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A11649 Annotations upon the five bookes of Moses, the booke of the Psalmes, and the Song of Songs, or, Canticles VVherein the Hebrevv vvords and sentences, are compared with, and explained by the ancient Greeke and Chaldee versions, and other records and monuments of the Hebrewes: but chiefly by conference with the holy Scriptures, Moses his words, lawes and ordinances, the sacrifices, and other legall ceremonies heretofore commanded by God to the Church of Israel, are explained. With an advertisement touching some objections made against the sinceritie of the Hebrew text, and allegation of the Rabbines in these annotations. As also tables directing unto such principall things as are observed in the annotations upon each severall booke. By Henry Ainsworth.; Annotations upon the five bookes of Moses, and the booke of the Psalmes Ainsworth, Henry, 1571-1622? 1627 (1627) STC 219; ESTC S106799 2,398,875 1,194

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the Israelites by miracles wonders and signes which God did by him in the middest of them Act. 2. 22. Heb. 2. 4. in whom God was reconciling the world unto himselfe 2 Cor. 5. 19. whō God buried not as he did Moses but raised him frō the dead that he saw no corruption Of him Moses wrote and to him give all the Prophets witnesse that through his name whosoever beleeveth in him shal receive remission of sins Act. 10. 40. 43. And by him all that beleeve are justified from all things from which we could not be justified by the law of Moses Act. 13. 39. This is the true God eternall life 1 Ioh. 5. 20. To him be honour and glory and praise throughout all generations and let all the earth be filled with his glory Amen and Amen A TABLE OF SOME PRINCIPALL THINGS OBSERVED IN THE ANNOTATIONS ON THE FIVE BOOKES OF MOSES A AAron and his sonnes made Priests Exod. 28. their first offerings Lev. 9. Aarons death Num. 21. 24. 28. Abib the moneth which we call March Exod. 13. 4. and 23. 15. Deut. 16. 1. Abrahams name interpreted Gen. 17. 5. Accepting the face what it is Gen. 19. 21. Adultery punished with death Lev. 20. 10. Deut. 22. 22. Afflicting of the soule by fasting c. commanded unto all Israel one day in the yeere Lev. 16. 29. It was to be from evening to evening Lev. 23. 32. All or every for all sorts Exod. 9. 6 25. Almighty or All-sufficient Shaddai Gods name Gen. 17. 1. Altar Gen. 8. 20. Altar of incense Exod. 30. 1. c. called the Altar of gold Exod. 40. 26. Altar of Burnt-offering or Brazen Altar Exod. 27. 1 c. and 40. 29. The Princes Offrings at the dedication of the Altar Num. 7. Amalek Gen. 36. 12. His destruction commanded Exod. 17. 16. Deut. 25. 19. Amen what it signifieth Num. 5. 22. Amids for within Gen. 2. 9. Ammonites Gen. 19. 38. Israel might not fight with them Deut. 2. 19. Amorites used for all heathens in Canaan Gen. 48. 22. And for but Gen. 2. 17. for that Gen. 12. 12. and 27. 4. Exod. 8. 29. for for Gen. 12. 19. Exod. 15. 2. for or Gen. 13. 8. and 19. 12. for then Gen. 3. 5. for that is Gen. 13. 15. or namely 1 Chron. 1. 36. for a passion of the minde Gen. 27. 28. And for both or superfluous Gen. 36. 24. and 40. 9. and 8. 6. for who which c. Gen. 49. 25. or that which Deut. 32. 1. for therefore Gen. 31. 44. for if or and if Gen. 18. 30. Exod. 4. 23. Levit. 26. 40. Angell what it signifieth Genes 16. 7. and 32. 1. Christ called an Angell Gen. 26. 24. and 48. 16. Exo. 3 2. and 14. 19. and 23. 20. The heathens opinion of Angels Gen. 32. 1. Anointing what it signified Exod. 29. 7. and 30. 26. The Anointing oile described Exod. 30. ●3 c. who were anointed therewith Ex. 30. 33. Answering what it is from God Gen. 36. 3. Appearing before God with three things Exod. 23. 15. Arke Teba Gen. 6. 14. Arke Aron Exod. 25. 10. Arabia whereof it was named Gen. 10. 7. Aram called Syria Gen. 24. 10. and 25. 20. Armies or hosts of Israel Exod. 6. 26. Arrowes for plagues Deut. 32. 23. Asses of what use Gen. 49. 11. Assembly or Church for multitude Gen. 28. 3. Ascending for burning Exod. 27. 20. Assured saying Gen. 22. 16. Atonement Exod. 29. 36. Lev. 1. 4. Atonement day with the Law for making reconciliation for the Church once in the yeere Levit. 16. Avenging and bearing grude forbidden Levit. 19. 18. B BAal-peor the Idoll wherewith Israel joyned Num. 25. Babylon Gen. 10. 10. and 11. 9. Back-parts of God what they meane Ex. 33. 23. Balaam and Balak with their storie Numb 23. c. Balaams prophesies Num. 24. his death Num. 31. 8. Baldnesse made for sorrow for the dead forbidden Lev. 21. 5. Banquet named of drinking Gen. 19. 3. Battlements to be made on houses Deut. 22. 8. Beersheba The Well of the oath Gen. 21. 31. and 26. 33. Before one i. exposed to him Gen. 13. 9. and 20. 15. and 34. 10. Begin how it is used for the doing of any thing Gen. 9. 20. Bekah an halfe shekell Exod. 38. 26. Belial what it signifieth Deut. 13. 13. Bels on the High Priests garments Ex. 28. 34 35. Beleefe or faith what it meaneth Gen. 15. 6. Exod. 17. 12. Bending the head what it meaneth Exod. 4. 31. Benjamin Benoni Gen. 35. 18. set before the children of the bond-woman Exod. 1. 3. Shoulders of Benjamin what they meane Deut. 33. 12. Bethel a Citie Gen. 12. 8. and 28. 19. Bethlehem Gen. 35. 16 19. Betrothing of a wife the manner of it among the Iewes Deut. 22. 23. The punishment for lying with a betrothed woman Deut. 22. 24 c. Binding a Chariot for making ready Gen. 46. 29. Bishops where of named Num. 3. 32. Biting usurie forbidden but allowed upon strangers Exod. 22. 25. Deut. 23. 19 20. Blasphemers to be put to death Lev. 24. 16. Blemishes might not be in any sacrifice Lev. 1. c. Deut. 17. 1. Blesse what it meaneth Gen. 1. 22. and 2. 3. and 12. 2. and 14. 19 20. and 27. 4. Blessing for gift 33. 11. for salvation Gen. 47. 7. Blessings for them that keepe Gods commandements and curses for the transgressors Lev. 26. Deut. 28. The Priests blessing of Israel Numb 6. 23 c. Blessing God for meat drinke c. Deut. 8. 10. Blessings and Curses where to be pronounced Deut. 27. Moses Blessings of the tribes Deu. 33. Blew what colour it was Exod. 25. 4. Bloud for life Gen. 9. 4. Blouds for murther Gen. 4. 10. Bloud of the sacrifice put on the Priests eare thumbe and toe Exod. 29. 20. Bloud of fowles and beasts might not be eaten Lev. 7. 26. 17. 10 11 12. Bloud of wilde beasts and fowles must be covered with dust Lev. 17. 13. Booke of God or of life Exod. 32. 32. The feast of Boothes or Tabernacles Lev. 23. 34. Borrowing and lawes concerning it Ex. 22. 14 15. Bowing downe for worship Gen. 22. 5. Ex. 4. 31. Brasse what it signifieth Exod. 27. 2. Bread for all food Gen. 3. 19. and 21. 14. 31. 54. Breath Neshamah what Gen. 2. 7. Brestplate of the high Priest Exod. 28. 15. Bribes forbidden Exod. 23. 8. Bringing neere and offering used for the same Lev. 1. 2. Brother for kinsman Gen. 13. 8. for the same humane nature Gen. 19. 7. Building how used Gen. 2. 22. Building for having children Gen. 16. 2. and 30. 3. Bullocke of the second yeere as a Calfe of the first Exod. 29. 1. Burnt-offering Gen. 8. 20. The Law concerning it whether it were of the herd flocke or fowles with the signification Lev. 1. and 6. 9 c. Butter what it signified Deut. 32. 14. C A Cake of the first of the dough to be given to the Lord Num. 15. 20. Calfe of the first yeere
sorrowes of this age were great as the very name of Enos testifieth and the history following in Gen. 6. confirmeth for impiety crept into the Church by unlawfull mariages with Kains seed and religion and manners were much corrupted Gen. 6. 2. 11. The Hebrew Doctors describe it thus In the dayes of Enos the sons of Adam erred with great error and the counsell of the wisemen of that age became brutish and Enos him-selfe was one of them that erred and their error was this They said for as much as God hath created these stars and sphaeres to governe the world and set them on high and imparted honor unto them and they are ministers that minister before him it is meet that men should land and glorifie and give them honor For this is the wil of God that we magnifie and honor whomsoever he magnifieth and honoreth even as a King would have them honored that stand before him and this is the honour of the King himselfe When this thing was come up into their heart they began to build Temples unto stars and to offer sacrifice unto them and to laud and glorifie them with words and to worship before them that they might in their evill opinion obtaine favour of the Creator And this was the root of Idolatry c. And in process of time there stood up false Prophets among the sons of Adam which said that God had commanded said unto them worship such a star or all the stars and doe sacrifice unto them thus and thus and build a Temple for it and make an image of it that all the people women and children may worship it he shewed them the image which he had feyned out of his owne heart and said it was the image of such a starre which was made knowne unto him by prophesie and they began after this manner to make images in Temples and under trees and on tops of mountaines and hils and assembled together and worshipped them c. And this thing was spred through all the world to serve images with services different one from another and to sacrifice unto and worship them So in tract of time the glorious and fearfull name of God was forgotten out of the mouth of all living and out of their knowledge and they acknowledged him not And there was found no people of the earth that knew ought save images of wood and stone and Temples of stone which they had beene trained up from their childhood to worship and to serve and to sweare by their names And the wise men that were among them as the Priests and such like thought there was no God save the stars and sphares for whose sake and in whose likenesse they had made these images but as for the Rocke everlasting there was no man that acknowledged him or knew him save a few persons in the world is Enoch Mathusala Noe Sem and Eber. And in this way did the world walk and converse till the pillar of the world to weet Abraham our father was born Maim in Misn. tom 1. treat of Idolatry c. 1. S. 1. 2. 3. That the heavens and stars were of old worshipped both Moses and the Prophets after him shew Deut. 4. 19. Am. 5. 26. 2. Kin. 21. 3. 5. And as the heathen Philosophers counted the heaven a living body Arist. de c●l l. 2 c. 2 so did the wisest of the Hebrew Rabbins All the stars and al the sphaers have soules knowledg understanding are living things and stand acknowledge him who said and the world was every one according to his greatnesse and according to his dignity lauding and glorifying him that formed them even as the Angels And as they know the holy God so they know themselves and know the Angels which are above them and the knowledge that the Starres and Sphaeres have is lesse then the knowledge of the Angels and greater then the knowledge of the sonnes of men saith Maimony in Iesudei hatorah chap. 3. S. 9. Vpon this perswasion men might the easier be drawne to the worship of them If we understand Moses here otherwise Then began men to call upon the name of the Lord then it may be meant of more publick worship now erected then before or of publick preaching in the name of the Lord to call the wicked to repentance or of calling themselves by the name of the Lord as in Gen. 6. 2. the faithfull are called the sonnes of God Onkelos the Chaldee Paraphrast translateth then beganne men to pray But the Chaldee in the Masorites bible saith Then in his dayes the sonnes of men left off from praying or became prophane so that they prayed not in the name of the Lord. CHAP. V. 1 The genealogie of the tenne first Patriarchs of the world 3 Of Adam 6 Seth 9 Enos 12 Kainan 15 Maleleel 18 Iared 21 Enoch who walked with God was taken away without death 25 Mathusala 28 Lamech 32 and Noe. THis is the booke of the generations of Adam in the day God created Adam in the likenesse of God made he him Male and female created hee them and blessed them and called their name Adam in the day they were created And Adam lived a hundred and thirty yeeres and begat a sonne in his likenesse in his image and called his name Seth. And the dayes of Adam were after he had begotten Seth eight hundred yeeres and hee begat sonnes and daughters And all the dayes of Adam which he lived were nine hundred yeeres and thirty yeeres and he dyed And Seth lived a hundred yeeres and five yeeres and begat Enos And Seth lived after he begat Enos eight hundred yeeres and seven yeeres and begat sonnes and daughters And all the dayes of Seth were nine hundred yeeres and twelve yeeres and hee died And Enos lived ninety yeeres and begat Kainan And Enos lived after hee begat Kainan eight hundred yeeres and fifteene yeeres and begat sonnes and daughters And all the daies of Enos were nine hundred yeeres and five yeeres and hee died And Kainan lived seventy yeeres and begat Maleleel And Kainan lived after he begat Maleleel eight hundred yeeres and fortie yeeres and begat sonnes and daughters And all the dayes of Kainan were nine hundred yeeres and ten yeeres and he died And Maleleel lived sixtie yeeres and five yeeres and begat Iared And Maleleel lived after he begat Iared eight hundred yeeres and thirty yeeres and begat sons and daughters And al the dayes of Maleleel were eight hundred yeeres and ninety and five yeeres and he died And Iared lived a hundred yeeres and sixtie and two yeeres begat Enoch And Iared lived after he begat Enoch eight hundred yeeres and begat sons and daughters And al the daies of Iared were nine hundred yeres sixty and two yeres and he dyed And Enoch lived sixty and five yeres and begat Methusala And Enoch walked with God after hee begat Methusala three hundred yeeres and begat sonnes and daughters And all the daies of
