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A52807 A compleat history and mystery of the Old and New Testament logically discust and theologically improved : in four volumes ... the like undertaking (in such a manner and method) being never by any author attempted before : yet this is now approved and commended by grave divines, &c. / by Christopher Ness ... Ness, Christopher, 1621-1705. 1696 (1696) Wing N449; ESTC R40047 3,259,554 1,966

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more solid reason of their dying within that term is rather to shew that the life of man though it be never so long yet in respect of Eternity is very short and not a day but a magnum nihil Mine age saith David my World Heb. That is my abode in the World is as nothing Psal 39.5 Punctum est quod vivimus puncto minus 't is but a point and less than a point so though never so long yet far off from perfection 'T is but a small space of time that the longest liver hath on Earth compar'd with Eternity in Heaven The Phrase and he died is added at the end of all those ancient Patriarchs to shew how unalterable was that grand Stature of Heaven Thou shalt die the Death Gen. 2.17 And 't is appointed unto all men once to die Heb. 9.27 So that the youngest and strongest should be mindful of their mortality learning to die daily as Paul did 1 Cor. 15.31 And to make death familiar to us at Bed and Board for as young as we and as strong as we do daily drop down into the dust The Proverb saith assoon goes the Lambs Skin to the Market as that of the old Sheep 'T is a witty and yet a worthy saying That while Death was but a young Archer newly come into the World and unexperienced he could not hit the mark for many hundred years Hence it was that those Primitive Patriarchs most of the Ten lived nine hundred years why Death then could not hit them with his Killing Dart any sooner but now he is become a better Marks-man and can strike down right Dead within the term of one hundred nay at seventy years Psal 90.10 which number is there stated as the term of Man's Life few exceed it and fewer attain to it As mens wickedness increased so the length of their lives decreased even in Mose's time who was the Pen-man of that 90th Psalm as the title telleth Yea Death learns to hit the mark sooner now for mens lives are daily shortened and Generations are fast justled out of their Beings to give place for others Eccles 1.4 The Stage of the Earth still standing in its place while the Actors upon it are often changed that so the World may come the sooner to its End and though there be some singular Examples of a longer life yet in the general 't is observ'd that more Die before they be Ten years old since Death became such a cunning Archer than there be that live above Sixty Yea some of Mankind there be whom Death sends out of the World as soon as Life hath led them into the World whose short passage is ab Utero ad Urnam from the Grave of the Womb to the Womb of the Grave There is but a little inter-space 'twixt their lying in the Womb and being laid in their Tomb Living in the former but Dead in the latter Besides how many die in their youth while their bones are full of marrow and their veins full of blood They perish in the midst of their way Psal 2.12 like the Jay pruning her self on the Tree Death shoots his Arrow and down they tumble while they hope in themselves to see many fair Summers The 4th Circumstance concerning Enoch's Appearance is the Function Capacity and Condition wherein he Appeared This is twofold 1. Publick as a Prophet of God and a Preacher of Gods Word or Will 2. Private as a Professor and a Practiser of Godliness both in the Form and in the Power of it in his walking with God 1. Of the first he appeared in the Quality both of a Prophet and of a Preacher both were publick Functions 1. Of a Prophet The Apostle Jude expresly mentioneth Enochs Prophecy Judes Ep. v. 14 15. How Jude came to this is uncertain There be two opinions concerning it the 1. is that the Apostle Jude had these two verses out of a book call'd the Prophecy of Enoch whereof Origen Tertullian Jerom Augustin Bede c. make mention That there was such a Book called by that name in those primitive times of the Fathers is not denied but all the doubt lieth 1. Whether Enoch was its Author Or 2. Whether Jude quoted those his two verses out of that Book considering 1. Because none of the Prophets either Moses Samuel or those after them in the Old Testament quotes any such book as those of Moses are by after-prophets 2. Because no such book is mentioned to be kept either in Moses Tabernacle or in Solomons Temple as the Tables of the Testimony were in the Ark of the Covenant 3. Because the Old Testament Church had no such book among all their Canonical Scriptures before their Babylonish Captivity 4. Because had there been such a book Moses could not have concealed it seeing the Creation of the World the History of all the primitive Patriarchs from Adam to himself were so distinctly revealed to him and had there been any such book in a true being he could not be ignorant of it but would have mentioned it as he doth all other things from the beginning Especially in his History of Enoch 5. Because if Enoch had indeed writ such a book then Moses had not been the first writer which all learned Authors both Protestant and Popish do acknowledge and which the words of our Lord Beginning at Moses he expounded unto them in all the Scriptures the things concerning himself Luk. 24.27 do import for had Enoch writ a book before Moses Christ would have begun at Enoch and not at Moses 6. Because neither Philo nor Josephus two learned writers of the Jewish antiquities do make mention of such a book of Enoch now they both being curious observers and careful preservers of all memorable Monuments would undoubtedly have discovered such a precious treasure as could not but be in all generations of the Jews most highly valued both for the Reverend Antiquity and Eminent Piety of the Author as likewise for the sublime excellency of the matter There be indeed other various sentiments about this Enochs Prophecy some say he wrote it upon Pillars of Stone or brick that neither of those two grand destructions of the World which he foresaw by Water and by Fire might destroy it others say that he wrote it in a book which is lost as many other Books mentioned in Scripture as the book of the Wars of the Lord Numb 21.14 the Book of Jashar Josh 10.13 With many others of Nathan Semeiah Gad Ahiah Haddo Hanani c. Named in the Chronicles c. Others say that this book was preserved in Noahs Ark from the Floud or if it were lost yet was it restored by Noah thereunto inspired This was the opinion of Tertullian But all those are uncertain Conjectures having no confirmation from Scripture yea rather are a contradiction to it as it maketh Moses the first writer in the World Herewithal these following considerations introducing the 2d Opinion are worth due observation As 1.
Though many books as all those forenamed be lost yet no Canonical Scripture the preservation whereof entire hath been a standing divine miracle of mercy to the Church in all ages 2. The Apostle Jude doth indeed say that Enoch Prophesied but he doth not say that he wrote what he prophesied he saith not It is written as if he were quoting some passage out of the sacred Scriptures 3. Though there might be in this Apostle Jude's time a book of some Apocryphal author containing in it the true Prophecy of Enoch but mixing with it many forged Fables yet Jude had a peculiar particular Revelation that this special Prophecy cited by that Author did verily come from the Prophet Enoch as he speaks of the Contention betwixt Michael and the Devil about the body of Moses no where mentioned but in his verse 9. in sacred Scripture This he might have by Divine Revelation 4. That Enoch was a Prophet strictly taken as the word in its proper notion doth signify to foretell things to come This he certainly did in naming his Son Methuselah which signifies he dieth and the Dart cometh which is a clear indication of his Prophetick Spirit whereby he foresaw and accordingly did foreshew thereby that the lease of that wicked old World was only the Term or Time of his Sons life for no sooner was his Sons head laid but in the floud came like a dart cast by a divine hano 5. That Jude had Enochs Prophecy concerning the destruction of the World most probably by Tradition from his Fore-fathers which is the 2d of the two aforesaid opinions how the Apostle came by it and not out of any book It being delivered from hand to hand from Father to Son down to that time and so applies he that Prophecy to the Gnosticks or loose-coats of his day intimating that the like sins would certainly bring the like Judgments Thus he argued with the Jews then Sensualists having not the Spirit v. 19. from things taken for granted and from their own Testimonies 6. Suppose Jude did cite this Prophecy out of some Apocryphal Author or which is more likely took it up upon the generally received Tradition of that time yet doth not this render this Catholick Epistle of Jude as some would hence have it no better than Apocryphal for then the Apostle Pauls Epistles and several other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Sacred Scriptures must be Apocryphal also seeing many such Quotations are made in them 'T is frequent with the holy Penmen of sacred writ to interlace some such circumstances as are not mentioned in their proper places or Histories As 1. In Exodus we read of the opposition which the Magicians made against Moses but no mention is there of their names yet Paul undertakes to name them James and Jambres 2 Tim. 3.8 Which he took up from Tradition of the Jewish Talmud yea Apuleius and other Histories describe the contest speaking of those two famous Magicians and the same Apostle quoteth three sentences out of profane Poets yet this is so far from making his Epistles Apocryphal that indeed it maketh those sayings of Heathen men to become Canonical Scripture 2. David in his Psal 105.18 telleth us how Josephs feet were hurt in the Fetters and he was laid in Iron Whereof Moses in his History of Josephs imprisonment Gen. 39.20 mentioneth not a word yet this makes not the book of Psalms Apocryphal The same 3. May be said touching Moses quaking Heb. 12.21 4. Touching the Water of the