Hendiaduo or the meaning and use of the wise sayings of God or of men to know this practically and for his direction and benefit for practice is the great design of this Book the words of the wise and their dark sayings r Such as are hard to be understood by inconsiderate and ungodly men but to be found out by diligent and humble enquiry 7. * Job 28. 28. Psal. 111. 10. Chap. 9. 10. Eccl. 12. 13. The fear of the LORD s Reverence and obedience to God or his Worship and Service as this word is commonly used is ‖ Or the principal part the beginning t Either the Foundation or the Top and Perfection or chief Point without which all other knowledge is vain and useless of knowledge but fools u Wicked men called Fools through this whole Book such as do not fear God despise wisdom and instruction x Are so far from attaining true Wisdom that they despise it and all the means of getting it Which fully proves what he now said that the Fear of the Lord is the beginning of Wisdom 8. My son y He speaks to his Scholars with paternal Authority and Affection to make them more attentive and obedient Teachers among the Hebrews and others were commonly called Fathers and their Scholars their Sons * Chap. 6. 20. hear the instruction of thy father z His good and wholsome Counsels but not such as are contrary to Gods Law Prov. 19. 27. and forsake not the law of thy mother a Those pious instructions which thy Mother instilled into thee in thy tender years See Prov. 31. 1. 2 T●…m 1. 5. 3. 14 15. This he adds because Children when grown up are very prone to sleight their Mothers advice because of the infirmity of their Sex and because they have not that dependence upon and Expectation from their Mothers which they have from their Fathers 9. For they shall be † Heb. an adding an ornament of grace unto thy head and chains about thy neck b This will make thee amiable and honourable in the fight of God and of men whereas the forsaking of those good Counsels will make thee contemptible 10. My son if sinners c Eminently so called as Gen. 13. 13 Psal. 1. 1. 26. 9. such as sell themselves to work all manner of Wickedness particularly Thieves and Robbers and Murtherers as appears from the next verses as also Oppressors and Cheaters by comparing this with v. 19. entice thee consent thou not 11. If they say come with us d We are numerous and strong and sociable let us lay wait for blood e To shed Blood He expresseth not their words which would rather affright than inveigle a young novice but the true nature and consequence of the Action and what lies at the bottom of their specious pretences let us lurk privily f So we shall neither be prevented before nor discovered and punished afterward for the innocent g Harmless Travellers who are more careless and secure and unprovided for opposition than such Villains as themselves without cause h Though they have not provoked us nor deserved this usage from us h This Solomon adds to discover their malignity and baseness and so deter the young Man from association with them 12. Let us swallow them up alive as † Heb. hell Num. 16. 33. the grave i Which speedily covers and consumes dead Bodies See Psalm 55. 15. 124. 3. We shall do our work quickly easily and without fear of discovery and whole as those that go down into the pit k into some deep Pit into which a Traveller falls unawares and is utterly lost and never discovered 13. We shall find all precious substance we shall fill our houses with spoil l As our danger is little so our profit will be great 14 Cast in thy lot among us m i. e. Put in thy Money into our Stock Or rather thou shalt cast thy lot amongst us i. e. thou shalt have a share with us and that equally and by lot although thou art but a Novice and we Veteranes This agrees best with their design which was to allure him by the promise of advantage let us all have one purse n Or. we will have c. One Purse shall receive all our profits and furnish us with all expences So we shall live with great facility and true friendship 15. My Son * Ch. 4. 14. walk not thou in the way with them o Avoid their courses and their conversation and company refrain thy foot from their path p When thou hast any thought or inclination or temptation to follow their counsels or examples suppress it and restrain thy self as it were by force and violence as the word implies 16. * Isa. 59. 7. Rom. 3. 