Hebrew doctors gathered from Deut. 21. 13. she shall bewaile her father and her mother a moneth of daies those thirtie daies they might not trim the haire of their head or beard nor weare white new garments nor marrie and the like Maimony ibidem ch 6. Vers. 11. inhabitants Hebrew inhabitant and Canaanite See Gen. 10. 16. heavy in Greek great as before in verse 9. was called Hebrew he that is every one called see the notes on Gen. 16. 14. The mourning Hebr. Abel Mizaim Vers. 15. peradventure or it may be The guilty conscience causeth feare Levit. 26. 36. rewarded him that is done of our owne accord unto him Vers. 16. commanded that is sent some on their message to Ioseph and after went themselves verse 18. The word command is effectually to procure a thing to be done as God commandeth his blessings and mercies by effectuall sending them Psal. 42. 9. and Levit. 25. 21. Deut. 28. 8. where the Greeke translateth send Here the Greeke expoundeth it they came unto Ioseph and said Vers. 17. of the God by this speech they seem both to insinuate their repentance and faith to obtaine mercy at Gods hand and use a reason to obtaine the like at Iosephs For if we forgive men their trespasses our heavenly Father will also forgive us otherwise not Mat. 6 12. 14. 15. Wherefore it is said forgive one another even as God for Christs sake forgave you Ephes. 4. 32. But the Hebrew Doctors observe a difference betweene dammage to our neighbour in his goods and hurts or injurie to his person which here was Iosephs cause They say hee that doth his neighbour dammage in his goods when hee hath paid that which hee ought to pay atonement is made for him But he that hurteth his neighbour although hee gave unto him for satisfaction the five things namely 1. dammage it selfe as when eye must bee given for eye tooth for tooth 2. for the smart 3. for his healing 4. for his resting from his labour 5. for his shame or dishonour of which see the notes on Exod. 21. 19. yet atonement is not made for him yea though he should sacrifice to God all the Rams of Nebaioth Esay 60. 7. yet atonement is not made for him nor his iniquitie forgiven unill he request it of him that was hurt and he doe forgive him Maimony in Misneh Tom. 4. treat of Hurt and dammage chap. 5. S. 9. Vers. 21. unto their hart that is friendly comfortably and which pleased them as that which came into Solomons heart 2 Chron. 7. 11. is expounded that which he was pleased to do 1 King 9. 1. See also the notes on Gen. 34. 3. Here Ioseph is an example of lenitie and readinesse to forgive and to doe good for evill as Christ teacheth all Matt. 5. 44. So the Hebrew canons say It is unlawfull for him that is hurt to bee cruell and not to forgive this is not the way of the seed of Israel But when hee that did the hurt doth request it and aske grace of him once or twise and hee kneweth that hee turnes from his sinne and repenteth of his evill hee shall forgive him Maimony in his said treat of Hurt and dammage ch 5. S. 10. Vers. 23. third generation or third sonnes So was his blessing begun to bee accomplished Gen. 49. 22. and 28. 19. borne that is brought up Of Machir see Num. 32. 39. Vers. 24. visiting c. that is will surely visit meaning in mercy See Gen. 21. 1. This was a testification of his faith in Gods promises as is written by faith Ioseph at his ending made mention of the departure of the sonnes of Israel and gave commandement concerning his bones Heb. 11. 22. The land of Canaan was a signe of their heavenly inheritance as before is shewed on Gen. 12. 5. 17. 8. Heb. 11. 13. 14. 16. and there Christ rising from the dead should bee the first fruits of them that slept by whom the resurrection of the dead which Ioseph exspected was to come 1 Cor. 15. 20. 21. 22. And there many bodies of the Saints which slept arose and came out of the graves after Christs resurrection Matt. 27. 52. 53. Vers. 25. from hence or from this place the Greeke addeth with you This charge was fulfilled when at their going out of Egypt Moses tooke the bones of Ioseph with him Exod. 13. 19. which afterward were buried in Sechem Iakobs purchase and Iosephs sonnes heritage Ios. 24. 32. Stephen sheweth that the other Patriarchs the sonnes of Iakob were buried also in Sychem in the land of Canaan Act. 7. 16. Vers. 26. old Hebrew sonne of 110. yeeres Gen. 5. 32. The same was the age of Iesus or Iosuah when he dyed the conqueror of Canaan and one of Iosephs seed Ios. 24. 29. an arke or chist coffin to be ready at their removall out of Egypt This death of Ioseph whereat the first book of Moses endeth was after the creation of the world 2369. yeeres ANNOTATIONS VPON THE SECOND BOOKE OF MOSES CALLED EXODVS VVHEREIN BY CONFERRING THE HOly Scriptures comparing the Chaldee and Greeke versions and other records of the Hebrewes MOSES his Words Lawes and Ordinances are explained BY HENRY AINSWORTH PSAL. 103. 7. The Lord made knowne his wayes unto Moses his acts unto the sonnes of Israel ACTS 7. 38. This is that Moses which was in the Chruch in the wildernesse with the Angel which spake to him in the mount Sina and with our fathers who received the lively Oracles to give unto us IOHN 1. 17. The Law was given by Moses but Grace and Truth came by Iesus Christ. LONDON ¶ Printed by Miles Flesher for John Bellamine and are to be sold at his shop neere the ROYALL EXCHANGE 1626. The Summe of EXODVS THis second booke of Moses sheweth the increase and oppression of Israel in Egypt the sending of Moses to deliver them the tenne plagues of God upon Egypt the bringing out of Israel with strong hand the leading of them through the sea where Pharaoh was drowned the safe conducting of them in the wildernesse the Covenant betweene God and them at Mount Sina where he gave them Lawes and Iudgements and Statutes ordaining a Priesthood for his service and erected a Tabernacle for to dwell therein among them More particularly ISrael increase are oppressed in Egypt and their sonns drowned Chap. 1 Moses his birth education pietie and persecution 2 Moses keeping sheepe seeth a vision and is sent to deliver Israel 3 He is confirmed by signes is sent with Aaron to Pharaoh and Israel 4 Pharaoh resisteth and vexeth Israel they cry out of Moses and grieve him 5 God incourageth Moses and sends him again to Israel and Pharaoh 6 Moses worketh miracles and is resisted by Pharaohs sorcerers 7 Egypt is plagued with Frogs Lice and Flies Pharaoh is hardned 8 Moe plagues of Murrain Boyls and Haile yet Pharaoh resisteth 9 Plagues of Locusts and Darknesse Pharaoh is more hardned 10 Egypt is appointed to the spoile
all their first-borne threatned to die 11 The Passover is kept the first borne of Egypt slaine Israel departeth 12 Their first-born are sanctified to God he conducteth Israel with a pillar 13 Pharaoh pursueth Israel they passe through the sea where Pharaoh is drowned 14 Israel ●ingeth Gods praise They murmur for water and have it sweetned 15 They murmur for bread God feeds them with Quailes and Manna 16 They murmur for water and have it from th● Rocke They overcome Amaleck 17 Iethro meeteth Moses Officers are set over Israel 18 Israel is sanctified to receive Gods fiery Law at Sina mount 19 God giveth the morall Law with terrour all 〈◊〉 is afraid 20 Iudiciall lawes concerning the bodies and lives of men Chap. 21 Lawes concerning goods and cha●tels 22 Moe lawes concerning justice and religious duties 23 The couenant of the law is approved and confirmed with sacrifice 24 God commandeth to make an Arke a Table and a Candlesticke 25 To make a Tabernacle wherein they should bee placed 26 To make a brazen Altar and Court of the Tabernacle 27 To make priestly garments for Aaron and his sonnes 28 To consecrate the Priests and Altar to sacrifice daily 29 To make the golden Altar the brazen Laver anointing oile and perfume 30 The workemen of the Tabernacle the Sabbath and Tables of stone 31 Israels Idolatry for which God would have destroyed them 32 They are brought to repentance Moses would see Gods glory 33 The covenant is renewed Moses face shineth and is veiled 34 The people bring gifts for the making of the Tabernacle 35 Bezaleel and Aholiab make the Tabernacle it selfe 36 The Arke Table Candlesticke golden Altar Oile and perfume are made 37 The brazen Altar Laver and Court The sum of the offrings 38 The Priests garments are made All the worke is approved 39 The Tabernacle is set up and anoynted and filled with Gods glorie 40 THE SECOND BOOKE OF MOSES CALLED EXODVS CHAPTER I. 1 The number of the sonnes of Israel that went into Egypt 7 Their great increase after Iosephs death 8 Their oppression by a new King 12 Their multiplication notwithstanding their bitter service 15 The King commandeth the men children to be killed at the birth 17 but the midwives fearing God doe save them alive 20 and are blessed of God for it 22 Pharaoh commandeth all the men children to be cast into the river NOw these are the names of the sonnes of Israel which came into Egypt every man and his house came with Iakob Reuben Simeon Levi and Iudah Issachar Zabulon and Benjamin Dan and Naphtali Gad and Aser And all the souls that came-out of the thigh of Iakob were seventy soules and Ioseph was in Egypt And Ioseph dyed and all his brethren and all that generation And the sons of Israel were fruitfull and increased abundantly and multiplied and wexed-mighty most exceedingly and the land was filled with them And there arose-up a new King over Egypt which knew not Ioseph And he said unto his people behold the people of the sonnes of Israel are moe and mightier than we Come-on let us deal-wisely with them lest they multiply and it be when there fall out warre then they be added also unto our enemies and warre against us and goe-up out of the land And they set over them taske-masters to afflict them with their burdens and they built for Pharaoh treasure-cities Pithom and Raamses And as they afflicted thē so they multiplyed so they encreased and they were yrked because of the sonnes of Israel And the Egyptians made the sons of Israel to serve with rigour And they made their lives bitter with hard service in morter in bricks and in all service in the field al their service wherin they made thē serve was with rigor And the king of Egypt said to the midwives of the hebrew women of which the name of one was Shiphrah and the name of the other Puah And he sayd when ye do the midwives office to the Hebrew women see them upon the stools if it be a son then ye shall kill him and if it be a daughter then she shall live But the midwives feared God and did not as the King of Egypt spake unto them but saved alive the men-children And the King of Egypt called for the midwives and said unto them why have ye done this thing and have saved alive the men-children And the midwives said unto Pharaoh because the Hebrew women are not as the Egiptian women for they are lively and doe bring-forth ere the midwife come-in unto them And God dealt-well with the midwives and the people multiplied and wexed very mighty And it was because the midwives feared God that he made them houses And Pharaoh commanded all his people saying every sonne that is borne ye shall cast him into the river and every daughter ye shall save-alive Annotations BOoke of Moses so our Lord Christ calleth it in Mark 12. 26. See the first annotations on Genesis Exodus a Greeke word signifying Departing because the first chief thing here handled is of the Departing or Out-going of Israel from Egypt Exod. 12. 41. This Greeke word is used in Heb. 11. 22. Luk. 9. 31. Exod. 19. 1. In Hebrew the booke is named of the first words Elle shemoth that i● These are the names And here beginneth the thirteenth section or lecture of the Law See Gen. 6. 9. Verse 1. Now these Hebrew And these This booke is a continuance of the former history of Genesis therefore it beginneth with And as coupled thereunto so likewise do Moses his two next bookes Sometime And is used in the beginning of a story as Esth. 1. 1. where it may in translating be omitted as is noted on Gen 36. 24. and so the Greek omitteth it here Egypt Hebrew Mitsraim that is the land of Mitsraim the sonne of Cham See Gen. 10. 6. and 12. 10. house that is houshold as the Chaldee saith the men of the house Vers. 3. Issachar hee is named in the fift place because he was the fift of the same mother Leah though Iakob had other sonnes before him see Gen. 35. 23. Benjamin hee though yongest is set before the foure children of the bondwomen In the wall of the heavenly Ierusalem the Iasper on which his name was graven is the first foundation Rev. 21. 19. Exod. 28. 20. And in Deut. 33. Moses giveth Benjamin a blessing before his elder brother Ioseph Vers. 5. soules that is persons and in Hebrew soule put for soules See Gen. 12. 5. thigh loynes or seed See Gen. 46. 26. seventie the Greeke addeth 75. and so the Holy Ghost in Act. 7. 14. the reason whereof is noted on Gen. 46. 20. 27. And this small number when they came in commendeth Gods blessing in multiplying them so greatly when they went out Exo. 12. 37. Deut. 10. 22. and Ioseph that is with Ioseph who was in Egypt already as the Chaldee explaineth it wherfore the Greeke version putteth this clause before
things under the Sun are vanity and vexation of spirit from mans birth to his dying day Ecclesiastes 1. 2. 3. 14. and 12. 7. 8. and an heavenly heritage is to bee sought for immortall and which fadeth not 2 Peter 1. 4. Of ground cursed there followeth barrennesse or unprofitable fruits and desolation Genesis 4. 12. and 3. 18. Esay 24. 6. and the end is to bee burned Hebrews 6. 8. So the earth and the workes therein shall bee burnt up 2 Pet. 3. 10. And as for mans sake this world is cursed and the creature made subject to vanity so it earnestly expecteth the manifestation of the sonnes of God that it may be delivered from the bondage of corruption Rom. 8. 19. 20. 21. in sorrow with painfull labour as Prov. 5. 10. Hereupon the Scripture mentioneth our bread of sorrowes Psal. 127. 2. Adam was to have labored in his innocency Gen. 2. 15. but without sorrow being under the Lords blessing which maketh rich and hee addeth no sorrow with it Prov. 10. 22. Concerning this sorrow or toyle of our hands Noe the figure of Christ was a comforter Gen. 5. 29. Vers. 18. thornes Heb. the thorne Hereby is meant harmfull weeds in stead of wholesome fruits Iob 31 40. Ier. 12. 13. for men of thistles doe not gather figs Mat. 7. 16. Thornes doe choak the good corne as Mat. 13. 7. And spiritually these signifie evill fruits which wicked earthly men bring forth Heb. 6. 8. of the field and so no longer the pleasant fruits of Paradise Gen. 2. 9. 16. But as Nebuchadnezar when he had a beasts heart was driven out among beasts to eat grasse as the oxen Dan. 4. 13. 22. so man not lodging a night in honour nor understanding but becomming like beasts that perish is to eat herbes with them Psal. 49. 13. 21. but by the labour of his hands his diet is bettered Vers. 19. sweat with much labour which Adam and all his posterity was condemned unto that this is a generall rule if any will not worke neither should he eate 2 Thess. 3. 10. The sweat of the face though it is to be distinguished from the care of the 〈…〉 d which Christ forbiddeth Mat. 6. 25. 34. yet it doth imply all lawfull labours and industry of body and mind for the good of both Eph. 4. 28. Mat. 10. 10. 1 Cor. 9. 14. so that the giving of the heart also to seeke and search our things by wisedome is a sore occupation which God hath given to the sonnes of Adam to be occupied therein and humbled thereby Eccles. 1. 13. bread that is all food whereof bread is the principall as that which upholds the heart of man Psal. 104. 15. Therefore that which one Evangelist calleth bread Mar. 6. 36 another calleth victuals or meats Mat. 14. 