Rock following Israel through the Wilderness 1 Cor. 10.4 5. And touching Jacobs worshiping upon the Top of his Staff Heb. 11.21 Yet are all Canonical 7. Although Jude receiv'd this Prophecy of Enoch by Antient Tradition yet not by Tradition only for he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Inspired of God 2 Pet. 1.21 therefore it makes nothing for the Foolish Traditions of the Romanists who argue from hence that seeing the Apostle did deliver this Prophecy to the Church which he receiv'd by Tradition therefore say they the written Word of God containeth not all things in it that are to be known by the Church necessarily concerning Faith and Manners there must be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as well as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Traditions as well as Scriptures without which they are not sufficient To this Popish Objection 't is Answered 1. Besides what hath been said before though some Books be lost yet no Sacred Scripture the most Holy and most Wise God hath so order'd the matter by his good Providence that no Book no Scripture no Saying or Sentence is lost that was necessary to Salvation 2. The same Spirit whereby Enoch Prophesied as all the other Prophets did Luke 1.70 did inspire Jude also with an extraordinary Spirit of discerning whereby he certainly knew it to be no other than Enoch's Prophecy This the Romanists may nor pretend to The third Answer is Though this Prophecy of Enoch was to that time but a Tradition yet then it seemed good to the Holy Ghost by the Apostle Jude to make it a part of Canonical Scripture 't is there made Authentick and put into the Canon The fourth Answer is Though hitherto it had been deliver'd only by Tradition yet was it always Consonant to the Truth of other Sacred Scriptures so this cannot palliate those Romish Traditions which are directly repugnant to the Word of God All the Prophets Evangelists and Apostles set forth that great Truth of Christs coming to Judgment whereof Enoch Prophesied so it was agreeable not contrary to the Word of God Oh the bold presumption of the Church of Rome to equal Friars Dreams with Holy Scripture though quite contrary to Scripture But 2. If Enoch were not a Prophet in the strict sense as Moses Samuel c. yet was he a Prophet in the large sense as he was a publick Preacher as he had his Word of Exhortation to that wicked World in which sense the word Prophecy is taken 1 Cor. 14.3 and 1 Thes 5.20 Thus Enoch was undoubtedly a Preacher of Righteousness as well as Noah 2 Pet. 2.5 Thundering out direful Threatnings to the old Impenitent Wicked World the sum whereof was those two verses v. 14 and 15. in Judes Epistle for that Apostle considering the Circumstances and corrupt Manners of that profane people to whom Enoch Preached gathered thence the substance of his Sermons as Behold the Lord cometh c. as at the Deluge of Noah and as at the giving of the Law on Mount Sinai c. both which were dreadful Comings of the Lord. This Doctrine of the General Day of Judgment unquestionably Enoch Preached Though he did not write it and Jude one of Gods Pen-men sanctifies his Sermon and puts the stamp of Divine Authority upon it applying it to his own Licentious Times for deterring them from sin Hence note 1. That the Doctrine of the Resurrection and of Coming to Judgment was known to the Fathers before the Flood 2. The like Threatnings are
by the Eye but by the Ear. This truth God taught Moses when he pray'd Lord I beseech thee shew me thy glory Exod. 33.18 God corrects him for this calling him from the Organ and object of the Eye to the Organ and object of the Ear saying I will not demonstrate the glory of my goodness to thy Eye but I will proclaim it to thy Ear v. 19. Exod. 34.6 all which condemns the Popish Doctrine that seeing of Pictures those Lay-mens books as they call them are good means to make men Religious which the Romish Church make a matter of Duty and hearing of Sermons which is Gods Ordinance only a matter of conveniency for it pleased God to ordain the hearing of the Word not the seeing of Pictures as the means of grace to build up his Church in the way of Faith and Holiness to Heaven 4. God hath placed in the Ear a double Natural Excellency 1. Discretion 2. Delectation or delight 1. There is a discretion or judgment seated in this Organ Doth not the Ear try words Job 12.11 The Ear judgeth distinctly of the variety of Sounds and of the truth or falshood of Sentences examining every word of the Sentences Hence the Criticks observe that Osnaijm the Hebrew Dual Number for Ears doth also signifie a pair of Ballances for as the Head or beam-head of the Ballance standeth between the two scales and determineth the weight of what is laid therein so the Head of Man hath one Ear hanging on one side and another on the other and the mind judgeth of the worth of words by the Ears as the Ballance doth by the Scales and therefore the two Greek Names for the Ear and the Mind 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 have a symbolical sound All which together with the Admiration or Interrogation in that Text Job 12.11 which is the strongest asseveration doth intimate that a Judicious Christian taketh not up Truth upon Trust but he tryeth all things by the ballance of the Sanctuary and holdeth then fast that which is good but abstaineth from that which appeareth to be evil 1 Thess 5.21 22. 1 Cor. 2.15 Phil. 1.9 Hebr. 5.14 not carried away as he is led 1 Cor. 12.2 not blown about with every wind of Doctrine Eph. 4.14 not pulled away with the error of the wicked 2 Pet. 3.17 nor taken prisoner by seducers 2 Tim. 3.6 and so made prize of by them Col. 2.8 for want of either skill or will to try Truth from Error 2. God hath placed Delight as well as Discretion in this most excellent Organ therefore Solomon calls the Ears the Daughters of Musick-passively understood Eccles 12.4 The Instruments of Hearing both External and Internal which receive the Musick as well as if actively taken the Instruments of Speaking that in vocal Song do make the Musick both which fail'd in old Barzillai 2 Sam. 19.35 and therefore he thought himself an unfit Companion for Musical David as some sounds as the sharpening of the saw c. are very harsh and ungrateful so other sounds whether by blast or by beating on Instruments or by a tuneable voice are both refreshing and ravishing to the sense of Hearing 5. There is not any Member that the Devil envies more than the Ear because God hath ordained that Organ to be an open door to life and Salvation as before and therefore that envious one endeavours to shut it up as appears in the case of the man possessed with a deaf Devil Mark 9.25 where Christ rebuketh Satan calling him thou deaf and dumb Spirit because he had made the young man so and thereby had most malitiously marr'd the workmanship of God the Devil had possessed his Ear to hinder him from hearing the Word of life Naturalists say that the Dragon hath the greatest spite against the Elephants Ear because he knows that to be the only part which he cannot defend therefore doth he bite it off and from thence sucks out his Blood So the Red Dragon the Devil endeavours to bung up the Organ of Hearing that Faith Life and Salvation may not come that way When this deaf Devil doth possess mans Ear then it is that God speaks once and twice and man perceives it not Job 33.14 Intus existens prohibet alienuni the Devil within makes man not only averse but adverse as well as unable to attend the word of God without and therefore 't is said v. 16. God openeth the Ears of men 6. This ushers in the sixth Excellency of the Ear there is no Member that God expresseth in Scripture so much of his care of and so much of his pains about as about this as 1. God planted the Ear Psal 94.9 and therefore the Fsalmist argues he that is the Author of the Senses shall he be senseless 2. When the Devil hath made it an heavy Ear Isa 6.10 59.1 and dull Matth. 13.15 then God awakens it Isa 50.4 3. When the Serpent hath not only stopp'd up his own ●ears Psal 58.4 but also the Ear of Man to make him deaf to the charmings of the word of God then God opens it Job 33.16 36.10.15 Isa 50.5 and Christ saith to all that belong to him Epphatha be thou opened or let all lets be removed let all coverings be uncovered Mark 7.34 Revelat aur●●m he takes off the veil that is upon the Ear for so the Hebrew Reading is Jigeleh Ozen he will reveal or uncover the Ear of all outward obstacles to make Man hear the better 4. When Satan hath bolted and blocked up this door of the Soul with Ignorance Vnbelief Passion and Prejudice so that as 't is said of some Creatures Man also hath got Fel in Aure Gall in the Ear then God bores it Oznaim Karitha mine Ears hast thou bored Psal 40.6 or digged open When he saith Epphatha together with that word there goeth a power as Luk. 4.32 which breaketh open the door and maketh the Bore so big that the Word of God may enter and find room Joh. 8.37 yea God calls up the Ears of the Soul to the Ears of the Body that one sound may pierce both then the deaf do hear and the blind do see Isa 42.18 5. When the Devil hath drawn the foreskin of security sensuality and wilful obstinacy upon the Ear so as to make it an uncircumcised Ear Jerem. 6.10 Act. 7.51 then God comes to Circumcise the Ear and with it the Heart Rom. 2.29 Jer. 4.4 this makes an Israelite indeed Joh. 1.47 When the foreskin of the flesh or old Adam is cut and put off by the Spirit of Christ both ad intelligentiam ad obedientiam to understand and obey the word and will of God Thirdly The Tongue is an Honourable Member of the Body therefore is it call'd Mans Honour Gen. 49.6 Jacobs Tongue never gave consent to his Sons villany and Mans Glory Psal 16.9 30.12 37.9 which is explained Act. 2.26 The Tongue is Mans glory above all other Dumb Creatures and surely such a