15. For their feet run q They make hast as it follows without considering what they are doing to evil r To do evil to others as was expressed v. 11 12. which also will bring evil upon themselves and make hast to shed blood s To shed innocent blood which is an inhumane and dangerous practice 17. Surely in vain the net is spread † Heb. in the eyes of every thing that hath a wing in the sight of any bird t The design of these words is to set forth the folly of these men by the similitude of a Bird which yet is very variously applied and understood by divers Interpreters But I shall not confound the Reader with the rehearsal of them This Clause in vain upon the understanding whereof the whole depends may be understood either 1. in respect of the Fowler So the sense is The Fowler who spreads his Net in the sight of the Bird loseth his labour because the Bird perceiving the danger will not be tempted to come to the Bait but flees away from it But or yet these as the first words of the next Verse may well be and by the Chaldee Translator are rendred are more foolish than the silly Birds and though they are not Ignorant of the danger and mischief which these evil courses will bring upon themselves which I have here represented yet they will not take warning but madly rush upon their own ruine Or 2. in respect of the Bird. So the sense is The silly Bird although it see the spreading of the Net yet is not at all instructed and cautioned by it but through the greediness of the Bait rusheth upon it and is taken by it And these men are not one jot wiser but albeit they know and find that by these practises they expose themselves to the justice of the Magistrate and to the vengeance of
f In that Common-wealth The state of that Kingdom is honourable and comfortable and safe so as good men can shew their faces with courage and confidence but when the wicked rise g Are advanced to Honour and Authority a man is ‖ Or sought 〈◊〉 hidden h The state of that Nation is so shameful and dangerous that wise and good men who only are worthy of the name of men with-draw themselves or run into corners and obscure places partly out of grief and shame to behold the wickedness which is publickly and impudently committed and partly to avoid the rage and injuries of wicked Oppressors and the judgments of God which commonly follow such persons and their confederates in sin Or as others both ancient and later Interpreters render it a man is sought out Sober and good men who had retired themselves are searched for and brought forth like sheep to the slaughter as being most suspected and hated and feared by bloody Tyrants 13 * Ps. 32. 3 5. 1 Joh. 1. 9 10. He that covereth his sins i That doth not confess them as appears by the opposite clause to God and to Men too when occasion requires it That being convinced or admonished of his sins either justifieth ordenieth or excuseth them shall not prosper k Shall not succeed in his design of avoiding punishment by the concealment of his sins shall not find mercy as is implied from the next clause but whoso confesseth and forsaketh them l By hearty dislike and hatred of all his sins and by a resolved cessation from a sinful course of Life This is added to shew that although the dissembling or hiding ones sins is sufficient for his damnation yet meer confession without forsaking of sin is not sufficient for Salvation shall have mercy m Both from God who hath promised and from Men who are ready to grant pardon and favour to such persons 14 Happy is the man n Because he shall thereby avoid that mischief which besals fearless sinners which is expressed in the next clause and procure that eternal Salvation which they lose that feareth o To wit the offence and judgments of God Who having confessed and forsaken his sins as was now said is afraid to return to them again and careful to avoid them and all occasions of them alway p In all times companies and conditions not only in the time of great trouble when even Hypocrites will in some sort be afraid of sinning but in times of outward Peace and Prosperity * Rom. 11. 20. but he that hardeneth his heart q That goeth on obstinately and securely in sinful courses casting off due reverence to God and just fear of his threatnings and judgments shall fall into mischief 15 As a roaring lion and a ranging bear r The Lion and Bear are always cruel and greedy in their natures and especially when they are hungry and want Prey in which case the Lions roar Psal. 104. 21. Isa. 31. 4. and Bears range about for it so is a wicked ruler s Instead of being a nursing Father and a faithful and tender Shepheard as he ought to be he is a cruel and insatiable Oppressor and Devourer of them over the poor people t Whom he particularly mentions either to note his policy in oppressing them only who were unable to withstand him or to revenge themselves of him or to aggravate his sin in devouring them whom the Laws of God and common Humanity bound him to relieve and protect or to express the effect of his ill government in making his people poor by his frauds and rapines 16 The prince that wanteth understanding is also a great oppressor u The Tyranny or Oppression of a Prince though by some accounted Wisdom is in truth a manifest act and sign of great folly because it alienateth from him the Hearts of his People in which his Honour and Safety and Riches consist and oft times causeth the shortning of his days either from God who cuts him off by some sudden judgment or from men who are injured by him and exasperated against him but he that hateth covetousness x Which is the chief cause of all oppressions and unjust practices shall prolong his days y