15. the ground or the earth called elsewhere our earth Psal. 146. 4. and our dust Psal. 104. 28. meaning till man returne to the dust of death the grave and there the wearied be at rest from their labours Iob 3. 17. Rev. 14. 13. dust thou art or thou wast to weet concerning the body as Gen. 2. 7. not the spirit which being immortall goeth unto God for eternall joyes or torments Luke 16. 22. 23. and 23. 43. This difference Solomon teacheth And dust returne to the earth as it was and the spirit returne to God that gave it Eccles. 12. 7. Here God condemneth mankind to death which is the wages of sinne Rom. 6 23. and to the grave the house appointed for all living Iob 30. 23. where they must wait till their change come Iob 14. 14. for it is appointed to men once to dye and after this is the judgement Hebr. 4. 27. Otherwise the life eternall could not bee obtained for flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdome of God neither doth corruption inherit incorruption therefore we must all either dye or be changed and this corruptible must put on incorruption and this mortall must put on immortality and then shall Death be swallowed up in victory 1 Cor. 15. 50. 51. 53. 54. So the Hebrew Rabbines also taught saying that unto this world there cleaveth the secret filthinesse of the Serpent which came upon Eve and because of that filthinesse Death is come upon Adam and his seed For when God saw how uncleannesse cleaved and spred it selfe abroad in the world continually he intended to consume it and to root out the power of it and therefore the bodies doe consume and corrupt and have no continued life But when the filthinesse is consumed and the spirit of uncleannesse taken out of the earth behold God will renew his world without any other filthinesse and will wake up by his power those that dwell in the dust c. and the Lord will reioyce in his workes as the intendment of the creation was at the first R. Menachem on Gen. 3. The Greeke Philosophers have observed that some dead men putrified turne to Serpents Plutarch in vita Cleomenis If so it is a notable memoriall of mans first poysoning by the Serpent Vers. 20. Eve in Hebrew Chavah which is by interpretation Life as the Greeke also translateth it or Living Adam first called her Woman Gen. 2. 23. God called her Adam Gen. 5. 2. and now the man calleth her Eve Life by which new name he testifieth his faith in and thankfulnesse for Gods former promise in vers 15. In which he also trained up his children teaching them to sacrifice and serve the Lord. Gen. 4. 3. 4. So the Hebrew Doctors reckon Adam as a repentant sinner and by Wisdome that is faith in Christ brought out of his fall Ioseph Antiq. b. 1. c. 4. and the Author of the Booke of Wisedome c. 10. v. 1. all living that is as the Chaldee paraphraseth of all the sonnes of man meaning this both naturally of all men in the world and so of Christ the promised seed and spiritually of all that live by faith in which sense Sarah is also counted the Mother of the faithfull 1 Pet. 3. 6. Gal. 4. 22. 28. 31. V. 21. coats to cover the body from shame and harme and for a memoriall of mans sin a further signe of those garments of justice and salvation which men have of God that their filthy nakednesse doe not appeare Rev. 3. 18. 19. 8. 2 Cor. 5. 2. 3. 4. The Chalde● calleth these here garments of honor of skin that is in likelihood of the skins of beasts which God taught him to kill for sacrifice Which offerings were even from the beginning of the Gospell preached as appeareth Gen. 4. 3. 4. 8. 20. And after by the Law the Skinnes of the sacrifices were given to the Priests Lev. 7. 8. And the sacrifices being all figures of Christ Heb. 10. 5. 10 the Skins were fit to resemble mans mortification as the girdle of skin which Iohn Baptist wore Mat. 3. 4. and new life by putting on the Lord Iesus Christ Rom. 13. 13. 14. and the garments of
with thankes for his blessings having gathered in their fruits so the law of Moses did command Exod. 23. 16. which order as by this appeareth the Fathers observed from the beginning and it was so accustomed among the Gentiles for the ancient sacrifices and assemblies unto that end were after the gathering in of the fruits for an oblation of the first fruits sayth Aristotle in Ethicks booke 8. brought in Greeke offred It is likely that the sonnes brought their offrings unto God by Adam their Father who was high Priest as after all the first borne in families were Priests Exod. 19. 22. and upon an Altar he offred their gifts The Hebrew Doctors say It is a tradition by the hand of all that the place wherein David and Solomon built an Altar in the floore of Araunah 1 Chron. 21. 22. 26. and 22. 1. 2 Chron. 3. 1. was the place where Abraham builded an Altar and bound Isaak upon it Gen. 22. 9 and that was the place where Noe builded after he came out of the Arke Gen. 8. 20. and that was the Altar upon which Kain and Abel offred and on it Adam the first man offred an offring after he was created and out of that place hee was created Our wise men have sayd Adam was created out of the place of his Atonement Maimony in Misn. book 8. treat of the Temple chap. 2. S. 2. an offring or oblation called in Hebrew a Minchah by which name the Meat offring is called in the Law Lev. 2. which commonly was of wheat flower Although the word is sometime used generally for any gift or present Gen. 32. 13. But Kain brought of the fruit of the ground which custome continued so that in Israel men might eate neither bread nor corne till they had brought an offring unto God Lev. 23. 14. Among the Greekes also they used to sacrifice the fruits of the earth Homer Iliad 1. and Numa ordeyned the like among the Romans who tasted not new corne or wine before the Priests had sacrificed the first fruits saith Plinie in book 18. chap. 2. and in the Roman lawes of the twelve Tables the same oblation of corne is commanded Derelig tit 1. lex 4. The like was for sacrificing of beasts as Abel did which was used of Israel and of all Nations till the comming of Christ see Lev. 1. Vers. 4. the fat of them As the first fruits of the earth of beasts of men were given in thankefulnesse to the Lord that all the rest might be sanctified and blessed Exod. 22. 29. 30. and 23. 19. so God challenged the fat of all sacrifices peculiarly to himselfe Lev. 3. 16. 17. and 7. 25. which fat sometime figured mans unbeleefe hardnesse of hear● and want of sense Psal. 119. 70. Acts 28. 27. which was to be consumed by the fire of Gods spirit sometime it signified the best of all things Numb 18. 12. in which sense it seemeth to bee spoken here of Abel From whose example the Hebrew Doctors teach that a man should inlarge his hand and bring his offring of the fairest and most laudable amongst those kinde of things whereof he bringeth Behold it is written in the law And Abel hee also brought of the firstlings of his flocke and of the fat of them And this is a common law in every thing which is for the name of the good God that it be of the goodliest and best If one build a house of prayer let it bee fayrer then his owne dwelling house if he feed the hungry let him feed him with the best and sweetest that is on his Table If he cloathe the naked let it be with the fayrest of his cloathes if he sanctifie any thing let him sanctifie of the fayrest of his goods and so hee sayth Lev. 3. 16. All the fat is the Lords Maimony in Misn. rom 3. in Asurei mizbeach chap. 7. S. 11. By the sacrifices of old there was besides a thankefulnesse to God a yearely remembrance also of their sinnes Heb. 10. 3. and hope of the forgivenesse of them by Christ to come Heb. 10. 1. 10. 14. And seeing the godly offred in faith Heb. 11. 14. and faith is by hearing the word of God Rom. 10. 17. Abel and the rest were taught of God thus for to worship him for all wil-worship devised by men is vaine Mat. 15. 9. Col. 2. 22. 23. had respect to weet with delight as the Hebrew word implyeth and so one Greeke version translateth it was delighted and with favourable acceptation as the Chaldee paraphrase explaineth it So GOD commanded every man to offer sacrifice for his favourable acceptation Lev. 1. 3. that hee and it might bee accepted of the Lord. This gracious respect unto Abel was seene of Kain for which hee was gtieved and the Apostle noteth it to be a testification of Abels justice by faith Heb. 11. 4. It is likely therfore that God shewed it by some visible signe as by fire from heaven consuming the sacrifice for so he used to doe in such cases after as Lev. 9. 24. 1 Chron. 21. 26. 2 Chron. 7. 1. 1 King 18. 38. and the burning of the sacrifices to ashes was a signe of his favourable acceptance Psal. 20. 4. and Theodotio a Greeke interpreter translateth it here he set onfire By this Gods acceptance Abels faith was confirmed touching life salvation in Christ otherwise God would not have received an offring at his hands as Iudg. 13. 23 unto Abel for his faith in Christ whereby he was just and by which he offred a greater sacrifice then Kain Heb. 11. 4. And so the sacrifice was respected for the man not the man for the sacrifice Prov. 12. 2. and 15. 8. Vers. 5. grieved or displeased very wroth The Hebrew word signifieth to burne or be inflamed either with anger or griefe the Greek here translateth he was grieved and in sundry other places as Ion. 4. 1. 9. where both the Greeke version and all the circumstances shew it to meane griefe So in 1 Sam. 15. 11. Samuel was grieved and Dauid 1 Chron. 13. 11. and Nehemiah Neh. 5. 6. and many the like countenance or his face fell that is he shewed himselfe ashamed grieved and discontented This is else-where expressed by the falling of the light of the countenance Iob 29. 24. contrary to which is the lifting vp of the face for a signe of comfort and joy Iob 11. 15. See also Gen. 19. 21. Vers. 7. doe well or doe good Hereby God teacheth that wel-doing consisted not in the outward offrings which Kain brought but in faith which hee wanted Heb. 11. 4. Ioh. 6. 29. And the Apostle hence concludeth that Kains workes were evill 1 Ioh. 3. 12. forgivenesse or acceptation The Hebrew word which properly signifieth elevation or lifting up when it is spoken of sinne as the words following shew here it is meaneth forgivenesse at Gods hand who lifteth up and so easeth us of the burden of it as Rom. 4. 7. from Psal. 32. 1. And
signified that he should with sundry other things worthy to bee observed in the briefe Historie of these tenne Fathers Vers. 21. Mathusala so in Luke 3. 37. in Hebrew Methushelach which is by interpretation He dyeth and the emission or dart meaning the flood commeth Enoch being a Prophet foretold in his sonnes name of the flood to come in the yeere that Mathusala dyed as came to passe Compare Iude vers 14. 15. Vers. 22. walked with God that is led his life and administred before God holily justly and faithfully and so pleasing to God as Gen. 6. 9. Wherefore the Apostle following the Greeke version saith he pleased God which without faith it is unpossible to doe Heb. 11. 5. 6. The Chaldee translateth he walked in the feare of the Lord and the lerusalemy Thargum saith he served or laboured in the truth before the Lord. And by comparing the like speech unto Eli 1 Sam. 2. 30. 35. it seemeth to imply a pleasing or acceptable ministration of office before the Lord. Wherefore Enoch is noted to be a Prophet Iude 14. And Noe who also walked with God Gen. 6. 9. was a Preacher of justice 2 Pet. 2. 5. Of Eli it is spoken touching the Priesthood 1 Sam. 2. 30. 35. and of David in the Kingdome Psal. 56. 14. and 116. 9. See also Gen. 17. 1. Thus Enoch was a speciall figure of Christ. Vers. 24. he was not to weet not found as the Apostle according to the Greeke saith Heb. 11. 5. and the Chaldee addeth he appeared not and yet the Lord killed him not The like speech is also used of them that are taken away by death Ier. 31. 15. which the Evangelist alledging addeth the word are or were that wanted in the Hebrew as in this place it is wanting also God tooke him that is translated him saith the Apostle that he should not see death Heb. 11. 5. where the Arabicke version addeth he was translated into Paradise meaning the heavenly Paradise mentioned Luke 23. 43. 2 Cor. 12. 2. 4. So Elias was taken up into heaven 2 King 2. and the Hebrew Doctors say that Enoch was taken up in a whilewind as Elias was and that he was disarayed of the foundation corporall and clothed with the foundation spirituall Also that God shewed him all the high treasures and shewed him the tree of life in the midst of the garden c. R. Menachem on Gen 5. and the Zohar on the same By this translating of Enoch God assured all the faithfull of their resurrection and eternall life therefore they after applyed the like worke of God to themselves after death as in Psal. 49. 16. And the Apostle teacheth we shall all be changed and shall have spirituall bodies and a building of God an house not made with hand eternall in the heavens with which house we desire to be clothed-upon c. 1 Cor. 15. 51. 44. and 2 Cor. 5. 1. 2. Ben Syrach saith Enoch translated was an example of repentance to all generations Ecclesiasticus 44. 16. Vers. 25. Lamech Hebr. Lemec Vers. 29. Noe so written in Luke 3. 36. 1 Pet. 3. 20. The Hebrew soundeth Noach which signifieth rest which proceedeth from comfort as the words following shew his name having affinity with Nachum comfort us from our worke that is comfort us with rest from our worke as the Greeke translateth he shall give us rest from our workes This prophesie his father uttered of him as hee that should be a figure of Christ in his building the Arke and offering of sacrifice whereby God smelled a savour of rest and said hee would not curse the ground any more for mans sake Gen. 8. 21. Of wee may reade it comfort us concerning our worke c. from the earth understand againe which commeth from the earth for the earth being cursed bare not fruits without great labour and sorrow Gen. 3. 17. 18. hath cursed Hebr. hath cursed it but this phrase our Tongue useth not for it I therefore say before the or that which And the Hebrew text sometime omits it as superfluous 2 Chron. 28. 3. with 2 King 16. 3. Vers. 32. 500. yeares old Hebr. sonne of 500. yeeres that is going in his 500. yeere An usuall speech in the Hebrew Scripture of mens age or of beasts Gen. 17. 1. Exod. 12. 5. But sometime it is not meant of naturall age properly as appeareth 2 Chron. 22. 2. compared with 2 King 8. 26. where Ahaziah is sonne of 22. yeeres for his owne life but sonne of 42. yeeres for the state of his kingdome And by being old or sonne of 500. yeere is not meant that yeere full ended but while hee was living in that yeere As appeareth by Gen. 7. 6. where Noe is 600 yere old which in v. 11. is explained to be In the yeare of the 600. yeere of his life Accordingly must we understand the ages of men and beasts spoken of in Scripture as when a Levite entred upon his Ministery being a sonne of 30. yeeres Num. 4. 3. it is meant going in the 30. yere of his life Therefore Christ fulfilling that and all other figures entred upon his Ministery when he began to be of 30. yeeres as is expressed Luk. 3. 23. And for the sacrifices in the Law which were to be of any yeerling beast after the Hebrew phrase sonne of a yeere Exod. 12. 5. the Iewes have left recorded that it must be strictly within the first yere of the life and if it bee but an houre older then a yeere it is not allowable for an oblation to God Maimony 8. book in Magnaseh Korbanoth chap. 1. S. 13. Noe begat that is began to beget for all his three sonnes were not borne in a yeere but Shem was borne two yeeres after when his father was 502 yeers old as may bee gathered by Gen. 11. 10. where two yeeres after the flood hee was but an hundred yeeres old and then was Noe his father 602. by Gen. 7. 6. See the like of Thara Gen. 11. 26. Sem Cham and Iapheth sounded in Hebrew Shem Cham and Iepheth of which Iapheth was the eldest Sem the next and C ham the youngest as is evident both by the former note of Sems age and by Gen. 10. 21. and 9. 24. But because Sem was in dignity preferred of God before his brethren Gen. 9. 26. 27 therefore he is first named The like is in the history of Abram and his brethren Gen. 11. 26. So Iaakob is named before Esau his elder Gen. 28. 5. and Ephraim before Manasses Gen. 48. 20. CHAPT VI. 1 The sonnes of God marry with the daughters of men 4 so Giants are bred 5 wickednesse increaseth 6 God repenteth that he made Man 7 and will destroy them 8 Noe findeth grace 13 and is forewarned of the Flood 14 The Arke with matter and forme thereof is commanded to bee made 18 for the saving of Noes house 19 and some of all living things 21 with provision of food 22 Noe doth all that God commanded