not man for the Sabbath Mat. 2.27 that we might sanctifie it and keep it holy unto God and to all those that truly sanctifie it the Lord makes it a Blessing indeed to them 3 God gave the Sabbath as a most Royal and Soveraign gift to Man he made the Sabbath for Man not Man for the Sabbath as before and bestowed it as a peculiar favour and Prerogative on Man as appeareth by three Scriptures the first is Exod. 16.29 The Lord hath given you his Sabbath This was Gods gift to man from the Creation for seeing from that very time there was a solemn Worship of God as is evident in Cain and Abel's Sacrifices to God so there must be a solemn time set apart for that Worship and what time could be more fi● than that day which God had sanctified by his own Example For the godly Posterity of Seth did publickly and in solemn Assemblies serve the Lord Gen. 4.26 separating themselves from the wicked Off-spring of Cain and they must have a prefixed time for their publick and external Worship which must be the Sabbath that the Lord their God had given them The second Scripture is Neh. 9.13 14. The Lord gave them right Judgements good Commandments whereof the fourth was one All good in respect 1. of the Author 2. Of the Matter 3. Of the Effect inasmuch as they make those good that observe them And above all these godly Levites doth instance that as a most special favour in Gods making known his holy Sabbath to them v. 14. which they reckon up with Gods raining down Manna from Heaven upon them v. 15. and his broaching the flinty Rock to give them Water that this ancient Church might give no warrant to a dry Communion And well may the Sabbath be thus ranked inasmuch as 't is the day whereon God gives his Church Angels food and Living waters out of Wells of Salvation Though God rained down no Manna upon the Jewish Sabbath Exod. 16.27 yet he doth upon the Christian and upon that more especially yea most of all upon the Supper-Sabbaths whereon we all eat the same Spiritual Meat and drink the same Spiritual Drink with them Sacramentally at the Lords Table 1 Cor. 10.2 3 4. The third Scripture is Ezek. 20.12 which comes in with a Moreover as an high remark upon this divine Gift Moreover also I gave them my Sabbaths The Relatives My and His God adjoyns with the Sabbath so frequently doth much advance the greatness of the Gift for whatsoever is Gods or of God must needs be great and excellent the Stream is like the Fountain and the Effect like the Cause This divine Donative the Sabbath was a most precious Dowry and Endowment both to our first Parents and to all their Posterity without which even the best would run wild and forget God were it not that a Weekly-Sabbath walls in our wild Natures The Sabbath was made for Man as a sweet Mercy to him It was made for Mans safety and advantage both to his Soul and Body which the superstitious Jews formerly great neglecters of it mistaking would not defend themselves on that day and therefore their City was taken once by Ptolomy and again by Pompey on the Sabbath-day If it stands in the way of Mans Safety 't is not to be observed The Third point to be handled is Why did God give this great Gift to Man in the beginning of time Answ For Divine Contemplation as well as for Divine Invocation and Action When God had compleated his Creation having made all very good Gen. 1.31 So good as caused Complaisancy in God himself and commanded Contemplation in man also That this latter might be done as well as the former as God had given Man a Soul to contemplate with it being the proper act thereof so he gave him a Sabbath to contemplate in which was a day set apart wherein Man might regard the Works of the Lord and the Operations of his hands Psal 28.5 When Man beholds a great Garden rich stored with Fruits and Flowers this calls his Eyes on every side of it besides there is a general Itch in mans Nature to be taken with Pageants Plays strange Sights and rare Shows which oft are sinful or however vain and at the best imperfect and unsatisfactory How much more ought man upon the Sabbath-day to admire the curious and glorious Frame and Fabrick of the World which in all its parts is so admirably accomplish'd with Curiosity Variety and Suitableness both to the Need and Nature of Man This the Psalmist sheweth in his Psalm or Song for the Sabbath-day Psal 92.1 2 3 4 5. which Psalm was set on purpose as a Canon to the Church for Sanctifying that Queen of Days all being an admiration of Gods mighty Works The Sidonians agreed among themselves to chuse him for their King who first discovered the Sun the next morning and while others gazed upon the East one onely wiser than the rest looked Westward who though scoffed at by his Competitors first saw the Sun-shine upon the tops of the Mountains So we may behold God Per Species Creaturae in the Creature as in a Mirrour or on a Theatre Vt Solem in Aquis ita Deum in operibus Contemplamur God is seen in his Works as the Sun is seen in the Waters and therefore we should study not onely the Book of Gods Word but also the Book of Gods Works even that great Folio of the World that Book with three Leaves Heaven Earth and Sea See my Crown of a Christian from page 125 to page 145. this Book leaves the Heathens 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inexcusable Rom. 1.19 20. who may behold God the Creator though not God the Redeemer in it either by way of Negative Causality or Eminence And we have but half the benefit of the Creature for which it was created if we get not Spiritual as well as Temporal good by it How the Jewish was was changed into the Christian Sabbath I refer the Reader to my Christian walk on the Lords day Whatever clearness there seems to some to be wanting as to the change of the day yet sure I am there is no want of clearness as to the choice of the day seeing both Christ and his Apostles did chuse this First day for religious Assemblies and Exercises which I have at large discussed in a distinct Discourse on this Subject All I shall say here is onely that the change of the Day from the Last to the First of the Seven was one of those things that Christ taught his Apostles betwixt his Resurrection and Ascention those Forty days he conversed with them Acts 1.2 3. and his Apostles were guided by Christs Spirit he gave them Joh. 16.13 Hence I infer 1 If a Seventh day be such a divine Gift to Man why should any man jear as the Heathens did who said Sabbatizing was a losing of the seventh part of precious time or as our late Anti-sabbatarians who call'd
in his heart My Lord delayeth his coming c. upon this grew secure and notoriously extravagant Matth. 24.48 49. Even so our Lord hath his Travelling time and his Servants have their Trading time Matth. 25.14 c. And our Lord after this hath his Returning time and his Servants their Reckoning time v. 19 c. Should we know when this time will be we should misimprove the mean time Therefore seeing the coming of that Dreadful Day will be sudden and unexpected as that was upon the World we should always watch Matth. 24.37 38 39 42. and be always ready v. 44. Men are never less safe than when they are most secure Oh what manner of men ought we to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quales quanti Men even to admiration looking up and longing for Christs coming in the Clouds those Chariots which carried him up shall bring him back again We should cry with Sisera's Mother VVhy are his Chariots so long incoming Judg. 5.28 and 2 Pet. 3.11 12. Hastening to meet him upon his way Mark 3. The very Symptoms of the last and worst of times are upon us in our Day We may safely say The time is short 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contracted or rolled up 1 Cor. 7.29 as Sails use to be by Mariners when the Ship draws nigh to Harbour the end of her Voyage Or as a Web of Cloth is rolled up only a little left at the end ungathered So God hath now rolled up most of his Works he hath to work in the World he hath only some few things to do a very little at the end of the World to wit four things 1. The Call of the Jews 2. The Fulness of the Gentiles 3. The Fall of Antichrist 4. The Reign of Jesus Christ and then God will say as he said Gen. 6.13 The end of all flesh is come before me The like doth Ezektel use the end it come is come and so some ten or twelve times is come is come Ezek. 7.2 3 6 c. as if he had said Destruction is at the Door If the Judge of the World were at the Door in the days of James the Apostle and the coming of the Lord did then draw nigh Jam. 5.8 9. sure I am it draws nigh much more now in our days and that great Judge who then stood before the Door is well nigh now got over the Threshold it being above a 1000 years since the Apostle said so Therefore let 1. The Persecuted be patient as v. 7. and hold a blow as we say let Patience have line enough in its perfect work the good Lord strengthen Faith and lengthen Patience when the Judge cometh he will set all to rights in the mean time grudge not v. 9. that is groan not grumble not grow not sour and sullen either to God or to one another 2. Let Persecutors Tremble though they be as tall as the great Giants in Noahs day yet God will sweep them away with a Floud of Fire as then he did them with a Floud of Water and not one of them shall escape his just indignation though the Jews feign that one Og a Giant was saved upon an High-Hill and with his own height or as some Rabbies say by getting and setting astride upon the Ark. Yet all this is said without book for the word saith expresly every man Died c. Gen. 7.21 22. no doubt but some might attempt it though in vain as we read of a fond Fryer that built himself an high house upon Harrow of the hill to save himself when an Astrologer had perswaded him the land should be drowned When this dreadful day comes there will be no flying to the Mountains unless it be a crying to them to cover us as Rev. 6.16 which yet shall be but a poor cover for Mountains shall melt and Rocks rend at this Judges presence Now the symptoms of this destruction are 1. Was there ever more burnings of unlawful lusts the fore-runner of the Floud than now when so many Pockified persons have invited so many Forreign besides Native Physicians for their cure in every corner 2. The Abounding of all manner of Iniquity as if Hell were broke loose amongst us The lost times are the loosest times The Dregs of time must needs be the worst as 't is of Liquor the sink of all the sins of former Ages seemcentred in our times 3. Coldness of love by such aforesaid Quench-Coals Dr. Latimer saw such lack of love to God and His People in his time that he verily thought Dooms-day was then just at hand much more may we think so now c. But beside and before this general Judgment-day wherein the whole World shall be burnt as before it was drown'd particular Dooms-days may come upon places and people our own Chronicles tell us of a Dooms-day-book