By Gods favour the peace and satisfaction of his own mind and the hearty love of his people which makes them careful to preserve his Life by their servent Prayers to God for him by willingly hazarding their own Estates and Lives for him when occasion requires it and by all other possible means 17 A man that doeth violence to the blood of any person z That sheddeth any mans Blood or taketh away his Life unjustly shall flee to the pit a Shall speedily be destroyed being pursued by divine Vengeance and the Horrours of a guilty Conscience and the Avengers of Blood let no man stay him b So it is a prohibition that no man should endeavour to save the Life of a wilful Murderer either by intercession or by offering satisfaction or any other way Of which see Gen. 9. 6. Exod. 21. 14. Numb 35. 31. Or as the ancient and many other Interpreters render it no man shall stay him None shall desire or endeavour to save him from his deserved punishment He shall die without pity being an object of publick hatred 18 * Ch. 10. 25. Whoso walketh uprightly shall be saved c To wit from destruction because God hath undertaken and promised to protect him but he that is preverfe in his ways d Heb. in two ways of which Phrase see above on v. 6. shall fall at once e Once for all so as he shall not need a second thrust 1 Sam. 26. 8. and so as he shall never rise more Or in one to wit of his ways Though he hath various ways and arts to secure himself yet none of them shall save him but he shall perish in one or other of them and shall be given up by God to the mistake of his way that he shall chuse that course which will be most pernicious to him 19 * Ch. 12. 11. He that tilleth his land shall have plenty of bread but he that followeth after vain persons f Chusing their company and imitating their Example who gives up himself to vanity and idleness and so is fitly opposed to the diligent man in the former clause shall have poverty enough 20 * Ch. 13. 11. 20. 21. 23. 4. 1 Tim. 6. 9. A faithful man g Heb. A man of truth or truths who deals truly and justly in all his b●…rgains and transactions with men shall abound with blessings * Ch. 13. 11. 20. 21. 23. 4. 1 Tim. 6. 9. but he that maketh haste h More than God alloweth him that taketh the nearest and readiest way to Riches whether it be right or wrong that is unfaithful and unjust in
Consciences made them dread both the present Judgment here and the terrible Consequences of it hereafter Heb. Who shall dwell for us c. i. e. in our stead Who will interpose himself between God's Anger and us How shall we escape these Miseries That this is the Sence of this Question may be gathered from the Answer given to it in the following Verse in which he directs them to the right Course of removing God's Wrath and regaining His Favour 15. He that * Psal. 15. 2. 24. 4. walketh † Heb. in righteousnesses righteously u Who is just in all His dealings with Men of which the following Clauses explain it Which is not spoken exclusively as if Piety towards God were not as necessary as Righteousness towards Men but comprehensively this being one Evidence and a constant companion of Piety and speaketh † Heb. uprightnesses uprightly x Who speaks truly and sincerely what He really intends he that despiseth y That refuseth it not for politick Reasons as Men sometimes may do but from a contempt and abhorrency of injustice the gains of ‖ Or deceits oppressions that shaketh his hands from holding z Or from taking or receiving as this Verb signifies Prov. 4. 4. 5. 5. 28 17. That will not receive much less retain Bribes of bribes that stoppeth his ears from hearing of † Heb. bloods blood a Who will not hearken or assent to any Counsels or Courses tending to shed innocent Blood and shutteth his eyes from seeing evil b That abhorreth the very sight of Sin committed by others and guardeth his Eyes from beholding occasions of Sin of which see on Iob. 31. 1. 16. He shall dwell on † Heb. heights or high places high c Out of the reach of danger his place of defence shall be the munitions of rocks bread shall be given him his waters shall be sure d God will furnish him with all necessaries 17. Thine eyes shall see the king e First Hezekiah and then Christ as before in his beauty f Triumphing over all Enemies and Ruling his own People with Righteousness in which two things the beauty and glory of a King and Kingdome doth chiefly consist they shall behold † Heb. the land of far distance the land that is very far off g Thou shalt not be shut up in Ierusalem and confined to thine own narrow Borders as thou hast been but thou shalt have free Liberty to go abroad with honour and safety where thou pleasest even into the remotest Countries because of the great renown of thy King and the enlargement of his Dominions 18. Thine heart shall meditate terrour h This is Either 1. a Premonition concerning a future Judgment as if he said Before these glorious Promises shall be accomplished thou shalt be brought into great straits and troubles Or rather 2. a thankful Acknowledgment of deliverance from a former Danger as if he had said When thou art delivered thou shalt with pleasure and thankfulness recal to mind thy former Terrours and Miseries * 1 Cor. 1. 