addeth to the name calling the place God figuratively as being his house The like is in Exod. 17. 15. was revealed or were revealed that is did appeare in more manifest sort Here againe a word plurall is joyned with the name of God to signify the mysterie of the Trinity in the unity of the godhead see the notes on Gen. 20. 13. The Gr. translateth it singularly was revealed or did appear so also doth the Chaldee save that for God it saith the angel of God V. 8. nurse sent with her from her fathers house Gen. 24. 59. How she came to be in Iakobs family is uncertaine the Iewes say she was sent to call Iakob home as was promised in Gen. 27. 45. She might also come thither upon other occasion after Rebekahs death The oke of weeping Hebr. Allon Bacuth this name sheweth his griefe for the death of this matron the place also being the safeest and most honorable that there hee could have for such a purpose see the notes on v. 4. on Gen. 23. 2. The Chaldee paraphrast for Oke translateth the Plaine or vally of weeping But the Greeke turneth it an Oke and so doth the Ierusalemy Thargum See also Gen. 12. 6. V. 9. again the Gr. addeth in Luz where he had appeared to him before Gen. 28. 11. 12. 19. V. 10. Israel the name given him before of the Angel is here againe given confirmed of God for the strengthning of Iakobs faith and assurance of Gods grace unto him See Gen. 32. 28. Ver. 11. Almighty or Alsufficient see Gen. 17. 1. The Gr. translateth it thy God an assembly or company church of nations the Chaldee saith an assembly of tribes Here God confirmeth the blessing given to Iakob by his father Isaak and amplifieth it see Gen. 28. 3. and 48. 3. 4. Kings the Chaldee addeth that shall rule over the peoples thus God giveth him the blessing of Abraham Gen. 28. 4. and 17. 6. Ver. 12. and or that is to thy seed see Gen. 13. 15. The Chaldee explaineth it and to thy sonnes the Greeke addeth through their generations Vers. 13. God the Chaldee saith the glory of the Lord meaning the vision which now appeared unto Iakob See Gen. 17. 22. Vers. 14. set up this he had done before and now repeateth it or as is likely being ruinated he new repaireth it see Gen. 28. 18. drinke offring or a powred out-offring an effusion usually called a drinke offring because it was onely of liquors or moist things as the Minchah or meat-offering was of dry And this drink-offring by the law of God was of wine or Sechar Exod. 29. 40. Num. 28. 7. among the heathens sometime of blood Psal. 16. 4. oile to consecrate it see Gen. 28. 18. Vers. 15. Bethel that is Gods house see Gen. 28. 19. Thus hee renewed the memoriall of his faith and thankfulnesse to God as God did before of his promises to him v. 10. 11. 12. Vers. 16. they journeyed the Greeke version addeth Iakob journeyed from Baithel and pitched his tent beyond the tower of Gader borrowing these words from the 21. verse a little peece or about a mile as the Chaldee paraphrase explaineth it This word is so used also in Gen. 48. 7. 2 King 5. 19. and not elsewhere Ephrath a towne called usually Bethlehem that is The house of Bread v. 19. some thinke it to have the name Ephrath of Calebs wife so called 1 Chron. 2. 19. 24. It hath both names in Mic. 5. 2. Bethlehem Ephrata there Christ was borne Matt. 2. 1. the bread of God that came from heaven Ioh. 6. 33. had hard child-birth Hebrew shee was hard in her child-bearing that is had sore and painfull labour According to the chastisement layd on Eve and her daughters Gen. 3. 16. It is daily to be seene and the Philosopher observeth it that no creature suffreth such strong paines in trauell as woman doth Aristot de Animal l. 7. notwithstanding shee shall be saved in child-bearing if they continue in faith c. 1 Tim. 2. 15. Ver. 17. midwife named in Hebrew of helping the woman in child-birth so Exod. 1. 15. 16. thou shalt have or this also shall bee to thee a sonne as Ioseph before was And this was according to Rachels desire see Gen. 30. 24. Vers. 18. departing or going-out from the body to God that gave it as Eccles. 12. 7. Psal. 146. 4. This sheweth the Soule of man to bee a spirituall immortall substance distinct from the body The heath ens acknowledged this saying that death is nothing else but the departing of the soule from the body Aristot. in his book of Death and that the soules of men are divine and when they goe out of the body they returne unto heaven Cicero lib. de Amicit. Ben. oni the Greek and Chaldee interprets it Son of my sorrow In that shee answered nothing but thus named her son it sheweth she received no comfort The like case was in 1 Sam. 4. 20. 21. The word oni is after used by Iakob for his painfull strength Gen. 49. 3. Benjamin that is Son of the right hand meaning loved tendered and especially regarded So man of the right hand in Psal. 80. 18. for one loved and much regarded of God This only of all Iakobs children was borne in the land of Canaan V. 20. unto this day the time when Moses wrote this and after in Sauls daies 1 Sam. 10. 2. About this place at Christs birth many infants were murdered by Herod then Rachel wept for her children and would not bee comforted because they were not Ier. 31. 15. Mat. 2. 16. 18. V. 21. Geder or Gader as the Gr. writeth it by interpretation the flocke or herd A tower of this name is also mentioned in Mic. 4. 8. V. 22. concubine a secondary wife see Gen. 22. 24. She is called also his wife Gē 37. 2. By this shamefull crime such as is not once named among the heathens 1 Cor. 5. 5. Reuben lost his first-birth 1 Chron. 5. 1. Gen. 49. 4. Iakob also himselfe having abused Bilhah contrary to the first institution of mariage Gen. 30. 4. is here chastised of God So Absalom lying with his father Davids cōcubines God thereby chastised Davids sins 2 Sam. 12. 10. 11. and 16. 22. heard it the Greek version addeth and it appeared evill in his sight But in the Hebrew nothing is said onely an empty space is left in the line with this marke o to move consideration as before in Gen. 4. 8. Sometime sorrow is so great as words or signes cannot expresse it Ezek. 24. 23. and such might here be Iakobs case Here also is a pawse breaking off as to a new matter even in the midst of the verse so in Deut. 2. 8. twelve which becomming fathers of many families are called the twelve Patriarehs Act. 7. 8. and the peoples that came of thē are named the twelve tribes Act. 26. 7. and although many great evills have already and will hereafter more
is no where found but in this place mules elsewhere are called Peradim 1 King 10. 25. 2 King 5. 17. It is therefore doubted what Iemim here meaneth And the Greek leaveth it untranslated Iamein as not knowing what it should be The Chaldee turneth it Gibbaraja that is Mighties or Giants as the word is used Gen. 6. 4. Others because Iemim hath affinity with Iam the Sea and majim waters translate it hot-waters or bathes which Anah should find in the desert But because it is knowne that mules are ingendred of the mixture of horses and asses or of he-asses and mares as Pliny sheweth in Histor. b. 8. ch 44. translated commonly therefore in Greeke hemionous that is half-asses 1 King 10. 25. c. and mules of themselues are barren and doe not encrease as the Philosopher noteth Arist. de Animal l. 15. it is likely they were not created at the first of God because he gaue all such creatures this blessing to be fruitfull and to multiply Gen. 1. 22. 28. and 8. 17. And that therefore they were found out by the wit of this man who feeding his fathers asses caused them to ingender with another kind as horses which was both against nature as first God set every thing according to his kind Gen. 1. 24. and 6. 19. 20. and against the plaine law which he after gave unto Israel Levit. 19. 19. thou shalt not let thy cattell engender with a diverse kind And the name Iemim first given them by Anah might be changed into Peradim which hath the signification of Parted or Separated as differing from all other beasts Vers. 26. Dishan called Dishon vers 21. and 1 Chron 1. 41. in Greek Deson Chemdan called also Chamram 1 Chron. 1. 41. d changed into r as is often see Gen. 10. 3. In Greeke Amada and Amadam 1. Chron. 1. 41. Cerán pronounced Keran or Cran in Greeke Charran Vers. 27. Akan called Iakan 1 Chron. 1. 42. in Greeke here Oukam and in 1 Chron. 1. 42. Ilakan Vers. 28. Aran. Thus have wee here of Seir seven sons and a daughter and againe of those seven nineteene sons and a daughter All which for Esaus sake are registred in the book of God Vers. 29. Chorites Hebr. Chorite singular for plurall as vers 21. see Gen. 10. 16. The Greek keepeth the singular Chorri Vers. 30. their Dukes that is their kingdomes as the Greek translateth it For these 7 sons of Seir had their Dukedomes at one time in severall places and did not one succeed another as the Kings that follow So King in Esay 23. 15. is used for the Kingdome of Babylon and foure Kings in Dan. 7. 17. are foure kingdomes as the Holy Ghost there expoundeth it in vers 23. the fourth beast shall bee the fourth kingdome and the throne of the Kings 2 King 11. 19. is by another Prophet called the throne of the kingdome 2 Chron. 23. 20. Vers. 31. of the sonnes or to that is over or among the sonnes of Israel the Greek saith in Israel that is before Moses time for he was King in Ieshurun Deut. 33. 5. Thus Esau after his Dukes had of his posterity 8 Kings which successively ruled their people whiles Israel was in affliction in Aegypt Exod. 1. c. Vers. 32. Bela in Greek Balak and in 1 Chron. 1. 43. in stead of Beor the Greeke hath Sepphor according to the name of the King of Moab in Numb 22. 2. Vers. 33. Bozrah a chiefe Citie in the land of Edom Esay 34. 6. and 63. 1. in Greek called Bosora Vers. 34. of Temani that is of the Temanites which had the name of Duke Teman Esaus Nephew verse 15. Of this land was Eliphaz Iobs friend Iob 2. 11. By interpretation Teman signifieth the South and so the Chaldee here taketh it The Gr. translateth Asom of the land of Thaimanon Vers. 35. Bedad in Greeke here Barad but in 1 Chron. 1. 46. Badad smote that is killed as the Chaldee and Greeke explaine see Gen. 14. 17. field that is country see Gen. 14. 7. Avith called Ajith 1 Chron. 1. 46. in Greeke here Gethaim but in 1 Chron. 1. 46. Ebith Vers. 36. Samlah in Greeke Samada of Massekka in 1 Chr 1. 47. Samaa of Meserika Vers. 37. Rechoboth a City built by Nimrod Gen. 10. 11. in Greeke Robooth It was by the River Euphrates as the Chaldee expoundeth it Vers. 38. Baal-chanan the same name by transplacing the parts of it is Hannibal Channibaal of which name were sundry Captaines afterward as in the story of the Carthaginean wars The Greek saith here Ballaenon in 1 Chron. 1. 49. Balenon son of Achobor Vers. 39. Hadar called Hadad 1 Chron. 1. 50. The Greeke is Arad son of Barad Pau called also Pai 1. Chron. 1. 50. in Greeke Phogor but in 1. Chron. 1. 50. Phaoul In that these Kings were of so sundry Cities it appeareth their Kingdomes came not by inheritance but either by election of the people or gotten by conquest according to the Oracle by thy sword shalt thou live Gen. 27. 40. daughter of Me-zahab by daughter some understand neece others take Mezahab for the name of a City Medava named of golden waters which the word signifieth a daughter or inhabitant whereof she was The Greek here translateth Son of Maizook in 1 Chron. 1. daughter in Chaldee daughter of the Gold-melter or Gold smith In 1 Chron. 1. 51. there is added the death of this Hadar here omitted as And Hadad dyed Vers. 40. the Dukes after eight Kings it seemeth the forme of government was againe changed among the Edomites though it is uncertaine when it was At Israels comming out of Aegypt they mention the Dukes of Edom Ex. 15. 15. and as they passed through the wildernesse they sent to the King of Edom Num. 20. 14. and here it was said these 8 Kings reigned in Edom before any king reigned in Israel v. 31. It is likely therfore that upon the unkind dealing of that King of Edom w ch seemeth to be Hadar who denyed to let Israel pass through their Land the Lord removed the dignity of Kings from that common-wealth and let it bee ruled by Dukes againe whereof eleven are here by name rehearsed families the Greeke saith in their tribes Timna in Greek Thamna and Thaiman in 1 Chron. 1. 51. Alva called Alja 1 Chron. 1. 51. in Greeke Gola and there Aloua Ietheth in Greeke Iethar Vers. 41. Aholibamah the Greek writeth these names here Olibemas Helas Phinon in 1 Chr. 1. 52. Elibama Hela Phinon Vers. 42. Mibzar in Greeke Mazar Vers. 43. Iram in Greek here Zaphoei but in 1 Chron. 1. 54. Areraman habitations which the Greeke translateth aedifices that is builded habitations possession or firme-hold whereas Iakob and his children dwelt in the land of their peregrination or sojournings vers 7. Gen. 37. 1. and 28. 4. God thus giving Esau his portion first in this world and after doing good unto Israel Deut. 2. 5. c. See also Gen. 25.