in the Exchequer containing a survey of all England for proportioning the exactions of the Norman yoke by William the Conqueror God bless this Land from such Dooms-day-books and from such Dooms-day-times as were in the Marian days wherein so many Fires flamed out all over our Land to burn the poor Protestants The Apostle Peter saith Think it not strange concerning fiery Trials which are to try you at if some strange thing happened to you 1 Pet. 4.12 wonder not at it as at some new astonishing thing for there is no new thing under the Sun that which hath been not only may but shall be Eccles 1.9 now that there have been such Dooms-day-times and Fiery Tryals both Sacred and Civil Writings confirm it by a cloud of Witnesses 1. Sacred Frequently mentioning how God proves his people by bringing them into the Furnace or Fiery Trials God tried Job as Gold is tryed in the Furnace Job 23.10 and so he did Israel in a furnace of Iron Deut. 4.20 1 Kin. 8.51 and Jer. 11.4 The Oppression of Egypt was a furnace to Israel and so was Babylons Bondage to the Jews afterwards Those grievous afflictions wherewith they were grievously afficted both in Egypt and Babylon did most kindly melt them and made them more malleable under Gods Hammer of his Word Jer. 23.29 God tryed them as Silver c. yea brought them through Fire and Water Psal 66.10 12. Now neither Reprobate Silver nor Alchymy Gold can bear the seventh Fire as Golden Job did who as the Finest Gold is purged in the Fire and shineth in the Water but quite contrary it is with dirty Clay which the Fire Scorcheth and Water Dissolveth 'T is Gods method to gather together his Vessels and to cast them into his Crucible or Furnace as men do with Silver and Brass to melt them in the midst thereof Ezek. 22.19 20 21 22. That is a most direful Doom there I will leave you in the Furnace God deals so with his Foes bringing them into the Briars and there leaves them to be burned as Vessels of Wood only but not so with his Friends who are Vessels of Gold with those God
by Authority taken from thence It seems this great Doctor of the Gentiles was not of the same opinion with those Jesuits who say that the Epistles of the Apostles were intended only for the use of those Persons and Churches to whom they were first written how much more all the Books of the Prophets in the Old Testament must be antiquated and not concern us as some Jesuited Enthusiasts say in our Day prefering their own Phantastick Revelations above the Rule of Scripture though both Testaments were writ by Divine Inspiration We must rather be of Godly Josiah's Mind who saith concerning Moses many hundred years before him that Moses wrote for us 2 Kin. 22.13 the Book of the Law which Moses wrote with his own hand v. 8. and 2 Chron. 34.14 and ordered to be laid up in the sides of the Ark Deut. 31.26 this Book good Josiah reckoned did speak to them in his Day and feared that great Wrath was kindled against them because they had not hitherto hearkened to do all that was written as he saith concerning us Reckoning aright that General Directions Recorded in Gods Word do Infallibly concern all Ages as 1 Cor. 10.6 11. or likewise of Blessed Stephens Mind who speaking of such as live in the Days of the New Testament saith that Moses recieved the lively Oracles of God to give them unto us Act. 7.38 Moses did indeed deliver those Oracles to the Fathers of the old Testament but they receiv'd them to give them unto us under the New and thus the writings of all the other Prophets after Moses were written for us and for our Learning for Paul's learning and for the learning of that famous Church of Rome the fame of whose Faith was publish'd through the World Rom. 1.8 how much more for our Learning who come far short of their high Attainments and cannot pretend to a greater Perfection The fifth Argument If the Old Testament was disannulled by the Death of Christ then the Church was without a Canon or Rule from that time for many years until the N. Testament was written but this is to suppose what may not be supposed For those Scriptures in which Timothy had been trained up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from a Child and wherein Paul exhorts him to continue they being profitable to teach reprove c. 2 Tim. 3.15 16. must be the Scriptures of the Old Testament seeing at the time of Timothy's Childhood none of the New Testament was written for Timothy was taken into Paul's Fellowship before any either Gospel or Epistle was published some of the Epistles were writ before any of the Gospels as that of the first to the Thessalonians yet this was writ after Timothy had joined himself to Paul for Paul's Preaching to the Thessalonians must be before his writing to them as appeareth by many passages in that Epistle yet Timothy was taken into Paul's company before Paul Preached there for the former was done Acts 16.1 2 3. but the latter not till afterward Acts 17.1 c. So that the first New Testament Scripture not being writ when Timothy was grown up and received into Paul's Society see Lightfoots Harmony and Chronology for this It necessarily follows that those Scriptures wherein Timothy was trained up from his Childhood were the Scriptures of the Old Testament yet Paul's Testimony of those very Scriptures was that they were Divinely Inspired and profitable to teach Truth to convince Errour to reprove Vice to instruct in Righteousness and to make wise unto Salvation v. 15 16. The consequence then is evident from hence that the Old Testament could not be look'd upon or supposed by the Church as an obsolete and cancell'd Bond or that the Church was then without a Canon The sixth Argument If the Scriptures of the Old Testament were given by Divine Inspiration 2 Tim. 3.16 And if the holy men of God the Prophets wrote them as they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 moved by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1.21 and their Writings were therefore called The Oracles of God Rom. 3.2 then without all controversie there must be the same holy and heavenly Truth or Divine Doctrine found in them as is in the Scriptures of the New Testament There being but one Spirit as there is but one God one Faith breathing in both Testaments Eph. 4.4 'T was this one Spirit which inspired the Pen-men of them both who is the Spirit of Truth John 14.17 leading both the Prophets and the Apostles into one and the same Truth John 16.13 14 15. Therefore the Books of both should be received with the same Spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 4.13 and neither of them ought to be refused NB. 1. To reject the Old Testament is to reject the Holy Spirit that speaks in it 2. 'T is not only rejecting but resisting the Holy Ghost as Stephen charges the Stiff-necked Jews for rejecting the words of the Prophets which they had spoke to them by the Spirit Act. 7.51 Let none now commit the same sin 3. It can come from no other than from the Inspiration of the Devil to reject the Old Testament which was writ by the Inspiration of God contrary products must proceed from contrary principles The seventh Argument If the Old Testament Scriptures be profitable for such blessed uses as are afore-mentioned then they who cast them away as unprofitable are not only Enemies to the Churches Profit and Edification and are Friends to Errour Vice and sinful Folly all which three the Apostle declareth are disappointed by those Scriptures convincing Errour reproving Vice and making wise to Salvation but are also Blasphemers against God and his holy Spirit that did dictate and indite them There be blasphemous deeds as well as blasphemous words Ezek. 20.27 Now to blaspheme any part of the holy Scriptures either by word or deed is Blasphemy in an high degree and at least borders near upon that unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost Matth. 12.31 32. That Opinion of rejecting any part of the holy Canon of the Scriptures which is undoubtedly very hateful to God as well as hurtful to men can never be a good Opinion 'T is not Heaven but Hell-born The eighth Argument If the Prophets as well as the Apostles be the Doctrinal Foundation of the Church as Christ is the Personal thereof 1 Cor. 3.11 then the Books of the Prophets Moses c. may not be rejected But the Antecedent is clear from Eph. 2.19 20. speaking of a Gospel-Church Therefore the Consequent must be clear also Mark well Paul puts no difference betwixt the Doctrines of the Prophets and that of the Apostles he makes them not two but one only Foundation therefore we cannot be true Christians nor indeed a true Church as the Ephesians were and that of Ephesus was unless we be Built upon both such as remove themselves from the Foundation of the Prophets may ere long make as little matter of Building upon the Apostles not regarding any written Word at all but rather