20. Where is the scribe where is the † Heb. weigher receiver where is he that counted the towers i These Words are Either 1. words of Gratulation and Insultation over the Enemy Thou shalt then say Where are the great Officers of the Assyrian Host They are no where they are not they are dead or slain Or rather 2. the words of Men dismayed and confounded such as proceeded from the Iews in the time of their distress and are here remembred to aggravate the present Mercy For the Officers here mentioned seem not to be those of the Assyrian Army who were actually fighting against the Iews and Ierusalem for then he would rather have mentioned the Captains of the host as the Scripture commonly doth in these cases than the scribes and receivers c. but rather of the Iews in Ierusalem who upon the approach of Sennacherib began to make Military preparations for the defence of the City and to chuse such Officers as were necessary and usual for that end such as these were to wit the scribe whom we call Muster-Master who was to make and keep a List of the Souldiers and to call them together as occasion required The receiver who received and laid out the Money for the Charges of the War and he that counted the Towers who surveyed all the parts of the City and considered what Towers or Fortifications were to be made or repaired for the Security of the City And unto these several Officers the People resorted with great distraction and confusion to acquaint them with all Occurrences or to quicken them to their several Works or to transact Matters with them as occasion required 19. * 2 Kin. 19. 32. Thon shalt not see a fierce people k As Moses said of the Egyptians Exod. 14. 13. So I say of the Assyrians that fierce and warlike People whom thou hast seen with great Terrour near the Walls of Ierusalem thou shalt see them again no more a * Deu. 28. 49. Jer. 5. 15. people of a deeper speech than thou canst perceive l A forreign Nation whose Language is abstruse and unknown to thee of a ‖ Or ridiculous or barbarous stammering tongue m Of which see on Isa. 28. 11. that thou canst not understand 20 Look upon Zion n Contemplate Zions beauty and safety and her glorious and peculiar Priviledges It is an Object worthy of thy deepest Meditation the city of our solemnities o This he mentions as the chief part of Zions Glory and Happiness that God was solemnly Worshipped and the solemn Assemblies and Feasts kept in her thine eyes shall see * Psal. 46. 5. 125. 1 2. Ierusalem a quiet habitation a tabernacle that shall not be taken down not one of the stakes thereof shall ever be removed neither shall any of the cords thereof be broken p Which was but very obscurely and imperfectly fulfilled in the literal Zion but was clearly and fully accomplished in the mystical Zion the Church of God in the times of the Gospel against which we are assured that the gates of Hell shall not prevail Mat. 16. 18. 21. ‖ Or but there glorious is the LORD we shall have a place c. But there q In and about Zion the glorious LORD will be unto us a place † Heb. broad of spaces or hands of broad rivers and streams r Though we have nothing but a small and contemptible Brook to defend us yet God will be as sure and strong a Defence to us as if we were surrounded with such great Rivers as Nilus or Euphrates which were a great security to Egypt and Babylon wherein shall go no galley with oars neither shall gallant ships pass thereby s But although they shall have from God the security of a great
most frequently mentioned both in the Old and New Testament Though the first may seem to be Principally●… if not only Intended because he speaks of his past sins which could be cleansed no other way but by Remission from secret faults g i. e. From the guilt of such sins as were secret Either 1. From others such as none knows 〈◊〉 God and my own Conscience Or 2. From my self such as I never observed ●…or did not discern the evil of Pardon my unknown sins of which I never repented particularly as I should have done 13. Keep back h Or restrain or withdraw Which word is emphatical and signifies Mans natural and great proneness even to the worst of sins and the necessity of God's grace as a Bridle to keep men from rushing upon them Having begged Pardon for his former Errors he now begs grace to keep him from Relapses for the time to come thy servant also from presumptuous sins h Or restrain or withdraw Which word is emphatical and signifies Mans natural and great proneness even to the worst of sins and the necessity of God's grace as a Bridle to keep men from rushing upon them Having begged Pardon for his former Errors he now begs grace to keep him from Relapses for the time to come * Psal. 119. 133. Rom. 6. 12. 