sore pestilence to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thereof from God by some Prophet or a Priest or a Dreamer of dreames And as the High 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 was adorned in his 〈◊〉 with Vrim and Thummim translated in Greek Manifestation and Truth so among the Egyptians their high Priest is reported to have an ornament about his necke of a Saphire stone and the ornament was called Aletheia that is Truth as Aeliam● writeth in his Greeke History booke 14. After the losse of Vrim and Thummim and Prophets in Israel the godly Iewes held them to the Law of Moses as they were commanded by the last Prophet Mal. 4. 4. And hereunto Iesus sonne of Syrach in Ecclus. 33. 3. seemeth to have reference saying The Law is faithfull to him that understandeth as the asking of Dela that is as the Oracle of Vrim and Thummim for Vrim is translated into Greeke Dela 1 Sam. 28. 6. R. Moses bar Maimon saith They made in the second Temple Vrim and Thummim whereby he meaneth the Brestplate with the precious stones to the end they might make up all the High priests eight ornaments without which he might not administer although they did not enquire of God by them And wherefore did they not enquire by them Because the holy Ghost was not there And every Priest that speaketh not by the holy Ghost and on whom the Divine-majestie resteth not they inquire not by him Maimony treat of the Implements of the Sanctuary Chap. 10. Sect. 10. According to this phrase are those speeches to be understood in Ioh. 7. 39. The holy Ghost was not yet because Iesus 〈◊〉 not yet glorified and in Acts 19. 2. Wee have not so much as heard whether there be an holy Ghost Wherby is meant the gifts of the Spirit in Prophesie Tongues c. as there followeth in vers 6. T 〈…〉 holy Ghost came on them and they spake with Tongues and prophesied which gifts being before ceased were restored by the Gospell an evident proofe that the Christ was come Ioel 2. 28. 32. Acts 2. 4. 17. 18. And in Christ this mystery of Vrim and Thummim was fulfilled for in the heart of him our great High-priest were the gifts of the holy Ghost without measure 3. 34. unto all Light and Manifestation of the Truth with all perfection and integrity Iohn 1. 4. 9 17. and 3. 12. 13. and 18. 37. Coloss. 2. 3. whereby the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Iesus Christ is come unto us by whom the Spirit of Truth is sent into us to dwell with us and to abide with us for ever Iohn 14. 16. 17. who also hath given us to put on the Brestplate of Faith and Love 1. Thessalon 5. 8. Vers. 31. the Robe in Hebrew Megnil in Greek Hupodutes that is an Vnderclothing it was a long garment worne next under the Ephod The Hebrewes say Vpon the Robe was the Ephod and the Brestplate and he girded with the curious girdle of the Ephod upon the Robe under the Brestplate and therfore it is called the Robe of the Ephod because he gird●● it with the Ephod Maimony in Implements of the Sanctuary Chap. 10. Sect. 3. See also Exodus 29. 5. and Levit. 8. 7. of the Ephod the Greeke here translateth it Poderee that is of the garment-downeto the foot So in Revel 1. 13. Christ appeareth 〈…〉 ed with a garment downe to the foot in the Gr. there Poderee to shew himselfe as High Priest for the Church Vers. 32. an hole called in Hebrew a mouth top Hebr. head a binding or welt called in Hebrew a lip woven worke Hebrew the work of the weaver Iosephus in his 3. booke of Antiquities Chap. 8. saith This coat was not of two peeces but woven in one without seames on shoulders or sides Maimony in treat of the Implements of the Sanctuary chap. 9. Sect. 3. saith The Robe was all of blew and the threds thereof were twelve times double and the hole thereof was woven at the beginning of the weaving And it had no sleeves but was divided into two skirts from the end of the necke unto beneath after the manner of all Robes and was not joyned together but about all the neck only The Gospell noteth of Christ how in the dayes of his flesh he wore a coat without seame woven from the top throughout Iohn 19. 23. Though that were not a priestly garment yet was it mysticall Vers. 33. Pomgranats that is similitudes of them so the Greeke translateth as it were Pomgranats of the flourishing pomegranat tree scarlet every sort of these three saith Maimony being twisted of eight threds as it is written upon the skirts of it twisted Exodies 39. 24. So the threds of these skirts were in all foure and twenty And hee made them like pomgranats which open not their mouth and hung them on the Robe Maimony treat of the Implements of the Sanct. Chap. 9. Sect. 4. Wheresoever this word TVVISTED is used alone as it is in Exod. 39. 24. it must be eight double threds Ibid. Chap 8. Sect. 14. The Greek version both here and in Exod. 39. 24. addeth the fourth stuffe and of fine linnen twined but the Hebrew wanteth this as also the Chaldee bells in number threescore and twelve as Maimony sheweth in the soresaid treatise chap. 9. Sect. 4. and they were hanged 36 on the one skirt and 36 on the other And in these 72 bells were 72 clappers all of gold and the bell together with the clapper in it is that which is called in Hebrew Pagnamon a Bell saith Maimony ibidem Vers. 35. to minister in the same or when hee ministreth sound or voice that is the sound of his bells Whereby was signified the voice of Christ which is heard of God in his prayer and mediation and heard of the people in his teaching and instruction Heb. 5. 7. and 7. 25. Deuter. 33. 10. Esay 58. 1. Mat. 12. 18. Therefore these Bels were of gold to signifie the purity and preciousnesse of the words of Christs accompanied with Pomgranats to signifie the fruits and comfortable effects of Christs both mediation and doctrine For Pomgranats were of the fruits of the holy Land Deut. 8. 8. and they with the wine that is in them signified the fruits and graces of the Saints Song 4. 〈◊〉 13. and 8. 2. Therefore many such were also in Solomons Temple 2 Chron. 3. 16. and 4. 13. And the care that this Robe should not be rent verse 32. signified the unity of the doctrine and faith of Christ which should bee among his people without rents or schismes 1 Cor. 1. 10 13. 1 Tim. 1. 3. goeth in c. that is publikely administreth as this phrase signifieth Numb 27. 17. 1 Chron. 27. 1. Acts 1. 21. that he dye not or and he shall not dye Vers. 36. Plate the Hebrew Tsits properly signifieth a floure the Greeke Petalon a leafe because it appeared faire and glorious after it is called the plate of the holy crowne
is the man that doth this and the sonne of man that layeth hold on it that keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it Maimony treat of the Sabbath chap. 30. Sect. 15. Vers. 14. that soule the Chaldee translateth that man shall be destroied This cutting off the Iewes understand to be untimely death by the hand of God when a man so violateth Gods Law as there are no witnesses whereby men should punish him See Gen. 17. 14. And of the Sabbath thus they write that for doing worke therein if a man doe it willingly and presumptuously he is guilty of cutting-off to perish by the hand of God and if there bee witnesses that see him he is to be stoned to death as was performed in Num. 15. 35. 36. and if he doe it of ignorance or errour he is bound to bring the sin offring appointed for the same according to the Law in Numb ●5 27. 30. Maimony in treat of the Sabbath chap. 1. Among the heathen Romanes their Flamins or Priests might see no work done on their holy daies but by a cryer gave men warning to the contrary and who so obeyed not was 〈…〉 ulcted and gave a beast for a sacrifice Albeit they might doe things whereof dammage would follow if they were omitted as to pull an oxe out of a ditch to underset an house ready to fall c. Macrob Saturn booke 1. chap. 16. Vers. 15. of Sabbathisme that is of cessation and rest See Exod. 16. 23. The Greeke translateth it a rest holy to the Lord. Vers. 16. to observe Hebrew to doe see the notes on Exod. 34. 22. Vers. 17. me the Chaldee translateth Betweene my Word and the sonnes of Israel that Word is Christ by whom the Sabbath is truely sanctified to his Church Hebrewes 4. From this Scripture the Hebrewes gather that onely Israel was charged with the sabbath day and not the nations of the world Talmud in Betsah chap. Iom tob So from Exod. 16. 29. Yet thus also they say It is unlawfull to speake to an Infidel to doe any worke for us on the Sabbath day although he be not charged to keepe the Sabbath and although he be spoken to before the Sabbath Maimony treat of the Sabbath chap. 6. Sect. 1. Howbeit this opinion of theirs seemeth not agreeable to Gods will for the Sabbath was to be kept before the Law was given at mount Sinai Exod. 16. 23. even from the Creation Gen. 2. 2. 3. therefore it was given to all the world was refreshed the Greeke and Chaldee doe translate hee ceased and rested This is spoken of God after the manner of men who are refreshed by rest from their workes Of such manner speeches see what is noted on Genesis 6. 6. Vers. 18. of stone that so the record of them might remaine for ever Iob 19. 24. These Tables were the worke of God even as the writing was the writing of God Exod. 32. 16. and these being broken in peeces Exod. 32. 19 two other tables of stone like them were hewed out by Moses but written againe by the Lord Exod. 34. 1. 4. After this Christ by the Spirit of God writeth his Law not in Tables of stone but in fleshly Tables of the hear● 2 Cor. 3. 3. and these fleshly tables are also the work of God as he saith I will take the stonie heart out of their bodies and I will give them an heart of flesh Ezek. 11. 19. The Minde and the Heart are the spirituall tables Heb. 8. 10. in the one such things are written as men should know and beleeve in the other such as should be done or omitted The first Tables which God made signified the stonic hearts which all men have by nature now corrupted in which notwithstanding God hath left his Law written so that they doe by nature the things of the Law and shew the worke of the Law written in their hearts Rom. 2. 14. 15. though still they continue hard and stonie and their sinfull nature is not changed The second tables of stone signified the heart of the Iewes hewed and polished by Moses and his legall ministerie in whose heart God also wrote his Law wherein they rested and made their boast of God and knew his will and had the information of knowledge and of the truth in the Law Rom. 1. 17. 18. 20. Howbeit their heart continued stonie and unchanged so that they which taught others taught not themselves neither could they stedfastly looke on Moses face nor see the end of that which i● abolished but their mindes were blinded and even to this day a veile is laid upon their heart Rom. 2. 21. 2 Cor. 3. 7. 13. 14. 15. The third which are tables of flesh is the worke of Christ by his Spirit giving us new hearts and writing his Lawes in them 2 Cor. 3. 3. Ezek. 36. 26. Heb. 8. 10. These things both of the weakenesse of Moses ministerie and of the grace of Christ the ancient Hebrew Doctors acknowledged as in their glosse upon Song 1. 1. Let him kisse me c. there mentioning that request of the people in Exod. 20. 19. Speake thou with us c. they say Moses taught them the Law and whatsoever they learned they forgat againe Then they came unto Moses and said O that God would shew him-selfe againe and kisse us with the kisses of his mouth that his doctrine might be fastened in our hearts Moses said unto them This cannot be done now but it shall be in the dayes of Christ as it is written Ier. 31. 33. I will put my Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts Midrash Cant. 1. 1. finger which signifieth Gods Spirit as I with the finger of God cast our divels Luk. 11. 20. which is expounded the Spirit of God in Matth. 12. 28. That which was written was according unto all the words which the Lord spake with Israel in the mount out of the midst of fire Exod. 20. Deut. 9. 10. CHAP. XXXII 1 The people in the absence of Moses cause Aaron to make a Calfe 6 They sacrifice thereunto 7 God certifieth Moses of their sinne 10 and his purpose to consume them therefore 11 Moses intreateth for the people 14 The Lord repenteth concerning the evill against them 15 Moses commeth down with the Tables 19 and upon sight of their sinne hee breaketh them 20 He destroyeth the Calfe 22 Aarons excuse for himselfe 25 Moses causeth the Idolaters to be slaine 28 The Levites are the executioners 31 Moses prayeth that either the sinne of Israel be forgiven or himselfe to be blotted out of the Booke of God 34 God spareth the people for the present but after plagueth them AND the people saw that Moses delayed to come down out of the mountaine and the people gathered themselves together unto Aaron and said unto him Rise-up make gods for us which may goe before us because this Moses the man which brought us up out of the land of Egypt we know not what is become of
hundred Of the sonnes of Aser by their generations according to their families according to the house of their fathers by the number of the names from twentie yeeres old and upward every one that went forth with the armie Those that were mustered of them of the tribe of Aser were one and fortie thousand and five hundred The sonnes of Naphtali by their generations according to their families according to the house of their fathers by the number of the names from twentie yeeres old and upward every one that went forth with the armie Those that were mustered of them of the tribe of Naphtali were three and fiftie thousand and foure hundred These are those that were mustered which Moses mustered and Aaron and the Princes of Israel twelve men each one was for the house of his fathers And they were all those that were mustered of the sonnes of Israel according to the house of their fathers from twentie yeeres old and upward everyone that went forth with the armie in Israel Even all that were mustered were six hundred thousand and three thousand and five hundred and fiftie But the Levites according to the tribe of their fathers were not mustered among them For Iehovah had spoken unto Moses saying Onely the tribe of Levi thou shalt not muster neither take the summe of them among the sonnes of Israel But thou appoint the Levites over the Tabernacle of the Testimonie and over all the vessels thereof and over all things that belong to it they shall beare the Tabernacle and all the vessels thereof and they sha 〈…〉 minister unto it and shall encampe round about the Tabernacle And when the Tabernacle setteth forward the Levites shall take it downe and when the Tabernacle is to be pitched the Levites shall set it up and the stranger that commeth nigh shall be put to death And the sonnes of Israel shall encampe every man by his owne campe and every man by his owne standard throughout their armies But the Levites shall encampe round about the Tabernacle of the Testimonie that there be no fervent wrath upon the congregation of the sonnes of Israel and the Levites shall keepe the charge of the Tabernacle of the Testimonie And the sonnes of Israel did so according to all that Iehovah commanded Moses so did they Annotations NVmbers This name is given unto this booke according to the Greeke title because the first chiefe thing here handled is the numbring of the tribes of Israel The Hebrewes give it no other name then of the first words Vajedabber that is And the LORD spake or Bemidbar that is In the wildernesse see the first annotations on Genesis and Exodus And here beginneth the 34. section or lecture of the Law whereof see Gen. 6. 9. Verse 1. Sinai the mount whereon the Law had beene given Exod. 19. by which mountaine Israel yet abode untill the twentieth day of this moneth Numb 10. 11. 12. the Tent or Tabernacle of meeting whither the people were to assemble at the times appointed and where God met with them as he promised Exod. 25. 22. It is called also the Tabernacle of Testimonie v. 43. and so the Greeke translateth it here the first Hebr. the one understanding day as in Mat. 26. 17. compared with Marke 14. 12. see the notes on Gen. 8. 13. And one is often put for first as is noted on Gen. 1. 