Holy Robes or Stoles were received from Ancestors and kept in sweet Chests by the Mother of the Family which were of such an Odoriferous smell that Isaac is said to smell the sweet smell of it upon Jacob's back Gen. 27.27 So will God say of us if thus Cloathed Thus far as Jacob's Fact carried a correspondency not only with the Commands of his godly Mother but also with a most Congruous Harmony of this Holy Antitype aforesaid All Divines both Ancient and Modern do justifie him therein but to vindicate Jacob from the Sin of lying once and again hic Labor hoc opus est here lies the grand doubt and scruple About this point I find three various Opinions among the Learned 1. Some say that Jacob neither lyed nor sinned in what he said 2. Others affirm that though he lyed yet therein they deny time he sinned 3. But there be others who conclude that he both Lyed and Sinned As to the First Opinion which cleareth Jacob of lying and sinning They say that his Speech to Isaac if expounded in the best sense is no Lye but an Irony whereof the Scripture hath many which is a witty way of speaking words that in a strict acceptation sounds not true yet importeth some great truth when taken by the right handle as Gen. 3.22 God saith Man is become as one of us which Words are but Gods Holy Derision of Mans vain affectation of a Deity at the Devils suggestion ver 5. whereas the Beasts of the Field might in a strict sense more truly say that Man was then become as one of them Psal 49.12.20 Such Sarcasms Elijah used 1 King 18.27 and Solomon Eccles 11.9 c. Thus Jacob's Speech importeth that he was the Person to whom the Blessing which Isaac was to pronounce belongeth for Esau had resign'd it to him by the sale of his Birthright which purchase gave Jacob a civil right to the Blessing Thus Austin excuseth Jacob's Speech saying though it was not true in the History it was true in the Mystery though Jacob was not Esau saith Theodoret litterally yet he was Mystically and Figuratively as he had bought his Birthright so rightly appeared in Esau's place some excuse Jacob's calling himself Esau because that Name signifies made or perfect intimating that he was now in the way of making himself and of being made perfect having already got the Birthright and now in a fair way for the Blessing and he might the better call himself so as he was preferred to a Priority by the Oracle of God whose Purpose and Decree did Predestinate him to be the Blessed One Therefore 't was a litteral Truth to call himself the First Born and a Mystical Truth to call himself Esau not unlike to Christ's calling John Baptist Elias Matth. 11.14 Abraham calls Sarah his Sister Gen. 12.19 and 20.5 Paul calls us Gentiles the Circumcision Phil. 3.3 Rom. 2.28 and counted the Seed of the Promise Rom. 9.8 Gal. 4.28 Some say further that Jacob's Speech ought not to be condemned seeing God approved it by giving him the Blessing and continuing the same to his posterity and seeing also Isaac when convinced how God had over-ruled his want of Eyes to a right end with astonishment concludeth I have Blessed him and he shall be Blessed whereas had he look'd upon Jacob as a wicked liar and wretched deceiver he would not have been so resolute in his Answer to Esau for confirming the Blessing on Jacob but rather have revok'd and revers'd it from him all doubtful and ambiguous Speeches require fair and candid Interpretations The Second Opinion which granteth Jacob lyed yet denyeth that Jacob Sinned in his lying for though his saying I am Esau thy first Born may admit of some excuse yet his saying I have done as thou badest me and come eat of my Venison can no way be qualified from the quality of a Lye seeing it was not he but Esau whom Isaac bade to go a Hunting neither was it Venison but Shamble Meat or Kid-flesh which he hide Isaac eat as Venison this the Jesuit Pererius himself cannot justifie though he doth the former yet those Apologists for Jacob say though he lied he sinned not for say they his lye was not a pernicious but an officious lye that is 't was not Hurtful to his neighbour but only helpful to himself which they say is no Sin But it follows not that whatever is said or done whereby our selves or others may be benefited becomes immediately lawful and honest for this Rule of falshood were it a rule of right would warrant all Thefts for satisfying hunger and for supplying want yea all manner of lyes for saving Life Estate or Credit whereas a lye wherein false things are spoken for true though it be a never so officious Lie and useful to our selves if another be deceived by it while it ceases not to be a lye it cannot cease to be a sin for every lye what ever other tendency it may have for good is a wicked sin condemn'd in the ninth Commandment Which leads to the last or the Third Opinion which affirms that Jacob both lyed and sinned in lying That he lyed is already granted it follows then that he sinned this is made manifest by the light of Nature as well as by the Law of Scripture That Secretary of Nature Aristotle could say that a lye is in it self an evil and a wicked thing Arist Ethic. lib. 4. cap. 7. The Hebrews call it Aven a great impiety a grand iniquity and the Scripture reckons it among Monstrous Sins Rev. 21.8 yea and condemns it to Hell whether it be the Pernicious Officious or the Jocose or merry lye indeed every lye is pernicious either to our selves or to others or to both 1. Because 't is plainly Destructive to the order of Nature in Humane Society 2. 'T is flatly forbidden by God in both Testaments 3. No lye is of the Truth 1 Joh. 2.21 but of the Devil Joh. 8.44 who began his Kingdom and still upholds it by lyes This last opinion hath in it no absurdity why may not Jacob be said to be a Liar as all men are Rom. 3.4 c. Peter is reproved for dissembling Gal. 2.11 12. and Holy men in Scripture often for greater faults their Righteousness while here is imperfect Jacobs Faith was mixt with Frailty yet had he not the habit or way of lying Psal 119.29 Isa 63.8 c. That Jacob failed herein notwithstanding his Faith is the concurrent Judgment of Modern Divines save the Jesuites who would excuse him from Lying by that of the Angel Raphael to Tobit inquiring of his Pedigree answered I am Ananias of Azarias the great Tobit 5.12 which impertinent answer that the Angel should descend of Tobit's Brethren and be of Kin to Tobit hath with other reasons impaired the Authority of that Book which brings in an Angel Lying an evil which the good Angels use not in Canonical Scripture and what is this but to justifie one Lie
the Reputation of a Prophet upon it ver 28. Remark the Third His cursed Carcass is carried in his all-bloody Chariot out of the Field to Samaria The Chariot was wash'd at the Pool there the Dogs came to claim their Due lapping up Blood and Water together as Vatablus saith after their nature and the Tongues of those Brutes verifie the Tongue of God's Prophet Remark the last is Micaiah and Elijah are justified Naboth is revenged Ahab is judged and his whole Council of false Prophets are all confounded which is a sufficient proof that Councils may err and now Zedekiah ware Horns thou art the next Sacrifice to expiate the Son Joram's Vengeance for leading his Father Ahab into Ruine The Lord is righteous in all his ways c. Psal 129.4 and 145.17 2 Kings CHAP. the first BEfore the History hereof some general Remarks must be made to make way for it The first is The last Chapter of the first of Kings gives a short account of Jehosaphat's Life and Death from ver 41 to ver 51. but speaks nothing of him in this second Book of Kings yet have we a large Relation of Jehosaphat's Reign in the second Book of the Chronicles Chapters 17 18 19 20. the summ of which is referred to this last Book of Kings Remark the Second in general is Ahaziah the Son of Ahab is briefly described 1 Kings 22.51 52 53. but more amply in this 2 Kings chap. 1. but not at all mentioned in the 2d of Chronicles because his Reign was short and enough had been recorded already of so bad a King Remark the Th●●d in general is Ezra the Scribe as is generally affirmed was the holy Pen-man of these two Books of the Chronicles as appears by the two last verses of the last chapter of these two Books and the three first verses of the Book of Ezra which are almost the same word for word This is an evidence that they were written after the Captivity and therefore that Book of Chronicles to which the two Books of Kings do so frequently make a Reference cannot be those Sacred Chronicles which were written long after both the Books of Kings As the Hebrews do call these Holy Chronicles Debre-Haiamim the words or deeds of days because they contain an History from Adam to Ezra's Day So the Greeks call them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies Remainders or gatherings up implying that the Books of Chronicles have gathered up what the Books of Kings had left out and not recorded yet omit many passages that were before fully related as the foul fall of David and the fouler fall of Solomon c. we have not a word there of them The Fourth general Remark is The second Book of Chronicles is the same with those two Books of Kings save only that after the separation of the Ten Tribes which was the turning point and began the Declinings of Israel's Glory that holy Pen-man gives over his History of the Kings of Israel which is sufficiently supplied out of this second Book of Kings and insisteth only upon the History of the Kings of Judah until their Captivity in Babylon and where-ever He relateth the same History formerly Recorded he returns as one phraseth it with Vsury as is before noted N.B. Only sometimes some of the Affairs of the Kingdom of Israel wherein the two Kingdoms had to do one with another are intermingled The Fifth general Remark is The cogency of this consideration causeth it therefore to be unavoidably necessary that as it hitherto hath been done so the History both in this second of Kings and in that second of Chronicles must go hand in hand in conjunction so far as the coincidency of matter doth constrain Hereupon this History of the second of Kings must be supplied out of that in the second of Chronicles and so begin this Book with the History of Jehosaphat of whom we have heard a little out of the first of Kings and tho' he be not treated on in the second of Kings yet is he largely in the second of Chronicles therefore begin we with him omitting what is already said before we come to Ahaziah Remarks in particular first upon Jehosaphat are First He was the fourth King of Judah succeeding his Father Asa 1 Kings 15.24 2 Chron. 17.1 in whose History is first His care of Religion tho' he was contemporary with wicked Ahab and Reigning about eighteen years in Affinity with him yet was he both Religious in his own person walking in the first ways of David before his fall into foul infirmities ver 3. he was not corrupted with that contagious Air of his neighbouring Idolatrous Israel ver 4. but his heart was lifted up in the ways of God not with Pride but with Zeal ver 6. He also endeavoured to make his People Religious by sending Teaching Princes Priests and Levites among them to teach them the Law of God ver 7 8 9. and not Humane Traditions For this the Lord requited him with a rich Reward 1. When he had established a Preaching Ministry the fear of the Lord fell upon Kingdoms round about him ver 10. And 2. His growing greatness brought in great Tributes to him from the Philistines Arabians c. ver 11. And 3. God blessed him with a prodigious Army of eleven hundred and sixty thousand brave fighting Men ver 12 14 19. of this 2d of Chron. c. 17. so that 't is no wonder that Ahab molested him not but made a League with him Remark the Second After this Jehosaphat joyns with Ahab and marcheth with him to Ramoth Gilead as is before related in 1 Kings 22. and now here again repeated in 2 Chron. 18.1 to the last verse N.B. 'T is usual for this Author Ezra to give only an Abridgment of those Histories he found so fully Recorded before yet this History he repeats over again almost word for word which must needs most highly commend the Contents hereof as exceeding necessary useful and profitable seeing the Holy Spirit who was Ezra's Enditer can do nothing in vain But he adds 2 Chron. 19.1 as well as that precious passage The Lord helped him noted before Jehosaphat returned to his house in peace looking upon his Deliverance as no less than a Miracle saith Vatablus and reckoning himself as a brand pluck'd out of the fire Zech. 3.3 and having seen Ahab suffer shipwrack before his Eyes he resolves to take more care of his own tackling for time to come c. Remark the Third God sent a Reprover to him 2 Chron. 19.2 even Jehu the Son of Hanant the Seer who delivered his Message with better success to patient Jehosaphat than his Father had done to passionate Asa 2 Chron. 16.7 10 c. whose wrath with God's Prophet would have better become wicked Ahab than godly Asa but a true sense of God's goodness in good Jehosaphat when he saw his Soul had through Divine Help at his call escaped as a Bird out of the snare of the Fowler