14. let them not have dominion over m●… i From known and evident sins such as are committed against knowledge and Del●…eration with design and resolution and Eagerness with resistance against the Cheeks of Conscience and the Motions of Gods Spirit and with Contempt both of God's commands and Judgments and so with Pride and ins●…lency which this word signifies See Exod. 21. 14. And such a sin was that of David's in the Matter of uriah to which he seems to have an Eye and prayeth to be kept from such Miscarriages then shall I be upright k That will be an Evidence of my Sincerity and I shall have this Comfort that although I am not absolutely Perfect but incompassed with many Infirmities yet I am an upright Person and such as thou wilst accept and I shall be innocent l Thou wilst hold me for Innocent Or I hall be cleansed or kept pare as this Word primarily signifies from ‖ Or much the great transgression m i. e. From the guilt of such Presumptuous sins which are indeed very great Transgressions and such as if accompanied with Obstinacy and Impenitency thou wilst not Pardon But as for other sins of ignorance or infirmity thou wilst graciously remit them for thy Covenants sake made with me in and through thy Christ. Oth. From much Transgression or from innumerable sins which usually follow the Commission of one Presumptuous sin as David found by his own sad Experience i If I be at any time tempted to any su●… sins Lord let them not prevail over me and if I do fall into them let me speedily rise again and not willingly give up my self to the Custo●…ary practice of them 14. Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart n Having prayed that God would keep him from sinful Actions he now prays that God would govern and sanctify his Words and Thoughts wherein he had many ways offended as he here implies and oft in this Book confesseth and bewaileth And this he the rather doth because this Caution was very necessary to preserve him from Presumptuous sins which have their first rise in the Thoughts and thence proceed to Words and Expressions before they break forth into Actions be acceptable in thy sight o i. e. Be really good and Holy and so well-pleasing to thee O LORD † Heb. my Rock my strength p O thou who hast hitherto strengthened me both against my temporal and spiritual Enemies and whose gracious and powerful Assistance is absolutely necessary to keep me from my own corrupt Inclinations and from all Temptations to sinful Thoughts and Wor●…s and Actions and my redeemer q This Expression seems to be added emphatically and with special respect to Christ who was certainly much in David's Eyes ●…o whom alone this word Goel can here Properly belong as may appear by my Notes on Iob. 19. 25. to which I refer the Reader and by whose Blood and Spirit alone David could and did expect the Blessings and Graces for which he here prayeth c. PSAL. XX. The ARGUMENT This Psalm contains a Prayer to be used by the People both now on the behalf of King David when he was undertaking some great Expedition going forth as is supposed against the Ammonites and Syrians 2 Sam. 10. or some other potent Enemies and hereafter in like Cases To the chief musician a Psalm of David 1. THe LORD hear thee in the day of trouble a In this time of War and Danger the Name of the God of Iacob b i. e God himself For Names are oft put for Persons as Numb 26. 53. A●… 1. 15. and 4. 12. and the Name of God for God as Deut. 28. 58. Ne●… 9. 5. Psal. 44. 98. 20. Prov. 18. 10. and oft elsewhere He calls him the God of Iacob or Israel partly to distinguish him from false God's and partly as an Argument to enforce the Prayer because God had made a League or Covenant with Iacob and his Posterity who are called by the Name of Iacob Psal. 147. 19 20. Isa. 44. 2. and whose cause David was now pleading against their Enemies † Heb. ●…t 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 high 〈◊〉 defend thee 2. Send † Heb. thy help thee help from the sanctuary c Either 1. From Heaven as it is expressed v. 6. Or rather 2. From the Tabernacle in Sion as it is explained in the next Words where the Ark then was towards which the Israelites directed their Prayers and from which God heard and answered them and † Heb. support thee strengthen thee out of Zion 3. Remember d To wit with acceptance as it follows all thy offerings e Offered either by th●…e at thy entrance upon this Expedition Or by us thy People on thy behalf or by thine appointment and † Heb. turn to Ashes Or mak●… fat accept f Heb. turn to Ashes by fire sent from Heaven in token of his acceptance as was usual of which see Levit. 9. 24. 1 Kings 18. 38. thy burnt-sacrifice S●…lah 4. Grant thee according to thine own heart g i. e. That good success which thy Heart desires and fulfil all thy counsels h Thy present design for God and for his and thy People 5. We will rejoyce i Hereby they shew their Confidence in God and their assurance of the Victory in thy salvation and * 〈◊〉 17. 15. 〈◊〉 ●…4 in the Name of our God k i. e. To the Honour of God as the Conqueror we will set up our banners l In way of Triumph which among other