5. And every first day of the moneth was a feast Numb 28. 11. c. second moneth which we now call Aprill so in Thargum Ionathan it is said the first of the moneth Ijar that is Aprill which is the second moneth In the Scripture it is named Ziv 1. King 6. 1. of the brightnesse and beautie of the flowers which then doe spring But God had spoken before unto them in the first moneth which is related after in Numb 9. 1. c. after their comming forth or of their departing seethe annotations on Exod. 16. 1. God having given them lawes for his service in Exodus and Leviticus doth now settle their church and commonwealth in order Vers. 2. the summe Hebr. the head which some vnderstand for heads that is the Rulers but the Chaldee expoundeth it the summe or count see the notes on Exod. 30. 12. This people was numbred by Moses three times in the first yeere after they came out of Egypt when every man gave a ransome for his soule whereby their redemption by Christ was figured Exod. 30. 11 12. c. 38. 25 26. In the second yeere when now they were to be set in order for their encamping about the Sanctuarie and journeying with it towards Canaan whereof the 4. first chapters of this booke doe treat The third and last muster was in the fortieth yeere the last of their travell when all this generation being dead their sonnes were numbred for to receive inheritance in the land of promise a Figure of the Kingdome of Heaven the sonnes of Israel the twelue tribes Gen. 49. 1. 2. 28. So all strangers are excluded from this numbring The Levites also were numbred apart vers 49. c. families or kindreds which next descended of those twelve tribes of which families see Numb 26. 5. c. house that is as the Greeke translateth houses and these were the next descent of the families aforesaid See Ios. 7. 14. Aben Esra here noteth that it is said the house of their fathers because the familie of the mother is not called a familie everymale whereby the females are excluded as also all children vers 3. their polles or their skulles that is as the Greeke translateth their heads meaning the particular persons so in Exod. 38. 26. V. 3. old Hebr. sonne of twentie yeeres that is going in his twentieth yeere of which phrase see the annotations on Gen. 5. 32. So all children and youths under 20. yeeres were not in this account upward some of the Hebrewes limit the time unto sixtie yeeres old R. Menachem on Numb 1. but the law setteth no such limitation that goeth forth to wit usually or is able to goe forth So all that were unable for the warre through old age sicknesse or other infirmities are not mustered here with Israel shall muster or shall number which in the Hebrew and Greeke hath the name of visiting This numbring of Israel signified Gods providence and care over them which extendeth not onely to their persons but to the very haires of their heads which are all numbred Luk. 12. 7. And in that they are numbred or mustred by their armies it shewed whereunto God had called them even to fight the good sight of faith 1 Tim. 6. 12. By the word of truth by the power of God by the armour of righteousnesse on the right hand and on the lest 2 Cor. 6. 7. Therefore they were to follow the Lord and his Tabernacle going before them to fight against the Canaanites as in our spirituall warfare we are to follow Christ Reu. 12. 7. 19. 11. 14. And onely males
for a continuall Burnt-offering yee shall make ready these After this manner ye shall make ready for every day seven daies the bread of the Fire offering of a savour of rest unto Iehovah it shall be made ready beside the continuall Burnt-offering and his Drinke-offering And in the seventh day yee shall have a convocation of holinesse yee shall not doe any servile worke And in the day of the First-fruits when ye offer a new Meat-offering unto Iehovah after your weekes ye shall have a convocation of holinesse ye shall not doe any servile worke And yee shall offer a Burnt-offering for a savour of rest unto Iehovah two bullocks younglings of the herd one ramme seven hee-lambes of the first yeare And their Meat-offering fine flower mingled with oile three tenth parts for one bullocke two tenth parts for one ramme A severall tenth part for one lambe throughout the seven lambes One goat-buck of the goats to make atonement for you Yee shall make them ready beside the continuall Burnt-offering and his Meat-offering perfect shall they be unto you and their Drinke-offerings Annotations COmmand the sonnes of Israel After that God had numbred the people and appointed them their inheritance he now repeateth and explaineth former lawes concerning his service which they should doe unto him in that their inheritance daily weekely monethly and at their solemne Feasts as they fell every yeare for he therefore would give unto them the lands of the heathens and they should inherit the labour of the peoples that they might observe his statutes and keepe his lawes Psal. 105. 44 45. And because they had omitted the solemnizing of these feasts now 38. yeares from the keeping of the Passeover in the wildernesse in the second yeare Num. 9. untill the Circumcision and Passeover at Gilgal Ios. 5. by reason of their travels wherein the Sanctuary Altar and holy things were folden up and removed from place to place and the generation which had beene before mustered was dead Numb 26. 64 65. therefore lest the ordinances formerly given should be forgotten or neglected and the people continue to doe as now they did every man whatsoever was right in his own eyes Deut. 12. 8. the Lord causeth the law of sacrificing to be againe commanded Which sacrifices being all figures of Christ and our service of God by him as hath beene shewed in the booke of Leviticus teach us to serve the Lord under the Gospel of his Sonne in spirit and truth for thereof were these legall feasts a figure Esay 66. 23. Zach. 14. 16 19. 1 Cor. 5. 7 8. Coloss. 2. 16 17. Heb. 13. 15. Mine oblation that is mine oblations in Greek my gifts Hebr. my Korban which is an offering or gift by which men drew nigh unto God through faith in Christ. See the notes on Levit. 1. 2. my bread for my Fire-offerings the Chaldee expoundeth it the bread ordained for my oblations Vnder the name of bread all food is implied and the flesh it selfe or fat of the sacrifices as is noted on Levit. 3. 11. the savour of my rest the savour or odour of sacrifices which may quiet or pacifie my spirit and anger and make you and your service pleasing and acceptable to me The Greeke translateth it for a savour of sweet smell the Chaldee to be accepted with favour See Lev. 1. 9. in his appointed time every one in the time appointed therefore of God the Greeke saith in my feasts for the same word which signifieth an appointed time is also used for a solemne feast appointed of God Levit. 23. 2. Hereby God limiteth every sacrifice his proper day and time which if it were let slip that oblation might not be offered in another day or time This is further manifested in vers 10. where he saith The Burnt-offering of the Sabbath in his Sabbath which the Hebrewes expound thus and not the Burnt-offering of one Sabbath in another Sabbath Maimony tom 3. in Tamidin chap. 1. s. 7. And it is a common proverbe among them Gnabar Zeman gnabar korban If the time be past the oblation is past and it is prophesied of Antiochus the wicked that he should thinke to change the times and the lawes Dan. 7. 25. And Ieroboam king of Israel who kept the feast of the seventh moneth in the eighth moneth is taxed for it in the Scripture which calleth it the moneth which he had devised of his owne heart 1 King 12. 32 33. Vers. 3. the Fire-offering the sacrifices to be burned with fire unto the Lord which Fire signified both the worke of Gods Spirit and the fiery trials and afflictions through which Christ and his children should be consecrated unto God Matth. 3. 11. Hebr. 9. 14. 1 Pet. 4. 12 13 14. of the first yeare Hebr. sonne of the yeare so after often in this and the next chapter of which phrase see the Annotations on Exod. 12. 5. perfect that is perfect lambes without blemish or corruption what this meant is shewed on Lev. 1. 3. and 22. 21. day by day or for a day that is daily a continuall Burnt-offering Hebr. a Burnt-offering of continuation which should be offered without intermission See the notes on Exod. 29. 42. and Levit 1. Vers. 4. make ready or doe that is kill sprinkle the bloud cut in peeces burne on the Altar and all other rites pertaining to sacrificing shewed in Levit. 1. betweene the two evenings that is in the after-noone of which phrase see the Annotations on Exod. 12. 6. God setteth no houres for the morning or evening sacrifices because they might occasionally be changed By the Hebrew Canons the ordinary time of killing the morning sacrifice was before Sun-rising after that the face of all the East was inlightned that is betweene day-breaking and Sun-rising The time of killing the evening sacrifice though it might be all the after-noone yet they used not to kill it till halfe an houre after two of the clocke and this they did by reason of the sacrifices of particular persons or of the congregation because it was unlawfull to offer any oblation at all before the continuall Burnt-offering of the morning neither killed they any oblation after the continuall evening sacrifice save the oblation of the Passeover only for it was unpossible for all Israel to offer their Passeovers in two houres So they killed not the Passeover but after the daily evening sacrifice Maimony in Tamidin chap. 1. sect 3 4. By this daily sacrifice morning and evening was signified the reconciliation of the Church unto God by faith in Christ notwithstanding their continuall infirmities which they fell into night and day as one end of the Burnt-offering was to make atonement for sinnes Iob 1. 5. and that being reconciled they should both shew their thankfulnesse for it unto God and expect from him a blessing upon them their labours and their rest Wherefore at such times speciall favours were shewed of God unto his people as in the morning when the Meat-offering
that is which lieth in his bosome as Mic. 7. 5. Vers. 57. her after-birth and so her little one therein as the Chaldee expoundeth it the least of her children Vers. 58. fearefull in Greeke marvellous Vers. 59. thy plagues or every of thy plagues as the forme of the Hebrew word implieth thy seed Chald. thy children permanent or firme faithfull and continuing long as Tharg Ionath explaineth which shall dure long upon your bodies Vers. 60. disease or sicknesse in Greeke sorrow Of the plagues of Egypt see Exod. 8. c. Vers. 62. with a few men Greeke in a short or small number Chald. a people of number that is soone numbred See this fulfilled Esay 1. 9. hearkenedst not Chaldee receivedst not the word Vers. 63. will rejoyce although the destruction of the wicked is to themselves miserable yet Gods judgements upon them are unto him his Angels and all the Saints joyfull Rev. 18. 20. Ps. 58. 11 12. Ier. 51. 48. for when the wicked perish there is shouting joy Prov. 11. 10. Vers. 64. and unto the end c. that is from one end of the earth to another A like phrase is from the end of the heavens unto the end of them Matt. 24. 31. Mark 13. 27. This dispersion of the Iewes is visible even to this day serve other gods the Chaldee expoundeth it serve peoples that serve idols but it implieth Gods judgment in giving them over to further sinne see the notes on vers 36. Vers. 65. not finde ease or not have quietnesse Vnto this curse of the Law for sinne is opposed the promise of grace in Christ Ier. 31. 2. a trembling heart in Greeke a faint or discouraged heart See Levit. 26. 36. Esay 1. 5. failing of eies in Greeke failing eies that shall looke for deliverance but not see it pining of soule in Greeke a melting soule that is sorrowfull and fearefull See Lev. 26. 16. 1 Sam. 2. 33. Vers. 66. hanging in doubt that is uncertaine as after followeth So the Greeke thy life shall bee hanging before thine eies not have assurance of thy life or not beleeve in thy life in Greeke not beleeve thy life that is have no assurance of it but alwaies feare death Vers. 67. Who will give that is O that it were evening see Deut. 5. 29. A lively description of misery wherein every houre by night or by day seemeth long and tedious Compare Iob 7. 3 4. Vers. 68. to Egypt the house of bondage Exod. 20. 2. and figure of spirituall bondage under sinne and Satan in which estate the Law leaveth all men till they be redeemed by grace in Christ. So another Prophet saith They shall not dwell in I●hovahs land but Ephraim shall returne to Egypt and they shall eat uncleane things in Assyria Hos. 9. 3. CHAP. XXIX Mos●● being to renew the covenant exhorteth Israel to obedience by the m●mory of the workes they have seene 10 All stand before the Lord to enter into his covenant 18 The great wrath on him that flattereth himselfe in his wickednesse 29 Secret things belong unto God THese are the words of the covenant which Iehovah commanded Moses to strike with the sonnes of Israel in the land of Moab beside the covenant which he stroke with them in Horeb. And Moses called unto all Israel and said unto them You have seene all that Iehovah did before your eies in the land of Egypt unto Pharaoh and unto all his servants and unto all his land The great tentations which th●e eies have seene the signes and those great wonders Yet Iehovah hath not given unto you an heart to know and eies to see and eares to heare unto this day And I have lead you forty yeares in the wildernesse your cloathes are not waxen old upon you and thy shooe is not waxen old upon thy foot Ye have not eaten bread neither have you drunke wine or strong drinke that yee might know that I am Iehovah your God And yee came unto this place and Sihon king of Heshbon and Ogh king of Bashan came out against us unto battell and wee smote them And we tooke their land and gave it for an inheritance to the Reubenites and to the Gadites and to halfe the tribe of the Manassites Therefore yee shall keepe the words of this covenant and doe them that ye may wisely doe all that ye● doe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yee stand this day all of you before Ieho 〈…〉 your God your heads of your tribes your elders and your officers all the men of 〈◊〉 Your little ones your wives and thy 〈◊〉 that is within thy campe from the 〈◊〉 of thy wood unto the drawer of thy water That thou shouldest passe into the covenant of Iehovah thy God and into his 〈◊〉 which Iehovah thy God striketh with ●●ee this day That hee may stablish thee this day for a people unto himselfe and that he may bee unto thee a God as hee hath spoken unto thee and as hee hath sworne unto thy fathers to Abraham to Isaac and to Iakob And not with you your selves alone doe I strike this covenant and this oath But with him that is standing here with us this day before Iehovah your God and with him that is not here with us this day For ye know how we have dwelt in the land of Egypt and how wee have passed in the midst of the nations which yee passed by And yee have seene their abominations and their filthy idols wood and stone silver and gold which were with them Lest there should be among you man or woman or family or tribe whose heart turneth away this day from Iehovah our God to goe to serve the gods of those nations lest there should bee among you a root that beareth gall and wormewood And it be when he heareth the words of this oath that hee blesse himselfe in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walke in the imagination of mine heart to adde the drunken to the thirsty Iehovah will not spare him but then the anger of Iehovah and his jealousie shall smoke against that man and every curse that is written in this book shall lie upon him and Iehovah will blo● out his name from under the heavens And Iehovah will separate him unto evill out of all the tribes of Israel according to all the curses of the covenant that is written in this book of the Law And the after generation your sonnes that shall rise up after you and the stranger that shall come from a farre land shall say when they shall see the plagues of that land and the sicknesses thereof wherewith Iehovah hath made it sicke That all the land thereof is brimstone salt and burning that it is not sowen neither springeth nor any grasse groweth therein like the overthrow of Sodom and Gomorr●h Admah and Zebojim which Iehovah overthrew in his anger in his wrath Even all nations shall say Wherefore hath Iehovah done thus unto this land what meaneth the heat