Sins of the People were the true Cause why God gave them this wicked King who broke Covenant both with God Jer. 34.17 and with Man Ezek 17.18 19. God harden'd his Heart that he humbled not himself c. Remark the Eighth The next remarkable Passage Recorded is in the nineteenth Year of the Captivity which was the nineteenth Year of Nebuchadnezzar's Reign and the eleventh of Zedekiah's Then was the full fatal and final Fall of that Earthly Kingdom c. 2 Kings 25.2 Jer. 39.2 and 52.12 't is true this Time is call'd the eighteenth Year of Nebuchadnezzar ver 29. Jer. 52. and the ninth Year of Zedekiah 2 Kings 25.1 and Ezek. 24.1 but we must suppose the King of Babylon besieged Jerusalem about two Years before it was Tibbakang Hebr. broken up with Battering Rams saith Vatablus 2 Kings 25.4 8. nor may we say with Grotius that this Place of the eighteenth Year seems to be corrected by that Place of the nineteenth but better say with Lyra 't was the latter end of the eighteenth and in the beginning of the nineteenth and though the Books of Kings and Chronicles give no account of any Occurrence betwixt those Years of nine and nineteenth of the Captivity yet find we some Passages of Remark in the two Prophets of Jeremy and Ezekiel Mark First In Jeremy who relateth how Hananiah in the beginning of Zedekiah's Reign in the Fourth Year falsly foretold the return of the Captives within two Years Jer. 28.1 c. This Priest probably but a pretended Prophet had seen how ill Vrijah and Jeremy had sped by telling the Truth therefore he resolves to Preach Placentia pleasing Matters to have Honour from the Princes and likely lucre too from the People so he affronts Jeremy publickly in the Temple as a lying Prophet in saying the Captivity would continue for seventy Years but the Issue was Hananiah is struck with Death within two Months after his false Prediction because he taught Rebellion against the Lord as Jeremy had foretold him ver 14 15 16 17. Mark 2. After this Jeremy tells us how he sent a Letter to the Children of the Captivity in Babylon in the former part of Zedekiah's Reign the Date and Contents thereof are declared Jer. 29.1 2 3 c. and Chap. 30. and 31. altogether Consolatory to the Captives and Chap. 49.34 and Jer. 50. and 51. in another Letter afterward to Comfort them that they must Exercise Patience and not Antedate Promises as their false Prophets prompted them to do against whom Jeremy denounced their most dreadful Doom Jer. 29.21 22. yet would they but wait God in due Time would deliver them and destroy Babylon and Elam that help'd her Calvin saith that Zedekiah suffer'd Jeremy's Letters to be sent by his Messengers Non ex Pietatis studio not from any Respect either to God or to his Prophet but out of Self-Love for he had heard by Hananiah that Itconiah his Corrival and the Captives would in two Years Time come back to Jerusalem if so he must resign up his Throne wherein the King of Babylon had seated him therefore sends he Embassadors to Nebuchadnezzar to testifie how obsequious he was to his Lord and Master and was Content they should carry Jeremy 's Letters knowing the purport of them was to perswade the People there Patience and to live peaceably in Babylon and not think yet of returning to give him Disturbance Mark Thirdly In Ezekiel whom in the fifth Year of Jehoiakin's Captivity and the thirteenth of the first as Dr. Lightfoot computes the Lord raised up a Prophet in Babylon as Jeremy was in Jerusalem and he began to Prophesie in the fifth Year of Jehoiakin's or Jeconiah's Captivity or as some call it with Lavater a Transmigration because he yielded to the Besieger c. Ezek. 1.2 and the same Ezekiel foretells the fatal Issue of Zedekiah's breaking his Covenant First with God Ezek. 16.38 and then with Man even with the King of Babylon Ezek. 17.15 who had set him up and sworn him to be faithful yet he revolts and seeks succour from the King of Egypt which perfidious Perjury and Treachery was the true Cause of Ruining all 2 Chron. 36.13 Mark Fourthly Ezekiel also in the sixth Year of Jeconiah's Captivity and the fourteenth of the first hath the Lord shewing him All Ezekiel from Chap. 8. to the End Daniel 2 3 and 4. Chapters what just Causes he had to remove his Glory from the Temple Ezek. 8.1 c. Chap. 9. and 10. and 11. and 12. and so on to Chap. 20. All this must be while Zedekiah Reigned the King of Babylon had set him as a Vine Ezek. 17.6 but not Content with that he must needs be a Cedar out Caesar aut nullus therefore did he bend his Boughs and Roots toward the other great Eagle Pharaoh for relief ver 7 8. so falsified his Fidelity which was his utter Destruction Mark Fifthly Again Ezekiel Prophesies in the seventh year of Jeconiah's Captivity and of Zedekiah's Reign Ezek. 20.1 which was two Years and five Months before the fatal Siege began here some rank Hypocrites came to be resolv'd of Ezekiel whether it were better to shake off the Babylonian Yoke or patiently to bear it Whereas before-hand they came concluded what course to take ver 31 32. Ezekiel by his Prophetick Spirit pierced into their putid Hypocrisie loath'd their false looks and abhorr'd their Motion God had no Answer for such no more than he had for Saul 1 Sam. 28.15 the Prayers of such are an Abomination Prov. 21.27 yet tells them the Day of this Prophane Person was now come and the Crown must be overturned overturned overturned until Christ come Ezek. 21.25 26 27. the Earthly Kingdom shall be no more in its former Glory Remark the Ninth Now Ezekiel returns us to the eleventh year of Zedekiah and the nineteenth year of Nebuchadnezzar and of the first Captivity Ezek. 26.1 c. all which Computations Grotius c. make contemporary Now are Ezekiel's three hundred and ninety years compleated from the first Division of Israel's Kingdom into ten Tribes and two Ezek. 4.5 and now was the City and the Temple destroyed c. 2 Kings 25.2 to 20. 2 Chron. 36.17 to 21. Jer. 39.2 to 15. and 52.5 to 28. N.B. Having made this most necessary Digression in enquiring what happened betwixt the ninth and nineteenth of the seventy Years Captivity The Enquiry following is what followed this fatal nineteenth year Answer The Prophets Jeremy and Ezekiel do supply what is not Recorded either in the Book of Kings or in that of Chronicles Mark 1. Jeremy gives an account of what was done in the twenty third year c. Jer. 52.30 Nebuzaradan comes then and carries away seven hundred and forty five more Captives probably to revenge Gedaliah 's Murder Mark 2. Ezekiel tells of a Messenger that came with sad Tidings of all that had been done at Jerusalem unto him now Captive in Babylon Ezek. 33.21 and
that this History of Esther seemeth to be after Ezra's Time so that could not be while the Temple-building was hindred N. B. 2. Some Rabbins say the Synagogue of the Jews to whom Mordecai wrote Letters Esth 9.20 was the Author of it But N. B. 3. 'T is the concurrent Conjecture of most Interpreters both Hebrew Greek and Latine that Mordecai himself was its Penman who being a man of God an Eye-witness and a principal Actor in this whole History therefore none so proper and prepared as he for it Besides Serrarius saith Queen Esther her self did contribute to this work who also had the Holy Spirit N. B. 4. Mordecai wrote this Book of Esther yet names not God in it tho' he had many occasions of mentioning that Sacred Name as in prayer fasting and dependance upon God for his Deliverance from most eminent Dangers c. The Reason supposed for his not naming God in it was lest this Book going abroad among the Pagans should be abused as Gen. 1. ver 1. was by them putting in Asima that Samaritan Idol 2 Kings 17.30 instead of Elohim as Aben-Ezra relateth From this corruption of the first verse in the Bible this word Asima afterwards was corrupted into the word Asina which signifies an Ass and from thence the Pagans slandered the Jews that they worshipped an Ass's Head Mordecai foresaw it and prevented this corruption by the Samaritans therefore names not God in this Book This is the more probable because such a mistake some Heathens made of the Hebrew word Jerusalem by making it in bad Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hierosulon which signifies Sacrilege c. N. B. 5. This History holds forth the Inconstancy of Human Affairs The lofty Luminaries of a worldly Heaven do fall into an Eclipse and the lowly Shrubs of the Earth are elevated to the Stars Behold here Humility advanced to the Throne and Ambition in its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Zenith and Highest Exaltation is hanged upon the highest Gallows This teacheth that the Great Ones of the World ought not to rely upon a Fortune of Ice but to fear every thing Job 3.25 and that the Godly Poor tho' never so low and miserable ought to despair of nothing 'T is the work of Almighty God to look on the Proud and bring him low Job 40.11 12 13. and to lift the Poor from the Dung-hill and set them among Princes 1 Sam. 2.7 8. N. B. 6. Some say Mordecai had a Prophetick Dream wherein he saw a most Dreadful Tempest of Thunder Lightning and Earthquake which was followed with a fight of two fierce Dragons sending forth