of this great anger Then they shall say Because they have forsaken the covenant of Iehovah the God of their fathers which he strucke with them when he brought them forth out of the land of Egypt For they went and served other gods and bowed themselves downe unto them gods whom they knew not and hee had not imparted unto them And the anger of Iehovah was kindled against this land to bring upon it every curse that is written in this booke And Iehovah rooted them out of their land in anger and in wrath and in great indignation and cast them into another land as it is this day The secret things belong unto Iehovah our God and the things revealed belong unto us and to our sonnes forever to doe all the words of this Law Annotations TO strike or to cut whereof see the notes on Gen. 15. 18. Here the covenant is renewed betweene God and the people and it is the same in effect with the covenant made at Horeb Exod. 19. and 24. save that Christ who is the end of the legall covenant is here more cleerely revealed especially in Chap. 30. vers 11 14. of Moab the countrey on the out side of Iordan whereof see Deut. 1. 1 5. in Horeb or Choreb that is mount Sinai where the covenant was given Ex. 20. and the blessings and curses for confirmation thereof Lev. 26. 3 46. Vers. 3. tentations or trialls whereby God tried the Israelites faith and the hardnesse of the Egyptians in letting Israel goe see Deut. 4. 34. and 7. 19. From Gods former benefits whereof they had experience hee exhorteth them unto the keeping of the covenant Vers. 4. not given unto you This sheweth the unability of man to understand the things of God without the gift of God And long after this Paul complaineth of the Iewes even unto this day when Moses is read the veile is laid over their hearts 2 Cor. 3. 15. and Christ saith that to them it was not given to understand the mysteries of the kingdome of heaven Matt. 13. 11 13 14. Vers. 5. upon you or from upon you that is so as you should put them off and cast them from you Compare Deut. 8. 4. Vers. 6. bread to wit ordinary bread out of the earth but God hath nourished you with Manna the bread of heaven Psal. 78. 24 25. Deut. 8. 3. Vers. 7. Sihon in Greeke Seon king of Esebon Of this history see Num. 21. Vers. 8. wee tooke in Chaldee wee subdued to the Reubenites in Chaldee to the tribe of Reuben c. See the performance hereof in Num. 32. Vers. 9. wisely doe or prudently carry and with understanding and consequently prosper so in 1 King 2. 3. Ios. 1. 7 8. Here beginneth the one and fiftieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 section of the Law see the notes on Gen. 6. 9. Vers. 10. your heads of your tribes that is your heads or chiefe men which are the heads of your tribes the Greeke translateth them by one word Archiphuloi that is the chiefe or Rulers of the tribes Vers. 11. thy stranger in Greeke the proselyte which is in the midst of your campe Such of that mixed multitude as came out of Egypt with Israel Exod. 12. 38. and others that had joyned themselves to the Church hewer of thy wood such ashewed wood and drew water were the basest servants or slaves of Israel as afterward was the case of the Gibeonites Ios. 9. 21 27. who also by faith were admitted into the Church and covenant of Israel Vers. 12. That thou shouldest passe He speaketh to them all as to one man and to passe into the covenant is a phrase taken from the manner of making covenants when they passed betweene the parts of the sacrifices Gen. 15. 17. Ier. 34. 18 19 20. his oath or his execration in Greeke his curses because they tooke the curses of the Law upon them if they kept not the Covenant This is called the oath of God Eccles. 8. 2. So this people returned from the captivity of Babylon entred into a curse and into an oath to walke in Gods law which was given by the hand of Moses Neh. 10. 29. Vers. 13. a God or for a God this is the substance of the Covenant even such as is made with us in Christ 2 Cor. 6. 16. Heb. 8. 10. Rev. 21. 3. See the Annotations on Gen. 17. 7. Vers. 15. not here meaning their posterity throughout all generations to whom this covenant did alike belong So in Thargum Ionathan it is expounded and with every generation that shall rise up unto the worlds end c. But this is to be understood with exception of the new Covenant which God promised and hath now stablished unto us in Christ Ier. 31. 31 32 33. Heb. 8. 7 8 9 10. Vers. 16. how wee have dwelt or that which we have dwelt which Ionathan expoundeth the number of yeares that wee have dwelt This their peregrination in Egypt and deliverance thence with Gods gracious conduct of them thorow the wildernesse are named as motives to perswade unto obedience Vers. 17. filthy idols in Hebr. Gillulim whereof see Levit. 26. 30. in Greeke Idols Vers. 18. Lest there should be or as the Greeke and Chaldee explaine it That there be not whose heart the heart is to bee kept with all diligence because out of it are the issues of life Prov. 4. 23. According therefore to this Paul warneth the Israelites Take heed brethren lest there be in any of you an evill heart of unbeleefe in departing from the living God Heb. 3. 12. from Iehovah in Chaldee from the feare of the Lord. the gods in Chaldee the idols of the peoples a root an evill heart forementioned which is hidden from men as the root is hidden in the earth but the fruits after doe appeare The Chaldee translateth it a man beareth or fructifieth beareth fruit in Greeke springeth up which word Paul useth in Hebr. 12. 15. gall and wormwood the Greeke translateth with gall and bitternesse whereby is meant sinnes as the Chaldee explaineth it and as it was said to Simon Magus Thou art in the gall of bitternesse and in the bond of iniquity Act. 8. 23. The Apostle respecting this place saith lest any root of bitternesse springing up trouble you Heb. 12. 15 for enc●oles with gall saying enochlee trouble Gall or Hem 〈…〉 ke was a bitter and poisonous weed growing in the East countries as appeareth by Hos. 10. 4. and wormewood likewise which are applied sometime to sinnes as here and in Amos 6. 12. Deuteronom 32. 32. sometime to bitter punishments as in Ier. 9. 15. and 23. 15. Lament 3. 15 19. Vers. 19. of this oath or as the Greeke saith of this curse see vers 12. I shall have peace or peace shall be unto me that is safety and prosperity without hurt or punishment imagination or contemplation that which the heart hath spied out and looketh unto So the Chaldee translateth it imagination or conceit but the Greeke
signifieth From is sometime put for unto by the interpretation of the Holy Ghost himselfe as from Baale of Iudah 2 Sam. 6. 2. is by another Prophet explained to Baalah 1 Chron. 13. 6. So the Deliverer shall come from or out of Sion Rom. 11. 26. is the same that hee shall come unto Sion Esay 59. 20. Min hashamajim from heaven 2 Chron. 6. 21. is El hashamajim unto or in heaven 1 King 8. 30. Thus Mikkedem is to the East or Eastward Gen. 13. 11. Mitsts●phon is Northward 1 Sam. 14. 5. and sundrie the like Sinai is a mountaine in Arabia Gal. 4. 25. where God gave his Law Exod. 19. from or out of that mountaine God came unto Israel and as the Chaldee interpreteth was revealed there unto them and from thence came with his people to conduct them towards Canaan Or came unto Sinai and to his people there And this is the first chiefe blessing unto Israel Gods Law Tabernacle Statutes and Iudgments given them at Sinai after which hee called them to journey towards the Land of promise Deut. 2. 6 7. rose up as the Sunne ariseth for of that rising the Hebrew word is properly used The Chaldee translateth it the brightnesse of his glory from Seir appeared unto us So Esaias prophesying grace to the Church saith The glory of Iehovah is risen as the Sunne upon thee And of the heavenly Ierusalem which Christ hath built it is said The Citie hath no need of the Sunne neither of the Moone to shine in it for the glory of God doth lighten it and the Lambe is the light thereof Rev. 21. 23. from Seir the mountaine of the Edomites Deut. 2. 4. 5. As Israel compassed Edoms land they were stung with fiery serpents for their murmuring then God appointed the Brazen serpent a figure of Christ to be set up to heale them Num. 21 4. 9. And here was a second degree of grace whereby God shined unto them as he doth unto us by his Gospell after wee have beene under the Schoolemaster of his Law Rom. 7. 4 25. Gal. 3. 23 24 26. unto them or unto him meaning Israel therefore the Chaldee expoundeth it unto us shined forth or shined bright and cleare as the Sunne shineth in his strength This word is used for the cleare manifestation of Gods power in saving his people or punishing their enemies Psal. 82. and 94. 1. and 50. 2. The Greeke here translateth hee hastened from mount Pharan the Chaldee hee was revealed in his might upon mount Paran Pharan or Paran the name of a mount and of the wildernesse of the Ismaelites Gen. 21. 21. thorow which Israel travelled Num. 10. 12. Neere it Moses by the Spirit of God explained the law more cleerly repeated this booke of Deuteron Deut. 1. 1 c. So the Prophet after speaketh the Holy one came from mount Pharan Selah Habak 3. 3. Some of the Hebrewes understand these things otherwise thus Hee rose up from Seir unto them that is to the sonnes of Esan that they might receive the Law but they would not From thence hee went to the sonnes of Ismael that they might receive it but they would not And then he came unto Israel R. Sol. Iarchi on Deut. 33. So Ionathan in his Thargum on this place and R. Eliezer in Pirkei chap. 41. But unto us it sheweth the third degree of Gods grace who after wee are come unto Christ by faith doth sanctifie us by his Spirit informing us in his truth and waies and so prepareth us to enter into his heavenly rest as by Moses he prepared Israel to enter into the Land of Canaan Rom. 8. 2 3 11. Gal. 3. 2 14. and 4. 6. and 5. 16 18 of Saints Hebr. of sanctitie meaning spirits of sanctity which Ionathan in his Thargum expoundeth holy Angels So Stephen saith that Israel received the Law by thy disposition of Angels Act. 7. 53. and Paul calleth the Law the word spoken by Angels Heb. 2. 2. So wee by grace in Christ are come to ten thousands of Angels Heb. 12. 22. which are all ministring spirits sent forth to minister for them who shall bee heires of salvation Heb. 1. 14. Compare Psal. 68. 18. Or by Saints wee may understand the Israelites as in v. 3. with whom or for whom God came from Sinai from his right hand to wit went or at his right hand was the fire of the Law or of the ordinance Hebr. Esh dath of which word Dath the Greekes borrowed their word Tatto to order or ordaine the Legall fire or the fiery Law and it is so called because the Lord spake those words out of the midst of the fine Deut. 5. 22. and to shew the nature and effect of the Law which is like fire Ier. 23. 29. The Greeke translateth it Angels Angels with him the Chaldee thus his right hand wrote out of the midst of fire the Law he gave unto us Answerable to this Legall fire is that fire of the Law of the Spirit which was given with cloven tongues like fire Act. 2. 3 4. The Hebrewes say by tradition that the Law appeared written with blacke fire upon white fire before the Lord. R. Moses Gerundens and Sol. Iarchi on Deut. 33. which seemeth to be either mysticall or fabulous Vnto us the fire of the Law is the Spirit of God whiles wee being baptized with the holy Spirit and with fire Matth. 3. 11. are by the Law of the Spirit of life in Christ Iesus made free from the Law of sinne and death Rom. 8. 2. Vers. 3. Yea the lover of the peoples that is yea or certainly hee loveth or thou O God lovest the peoples or protectest them The Hebrew Chobeb signifieth a loving embracing or hiding as in the bosome and so implyeth Love and Protection And the peoples are meant of the tribes of Israel as in Iudg. 5. 14. after thee Benjamin among thy peoples and in Act. 4. 27. the peoples of Israel The Greeke translateth And he spared his people the Chaldee yea he loved them for tribes that is of his love chose and disposed them to be tribes It may imply also the strangers converted unto God And now in Christ there is neither Iew nor Greeke neither bond nor free for we are all one in him Gal. 3. 28. all his Saints that is the Saints of Israel as the Chaldee expoundeth all the Saints of the house of Israel Or the Saints of God as in Psal. 34. 10. Feare Iehovah yee his Saints So his Saints may be used for thy Saints as his commandements Dan. 9. 4. for thy commandements see the notes on Deut. 5. 10. in thine hand in thy power and custody under thy guidance care and protection Hand is often for power so the Chaldee here translateth with power hee brought them out of Egypt and in the hand is under the guidance and direction Num. 4. 28 33. so the Greeke here translateth and all the sanctified ones are under thine hand It noteth the safety of Gods
confessed to be exceeding great Nat. Hist. l. 37. c. 1. And Claudius the Romane Emperour used to weare Emeralds and Sardonyches Plin. ibidem c. 6. so that the Latine Poets when they noted men for their statelinesse spake of their hands garnished with Sardonyches Martial l. 3. Iuvenal Sat. 6. and shew of what esteeme they were in saying gemma● princeps Sardonychus loculis quae custoditur eburnis Iuvenal Sat. 13. The reason alleaged from Rev. 7. 5 8. that the tribes are there reckoned up by the Holy Ghost with omission of Dan otherwise than they are reckoned in any place of the old Testament weakneth not but rather confirmeth that which I have said For as there is no new person put in stead of any tribe or new name given to any tribe but such as was given before in the old Testament so neither is it likely that in Rev. 21. any other new stone should be placed than such as agreeth with the description of Moses so that the Sardonyx should be looked for in Exo. 28. among the rest Againe the omission of Dan in Rev. 7. accordeth very well with the old Testament for though Iosephs sonnes Ephraim and Manasses made two tribes Genes 48. 5 6. Num. 1. 10 33 35. so that after a sort there were thirteene yet the Scripture usually nameth and reckoneth them but twelve that the name of the twelve tribes is famous also in the new Testament Luke 22. 30. Act. 26. 7. Iam. 1. 1. Rev. 21. 12. And when they are reckoned by the Prophets one commonly is omitted for either Ioseph is named in stead of his two sonnes as in Gen. 49. or if they two be mentioned Levi for his separation to the Lords service in the Tabernacle is omitted as in Num. 13. and often or if both hee and they be expressed some one of the other is let passe as Simeon is unnamed in the blessing of the tribes Deut. 33. Accordingly the Spirit of God in Rev. 7. naming Levi and Manasses and Ioseph for his sonne Ephraim was to omit the name of some other unlesse hee should have counted 13. tribes contrary to the course of the Scriptures and scope of the matter there in hand Why Dan is not named in Revel 7. or Simeon in Deut. 33. belongeth not to this question it sufficeth that there is no new practise in Rev. 7. differing from the Prophets neither need we looke for any innovation among the precious stones Rev. 21. Thus have I according to the measure of knowledge which God hath given me and as the extreme infirmity of my body would permit made answer to the chiefe matters objected especially such as concerne the Scriptures and may by them be decided Other things wherein I have shewed either mine owne or other mens judgement I will not contend about Let not any thing which I have written be accepted without triall or further than it agreeth with the truth The learned which have interpreted and opened the Scriptures have had their second thoughts and altered both their versions and Expositions in sundry 〈◊〉 as all men know but in part For things wherein I have missed I humbly crave pardon of God and of his people to such as have the spirit in them that lusteth after envie I wish a better minde to such as love the truth encrease of knowledge and grace and for ought that is good and profitable in my labours the praise therefore be unto him that is Authour of every good gift and worke the benefit thereof unto those that love his Name which be blessed for ever Amen ANNOTATIONS VPON THE BOOKE OF PSALMES WHEREIN THE HEBREW WORDS and sentences are compared with and explained by the ancient Greeke and Chaldee versions but chiefly by conference with the Holy Scriptures BY HENRY AINSWORTH 2 SAM 23. 