horrible Hissings many Nations looking on and expecting the Issue of the Combat Then he saw a small Fountain which soon became a great River attended with a Light growing so great as that of the Sun and thereby the Earth was both watered and illuminated Mordecai learnt the Interpretation of this Dream by the great Combat he had with Haman and in the Exaltation of his little Niece Esther that was promoted to so high a Splendour as to Refresh and Englighten her own Nation and others c. The Third General Remark is concerning the Time of this History which 1. Munster Mercator Canus Cedrenus and Vatablus place in some time of the Captivity But 2. All others do unanimously affirm it to be after their Return yet before the Time of Alexander the Great and while the Persian Monarchy stood in its Grandeur moreover 't is said expresly ver 1. in Ahasuerus's Reign Now come we to the Particular Remarks upon Esther chap. 1. which may be reduced to two Heads First The Causes and Occasions of Esther's Advancement And secondly The Occurrences attending the Banquet that occasion'd it all which Dr. Lightfoot doth fix for Time the next following the History of Daniel chapters 10 11 12. Remark the First upon the first Part is the Person who made this sumptuous Feast was the Persian Monarch who is call'd Ahasuerus a Median and Artaxerxes a Persian name saith Bonartius from Dan. 9.1 and Ezra 4.6 7. common Names to these mighty Monarchs 'T is not of necessity to know which of those Persian Kings this was so much controverted among the Learned The Rabbins in Sedar Olam say it was Cambyses call'd by those common Names as is aforesaid upon Ezra 4.6 7. However he was a greater Potentate and Prince than either Cyrus or Darius before him were who had but One hundred and twenty Provinces Dan 6.1 whereas this King had added seven more by his Conquests of India and Ethiopia ver 1. here yet in all his Reign saith Dr. Lightfoot the building of God's Temple lays forgotten Hereupon divers Jews who had gone up to Jerusalem in the first of Cyrus return back during this Disturbance to their old Residences in Babylonia or in Persia again c. among whom were Mordecai with his Niece Esther to do good unto his Country-men abroad when he could no longer help them at home Remark the Second This great Conquerour elevated with his late Conquests of seven more Provinces makes a most sumptuous Feast for all his Nobles c. ver 2. to gratifie them for their former Valour and Victory 'T was a None-such Feast in respect of the number of its Guests largeness of Preparation and continuance of Time for it lasted half a year long and seven days longer in Shushan ver 3 4 5 c. And this he did also to demonstrate his own Splendour and Glory N. B. Tho' this Feast lasted long yet had it an end but so hath not the Feast of a good Conscience Prov. 15.15 Remark the Third Tho' there was much that was Blame-worthy and justly to be condemned at this None-such Royal Feast such as 1. Vain-glory. 2. Prodigality 3. Mis-spending of Time 4. Neglect of Business 5. Contempt of the True God not once acknowledged either by the King or any of his Guests 6. The mad Merriments and profane Jollity and Jovialty for so long a time practised without the least Note of Sanctity or Respect to God's Glory as Merlin well noteth yet something there was very Laudable and rightly to be commended that this King together with his lawful Liberality to his Peers and his comely Courtesie to his People did prescribe by a Law that every man should only Drink what he thought good without either stint or force As there was no Restraint from Sufficiency on the one hand ver 6 7. so there was no Constraint to a Superfluity on the other hand ver 8. This King's Law was that none should compel another to drink more than he listed N. B. 1. Masius reads it none did compel another to drink according to the Law of the Persians which allowed forcing of drink among that loose People this Law Regulated that N. B. 2. Erpenius bewails the Luxury and Intemperance of our Times seeing the Roaring-Boys so they will needs be call'd by a woful Prolepsis Here for Hereafter in Hell when Fire
while they stood out of Doors N. B. Then why is there not the like care taken and the like speed used to make peace with God who commands us Agree with thine Adversary quickly while thou art in thy way of Health and Strength Matth. 5.25 seeing for ought we know 't is now if ever now or never 2 Cor. 6.2 to Day hear his Voice or not at all c. Hebr. 3.7 Is it nothing to lose an Immortal Soul They here do hasten lest they should lose only their Temporal Estates and shall we stand trifling from Day to Day crying to morrow will he soon enough and while we fondly future our Repentance until it be all too late and the season of Grace gone so we fool away our own Salvation not learning to be wiser than the foolish Virgins Matth. 25.10 11. The Second Part is the Concomitants of this Divorce c. Remark the First Ezra's Oration to the Multitude Ye have transgressed in taking strange Wives c. ver 10. Adding this Sin to all your other Sins which heaps them up to Heaven as Chap. 9.6 and so calls for fierce Fire as well as this furious Water of Rain from Heaven upon you Psal 11.6 Therefore confess ver 11. and forsake too then shall ye find mercy Prov. 28.13 Ye have pleased your selves now do ye please God Remark the Second The Multitude understanding the Equity of Ezra's Exhortation promiseth Obedience with a loud voice ver 12. only they begged time for it because 1. The Transgressors were too many to be dispatched in one Day and 2. Much less on such a Rainy Day ver 13. and they were afraid to stand any longer out of Doors that Day because saith Wolphius this was an Extraordinary Rain more like Spouts than Showers falling on them and therefore Indications of God's Indignation Their Fear was much augmented by their Guilt and therefore they desire the Settling of the Sanhedrim who might take time to determine all dubious Cases ver 14. and so dismiss them for that Rainy Day Remark the Third Ezra as the King's Lord Commissioner grants the Peoples Petition the Sanhedrim is Settled Ledariosh Hebr. to Examine and Execute all Matters c. ver 15.16 where Dr. Lightfoot noteth That the word Dariosh may hint that the Meeting about this Matter might be in the seventh Year of Aataxerxes Darius the same Year that Ezra came to Jerusalem And this Work proved so weighty that it was not the Work of one or two Days as ver 13. but of full three Months ver 17. tho' the Sanhedrim sequester'd themselves from all other Affairs and set wholly to this saith Masius The Work lasted the longer because there were so few Innocent Persons to employ in managing this matter among the People only Jonathan and Jahaziah among the Priests that were not guilty Meshullam Chap. 8.16 and Shabbethai the Levite Assistants to the two Priests these four pious and prudent Men had their hands full from our December to our March Remark the Fourth Who they were that upon Conviction Covenanted by giving their Hands to assure the assent of their Hearts as 2 Kin. 10.15 that they would put away their Wives which still retain'd Pagan Opinions The 1st were Ecclesiasticks named ver 18 to 25. this was a contagious Sin saith A Lapide that had corrupted so many Priests and Levites yea even the Sons of good Jehoshua who had help'd Zerubbabel to Build the Temple Chap. 3.2 N. B. To shew That Grace is by Gift and not by Entail c. And the 2d were Laicks numbred from ver 25 to the end Ver. 44. concludes the Account saying That some only of the Pagan Wives had Children that were all put away ver 3. yet this implies the most of them were Barren which came to pass saith Vatablus by a special Providence of God who blasted such Matches and who would not have Ezra c. over match'd with too long and tedious Trials as must have been seeing All the Children were judg'd with the Wives Nehemiah CHAP. I. THIS Chapter is a Narrative how Nehemiah was stirr'd up to repair the Walls of Jerusalem wherein we have those Circumstances the Time Place Means and Manner Remark the First This Book begins with The Words of Nehemiah hence Sancti●● c. do infer that he was the Pen-man of this Book being writ in an easier and plainer stile than Ezra wrote who as Wolphius observes mixt his Book with much Chalde● but many Ancients make Ezra this Book 's Author also calling it the second Book of Ezra c. However Nehemiah is the principal Subject of it who according to the Notation of his Name Hebr. the Comfort of God was a most singular Comforter from God to his Countreymen the afflicted Church of God And it came to pass ver 1. that Phrase declareth this Book to be a Continuation of the foregoing Book Nehemiah being God's third Instrument to Comfort his Disconsolate Church after the Captivity's Years were expired and deservedly counted and called the third Founder of the Common-wealth of the Jews after Zerubbabel and Ezra Remark the Second The Time when is express'd in the twentieth Year of Artaxerxes about thirteen Years after Ezra and his Company first came to Jerusalem Ezra 7.8 with Neh. 2.1 during this interspace there is a silence of any thing done saith Dr. Lightfoot from Ezra's Action of Reforming their mixt Marriages Ezra 10. which most probably was done in Darius's seventh until his twentieth and then Nehemiah began to stir but in this space of twelve Years saith the Doctor we may well conceive that the Prophet Zechary was Prophesying among the People and helping for ward the Reformation which Time saith he taketh up his 9.10.11.12.13.14 Chapters In which the Prophet prophesieth plainly of many things concerning Christ and the Time of his coming c. Remark the Third The Place where Nehemiah was in Shushan ver 1. which was the King's Winter-Palace as Ecbatana was his Summer-Palace c. and the City was call'd Shushan which signifies a Lilly not only because it abounded with Lillies in the Spring but chiefly for its beautiful Situation In this Palace Nehemiah was a Courti●● with the King and as Cup-bearer to him ver 11. as Esther came to the Kingdom so Nehemiah to this Office for such a Time as this Esth 4.14 Though he was a Captive a Stranger and one of another Religion yet is made the King's Taster which was 〈◊〉 Office not only of great Honour but also of mighty Trust wherein the Life of the the●● greatest King upon Earth was put into his Hands This must needs be looked upon as an over-ruling Work of Almighty God to cause sundry Pagan Princes thus to Countenance a Religion the excellency whereof they were so ignorant and to protect that People whom their Subjects hated even with a perfect hatred Remark the Fourth The Means whereby Nehemiah came to be stirred up was the coming of Hanani c. from Jerusalem to