1 2. David the sonne of Iesse said And the man who was raised up on high the anointed of the God of Iakob and the sweet Psalmist of Israel said The Spirit of Iehovah spake by me and his word was in my tongue LVKE 24. 44. All things must be fulfilled which are written in the Law of Moses and in the Prophets and in the Psalmes LONDON Printed by John Haviland for John Bellamie and are to be sold at his shop neere the ROYALL EXCHANGE 1626. A PREFACE CONCERNING DAVID his Life and Acts. DAVID the sonne of Iesse of the tribe of Iudah of the linage of Abraham in the a 1 Chron. 2. Matth. 1. 1. 17. fourteenth generation was borne in Bethlehem a towne in the tribe of Iudah in the land of Canaan about 2917 yeares after the creation of the world in the daies when Samuel the Prophet was Iudge of Israel He was the b 1 Chro. 2. 15. seventh and youngest of all Iesses sonnes of least esteeme among them and set to keepe his fathers c 1 Sam. 16. 11. sheepe In the three and twentieth yeere of his life he was by Samuel the Prophet privately in Bethlehem anointed d 1 Sam. 16. 13. King over Israel in the midst of his brethren and the Spirit of the Lord came upon him from that day forward He was e Vers. 12. ruddy of a beautifull countenance and goodly to looke to a f Vers. 18. cunning player on the Harpe a mightie valiant man of warre and prudent in speech and a comely person and the Lord was with him Who also gave him these testimonies and promises g Act. 13. 22. I have found David the sonne of Iesse a man after mine owne heart which shall fulfill 〈◊〉 my will h Psal. 89. 19. I have laid helpe on one that is mighty I have exalted one chosen out of the people with whom i Vers. 21. my hand shall be established mine arme also shall strengthen him I will k Vers. 23 c. beat downe his foes before his face and plague them that hate him In my name shall his horne be exalted I will set his hand in the sea and his right hand in the rivers I will make him my first-borne higher than the Kings of the earth My mercy will I keepe for him for ever and my covenant shall stand fast with him his seed will I make to endure for ever and his throne as the daies of heaven c. After Davids anointing in Bethlehem he went againe and fed his l 1 Sam. 16. 19. fathers sheep but the Spirit of God wrought mightily in him He killed m 1 Sam. 17. Goliath the Philistian Giant from whose face n Vers. 24. all the men of Israel fled away for feare David overcame him in the name of the Lord of hosts with a sling and with a stone He was a cunning Musitian and o 1 Sam. 16. 23. playing on his Harpe with his hand he refreshed King Saul tho was vexed with an evill spirit from the Lord. He was imployed in warres against 〈◊〉 Philistians and p 1 Sam. 18. 5. whither soever Saul sent him
so after in vers 13. see Psal. 35. 18. above telling that is moe than I or any can tell or moe than can be told Vers. 7. thou wouldest not or delightedst not Christ was to cause the sacrifice and oblation to cease D●● 9. 27. because it was unpossible that they should purge sinnes Hebr. 10. 4. therefore speaketh hee thus to God his Father Heb. 10. 5. mine eares or eares to me see Psal. 3. 1. digged open or pierced that is thou hast made mee obedient to thy voice contrary to which is the stopping of the eare Psal. 58. 5. so the Chaldee explaineth it thou hast digged open mine eares to hearken unto thy commandements Or mine eares thou hast boared as thy servant for ever according to the law Exod. 21. 6. The Greeke Interpreters to make the sense plainer say but a body hast thou fitted to me meaning that his body was ordained and fitted to be a sacrifice for the sinnes of the world when the other legall sacrifices were refused as unprofitable And thus the Apostle alleageth the words following the Greeke Hebr. 10. 5 10. burnt-offering sacrifice that goeth all up in fire See Psal. 20. 4. sin-offering or expiation oblation for sinne as the Apostle calleth it Hebr. 10. The word Sinne is often in the Law put for the sin-offering Levit. 4. 24 c. Exod. 29. 14 So the Apostle saith Him that knew no sin he made sin that is a sin-offering for us 2 Cor. 5. 21. Vers. 8. Loe I come or am come to wit into the world Hebr. 10. 5. and particularly to Ierusalem to give my selfe a sacrifice for sinne See Mark 10. 32 33 34. The Chaldee not understanding this mystery paraphraseth Loe I enter into life eternall when I have studied or exercised my selfe in the roll of the booke of the law which is written for me alluding as it seemeth to Deut. 17. vers 18 19 20. the roll or volume of the booke that is a booke or scroll of paper or parchment rolled up The like phrase is used Ier. 36. 2 c. Ezek. 2. 9. c. The Hebrew Sepher book is used generally for any writings evidences bils court-rolls c. Deut. 24. 1. 2 King 5. 5 6. Ier. 32. 11. and the bookes in Israel were written in long scrolles and folden or wrapped up Hence is that phrase the heavens shall be folden up like a booke Isa. 34. 4. Rev. 6. 14. it is written So Chist saith The son of man goeth as it is written of him Mat. 26. 24. and Moses wrote of me Ioh. 5. 46. See also Luk. 24. 44. 46. Act. 13. 29. Vers. 9. thy acceptable will by the which will we are sanctified even by the offering of the body of Iesus Christ once Heb. 10. 10. See also Ioh. 6. 38. Luk. 22. 42. Vers. 10. I have preached the glad tidings of or I have evangelized justice of this word the Evangelie or Gospell hath the name the Greeke signifying Good tidings and the English also to like effect made of the Saxon godspell that is a good speech And the justice here meant is thus set forth by the Apostle Now is the justice of God made manifest without the law having witnesse of the law and of the Prophets namely the justice of God by the faith of Iesus Christ unto all and upon all that beleeve c. Rom. 3. 21 22. the great church or assembly congregation So Psal. 22. 23. close not up restraine not as in a prison that words should not be uttered Ier. 32. 2 3. Vers. 11. I said that is mentioned and spoke of as 2 Sam. 6. 22. to the great church the word to is referred to Gods mercy and truth extended to the church The Greeke referreth it to concealed and translateth from the great church And the Hebrew elsewhere usually speaketh Psal. 69. 6. and 78. 4. and 139. 15. Vers. 13. iniquities this word as the former evils is sometime used for sinne sometime for the punishment of sinne See Psal. 31. 11. Vers. 14. Vouchsafe or Let it please thee Vers. 15. to make an end of it to consume or destroy it Compare this conclusion with the 70. Psalme Vers. 16. made desolate or wondrously wasted unto amazednesse and astonishment So after in Psal. 46. 9. and 69. 26. and 73. 19. and 79. 7. for a reward or an end of their shame that they would bring upon me End is used for reward as Psal. 19. 12. or For because of their shame The Hebrew word sometime signifieth because Isa. 5. 23. Genes 22. 18. Deut. 7. 12. aha the Chaldee openeth it with this paraphrase wee are glad at his destruction Vers. 18. thinketh on me in Greeke hath care of me in Chaldee thinketh good for me delay not prolong not the time till the last and consequently faile not The word is so to tarry or linger as to disappoint one of his expectation as Habak 2. 3. Though it tarry wait thou for it shall surely come and shall not delay that is not faile And thus may we understand other like Scriptures as Deut. 7. 10. God will not delay that is not faile to reward him that hateth him Deut. 23. 21. when thou vowest a vow to the Lord thou shalt not delay that is not faile to pay it So Exod. 22. 29. and sundry the like PSAL. XLI David prophesieth of Christs poverty and afflictions 5 His prayer and complaint of his enemies 10 Iudas his treachery 11 Christs resurrection and glorie for which he blesseth God To the Master of the Musicke a Psalme of David O Blessed is hee that prudently attendeth unto the poore weakling in the day of evill Iehovah will deliver him Iehovah will keepe him and preserve him alive he shall be made blessed in the earth and give thou him not to the soule of his enemies Iehovah will uphold him on the bed-sted of languishing sorrow all his bed thou hast turned in his sicknesse I did say Iehovah be gracious to me heale my soule for I have sinned against thee My enemies said evill of me when shall he die and his name perish And if he come to see he speaketh false vanitie in his heart he heapeth up painfull iniquitie to him selfe he goeth forth abroad he speaketh it Together against me whisper doe all that hate me against me they thinke evill to me A mischievous thing is fastened in him and he that lieth downe shall no more rise up Also the man of my peace he whom I trusted in that eateth my bread he hath greatly lifted up the heele against me And thou Iehovah be gracious to me and raise me up and I shall repay them By this I know that thou delightest in me because my enemie shall not shout triumphantly over me And me thou hast sustained me in mine integritie and hast setled me before thy face for ever Blessed is Iehovah the God of Israel from eternitie and unto eternity Amen and Amen Annotations THat prudently attendeth or skilfully carieth himselfe it
implieth both a skilfull minding or judging and a cariage according in word and deed therefore the Chaldee paraphraseth attendeth to the affaires of the poore to have pitie on him the poore weakling The Hebrew Dal hath the signification of drawing out or emptying and is applied to the weake leane sickly whose flesh and health is spent Gen. 41. 19. 2 Sam. 13. 4. and to the poore whose wealth is wasted Psal. 72. 13. and 113. 7. opposed to the rich Exod. 30. 15. And as the poore are thus called weake thinne or leane so rich and great men are called thicke or fat Psal. 78. 31. The poore weakling treated of here was David and his sonne Christ as appeareth by the 10. verse compared with Ioh. 13. 18. Vers. 3. preserve him alive conserve his life and health as Deut. 20. 16. or restore him to health from sicknesse as Hezekiah is said to live when he recovered his health Isa. 38. 9. 21. give thou him not he turneth his speech to the Lord and so againe in the next verse to the soule that is to the lust or will as Luke 23. 25. see Psal. 27. 12. The Greeke saith into the hands the Chaldee to the will Vers. 4. languishing sorrow or of sicknesse feeblenesse The Chaldee expoundeth it thus The Word of the Lord will helpe him in his life and will appeare unto him on the bed of his sicknesse thou hast turned or hast changed It may be understood either of making his bed easie that is comfortable in his sicknesse or of changing his estate from lying sicke to sitting up in health Vers. 5. heale my soule that is heale me who now am sicke or heale my soule of sinnes infirmities c. so God healed the people when hee pardoned their uncleannesse 2 Chron. 30. 20. and healeth the broken hearted Psal. 147. 3. And that which the Prophet speaketh of healing of the people the Evangelist expoundeth of forgiving them their sins Isa. 6. 10. Mark 4. 12. Mat. 13. 15. Vers. 7. abroad or in the street Vers. 9. A mischievous thing or Some devillish matter Heb. a word of Belial See word for thing in Psal. 7. 1. and Belial which the Chaldee here translateth perverse and wicked in Psal. 18. 5. And both joyned as here in Psal. 101. 3. Deut. 15. 9. It may be understood of some odious sin and wicked vice or of some grievous punishmet for the same is fastned or is powred into him The originall word signifieth both and may denote the greatnesse and fast cleaving of his sin and likewise of his punishment for plagues are said to be powred out Rev. 16. 1. c. 〈◊〉 shall no more rise or shall not adde to rise Vers. 10. the man of my peace that is my familiar friend which was at peace with me as Iudas Christs owne disciple The Chaldee expoundeth it the man that should have sought my peace greatly lifted up or magnified the heele or the foot-sole that is hath insolently and contumeliously abused me seeking my ouerthrow And this Christ applied to himselfe Ioh. 13. 18. Hee that eateth bread with me hath lift up the heele against me Vers. 12. shout triumphantly this word noteth any loud sound with voice or trumpet as Iosh. 6. 5. 20. Numb 10. 7. sometime a sorrowfull crying out as Ierem. 20. 16. but commonly joyfull shouting as here and after Psal. 81. 2. and 47. 2. and 66. 1. Vers. 13. And I or As for me Vers. 14. Amen or as the Greeke translateth So be it But the Hebrew word Amen is used in the Greeke English and all other languages to betoken vnity of faith and spirit and it implieth both a wishing of the thing so to be and a perswasion in faith that so it shall be when it is added in the end of blessings prayers or imprecations Num. 5. 22. Deut. 27. 15 c. Matth. 6. 13. 1 Cor. 14. 16. It is used also in the beginning of speeches and then it is an earnest asserveration as Ioh. 6. 26. Amen Amen that is Verily Verily For so else-where when one Evangelist saith Amen Mat. 24. 47. another speaking of the same thing saith Uerily or truly Luk. 12. 44. Sometime it is the title of God himselfe Isa. 65. 16. and of Christ Revel 3. 14. because of his faithfulnesse and truth in performing all promises The Chaldee paraphraseth upon this verse thus Blessed be the name of the LORD the God of Israel from this world and unto the world to come and let the just say Amen and Amen The second Booke PSAL. XLII The Prophet sheweth his desire to appeare before God 4 his teares for his absence 6 hee checketh himselfe for his weaknesse 8 complaineth of his troubles 12 and encourageth his soule to trust in God To the Master of the Musicke an instructing Psalme to the sonnes of Korach AS the Hinde desirously brayeth for the streames of waters so my soule desirously brayeth unto thee O God My soule thirsteth for God for the living God when shall I come and appeare before the face of God! My teares have beene to me bread day and night while they say unto me all the day where is thy God These things I remember and powre out upon mee my soule because I had passed with the throng had resorted with them unto the house of God with voice of shouting and confession a multitude keeping festivitie Why ●owest thou downe thy selfe my soule and makest thou a tumultuous stirre within me wait hopefully for God for yet I shall confesse him the salvations of his face My God within mee my soule boweth downe it selfe for that I remember thee from the land of Iordan and Hermonim from the little mountaine Deepe unto deepe calleth at the voice of thy water-spouts all thy billowes and thy waves doe passe over me By day Iehovah will command his mercy and in the night his song with me a prayer to the God of my life I will say to God my Rock why hast thou forgotten me why goe I sad for the oppression of the enemie With a murdering weapon in my bones my distressers doe reproach me when they say unto me all the day where is thy God Why bowest thou downe thy selfe my soule and why makest thou a tumultuous stirre within me wait hopefully for God for yet I shall confesse him the salvations of my face and my God Annotations THe second booke to wit of Psalmes For though they be all compiled in one volume as were also the small Prophets which thereupon is called The booke of the Psalmes Act. 1. 20. as The booke of the Prophets Act. 7. 42. yet in the Hebrew there are five bookes the first reacheth to the end of the 41. Psalme fore-going which is concluded with Amen and Amen The second to the 72. Psalme concluded also with Amen Amen and the end of Davids Prayers The third reacheth to the 89. Psalme concluded likewise with Amen and Amen The fourth unto the 106. Psalme whose conclusion is Amen