Conduct N.B. Lyra observes the same Objection against Ezra named here ver 1 13 and 33. saying if this be Ezra the Scribe he must now be an hundred and thirty Years Old if not more this Wolphius well answereth that these Holy Men that lived sober Lives and were more conversant in their serious Studies than in riotous Feasts which shorten many Men's Lives Plures pereunt gulâ quam Gladio More die by Gluttony than by the Sword and both of them most eminent Instruments for preserving the Church God might probably grant them a longer Lease of their Lives promised in the fifth Command and performed unto Aaron who was an hundred and thirty Years Old though he died before his Time by a Divine Hand of God Therefore 't is no wonder if these two did live so long Answer the Fourth Others say these Passages might be put into this Book by some other sacred and inspired Pen-man there being some though but few such Passages in the forgoing Books of Scripture as the last of Deuteronomy c. which were added by succeeding Men of God in after Times and A Lapide addeth that this Addition was made by the Synagogue of the Jews who then were guided by the Holy Spirit to shew principally saith he the Succession of the High Priesthood Remark the Third Ezra the Priest and Scribe so called ver 26. and is here an Holy Assistant to this good Governour Nehemiah for though Ezra was no High Priest Ezra 7.1 yet because of his great Wisdom Zeal and Courage and because of that favour he found with the King of Persia so as to grant him a very large Commission Ezra 7.22 c. He had a Government over the Jews as well as Nehemiah and therefore the Years are reckoned here by the Time of Nehemiah and of Ezra's Government The Second Part is the Concomitant Circumstances of the Dedication of the Walls and Gates of the City newly repaired Remark the First Not only the Walls ver 27. but also the Gates ver 30. yea the whole City saith Tirinus are now solemnly Dedicated to God in thankfulness to him who had so wonderfully bless'd them in the Rebuilding of all and with earnest Prayers for God's Presence to preserve for the Future not only their Lives Families and Estates but also his own Temple and Worship therein from the furious Assaults of the Enemy This Dedication was done with Prayers Praises Sacrifices and all forts of Musick c. and all saith A Lapide a little after fifty Days they had rested when all was perfected Remark the Second They gather'd together all the Levites that were gone into the Countrey which they might do till their turn came to Officiate in the Temple that this legal Consecration might be carried on with more Solemnity In Order whereunto the Levites purified themselves with legal Washings Numb 10.9 10. and then the People ver 30. whence Lyra learnedly observeth N.B. That Ministers who would reform others must first begin to reform themselves Yet this legal Dedication under the Law will not warrant as Wolphius saith well those Superstitious Consecrations used by the Romanists under the Gospel Remark the Third The Manner of managing this Dedication from ver 31 to 43. all the Princes Priests and People divided themselves into two Companies and walk'd in solemn Procession two differing Ways upon the broad Walls Ezra the great Scribe led the first Company ver 36. and Nehemiah as Captain General follow'd the second ver 38. as the first Company went round from the West Southward until they came to the East So the second went round from the West Northward until they came to the East also where they both met together in the Temple ver 40. as in their Center after these Circumferences wherein they both as one praised God with all sorts of Musick both Vocal and Instrumental as the Law of Moses prescribed upon all such solemn occasions of Joy N.B. Saith Wolphius both those two Companies though they went differing Ways the one Northward and the other Southward round about yet could they come and convene together in the Temple as in the proper center and publick Shop of Piety Even so the Brethren of differing persuasions have lately by a gracious influence of God upon them made an amicable Coalition and Concord in God's Temple also The good Lord grant that the envious one Satan may never be permitted to sow his Tares of Discord where God hath sown the good Seed of Concord c. The Third Part is the Consequents of this Solemn Dedication namely A General Joy and Reformation ver 43 to 47. Remark the First This was a Solemn and Sacred Procession far different from those Antick Processions practis'd by Papists c. who have their Jester in the midst of them to make them Merry Epit. Hist Gallic pag. 191. there was Mad Devotion in the mean time But these Godly Levites had the Musical Instruments of God so call'd 1 Chron. 16.42 because they were of God's appointing under the Law And tho' much mention is made of their going from Gate to Gate c. yet this they did to excite them the more in Singing aloud to be heard a far off as Vaiashmignu Hebr. ver 42. signifies at the sight of them and in praising God for his marvelous helping them so soon to build such Fortifications And 't is expresly said that God made them Rejoice with great Joy so that they offer'd up the greatest of Sacrifices which Sanctius saith were Oxen the biggest Beasts ver 43. yea their Wives and Children were wrought upon so as to Rejoice with them This look'd not like that Joy which Jesters but Jehovah put into them Psal 4.7 Remark the Second The People here generally Rejoiced to behold those eminent Gifts and Graces shining forth in those Godly Priests and Levites saith Wolphius while they so chearfully and devoutly executed their Offices in this Religious Work ver 44. And hereupon this Spiritual Joy did so inlarge the Peoples hearts that they most promptly provide all the prescribed Maintenance for those pious Ministers and to pay them all their Dues that God had appointed and themselves had lately commanded to do that so none of the Sacred Function might be forced out of the City into the Country to seek a Livelihood there for them and theirs N. B. This was a Right and a Religious Reciprocation the People had received much benefit by their Ministry and therefore they most voluntarily return a competent Maintenance to them according to that Rule Gal. 6.6 1 Cor. 9.4 7 9 11 to 14. So warm were this Peoples hearts now by the Word that they will by no means part with their Ministers but they shall have a Competency in wholly waiting on their Work for the Peoples Edification Remark the Third The Reformation in appointing Porters that no unclean Person might enter into the House of God this care belonged unto them 2 Chron. 23.19 the Law of Purification
Keeping carefully and 3. In Distributing prudently to every Priest and Levite their Portion and Proportion Remark the Fourth When Nehemiah had left nothing undone that might become a Vigilant and a Valiant Ruler he shuts up all with this Holy Ejaculation Remember me O my God c. ver 14. that his God saith Wolphius might put a Candid Construction upon all his Kindnesses so the Hebr. is for good Deeds to God's House in Restoring all the Ordinances thereof to be duly observed as he had done before Chap. 5.19 See there wherein N. B. he did what God hade him do Put me in Remembrance Isa 43.20 and 62.6 7. saying Lord forget not my Labour of Love Hebr. 6.10 Not that God needeth any of Man's Memento's but speaking after the manner of Men he alludeth to the wipings out of a Table-Book God is said to have a Book of Remembrance Mal. 3.16 and good Nehemiah would not be wiped out of that Book nor blotted out of the Book of Life Rev. 3.5 as Piscator senseth it here N. B. This good Man was far from that cursed frame of the wretched Monk who in his Dying hour blasphemously belched out these words Redde mihi Deus aeternam Vitam quam mihi Debes God give me Heaven which thou owest me Not like that foul-mouth'd Vega another Popeling who cry'd Coelum gratis non accipiam I scorn to have Heaven as a free gift quite forgetting that Eternal Life is the gift of God and not any wage for Man's work Rom. 6.23 Nor was Nehemiah here like that Third Popish Justitiary who most daringly bluster'd out Non habeo Domine quod mihi Ignoscas which is in the Language of our late Executed Jesuits I die as Innocent as a Child unborn and have no Sins for God to pardon No Nehemiah said thus in the sense of Augustin saying Certum est nos facere quod facimus sed Deus facit ut faciamus Sure it is we do what good we do but 't is God alone who causeth us so to do 't is God that works all our good works in us and for us Isa 26.12 and without Christ we can do nothing John 15.5 and from him alone is our Fruit found Hos 14.8 hereupon the Church in Canticles is no where commended for the beauty of her Hands those Acting Members because her Bridegroom alone wrought all her good works for her and would rather have her to abound with good works in silence than that she should boast of them at all therefore ought we all to say in our loftiest Enlargements and highest Attainments Not unto us O Lord not unto us but to thy Name be the Praise Psal 115.1 This is the Godly Man's Motto and his Daily Practice Gen. 41.16 Acts 3.12 16. 1 Cor. 15.10 'T is not our Pains but Christ's Pounds that gains Ten Pounds Luke 19.16 N. B. I am thus large on this Remark for Refuting that Lying Doctrine of the Romish Merit bolster'd up by these words of Nehemiah See more of this Point upon ver 22. The Third Part of this Chapter consists also of a Malady and Remedy Remark First Upon the Third Malady to wit the Prophanation of the Sabbath are First The Matter that was done in Nehemiah's sight namely Treading of Wine-Presses bringing in S●eaves of Corn lading of Asses c. ver 15. all on the Sabbath-day which were expresly forbidden by God's Law Exod. 20.10 and 34.22 c. As their Asses ought to have Rested on that Day so their Wine-Press treading saith Wolphius might then have been waved without Damage so could not be a Work of Necessity Remark the Second The Persons that Prophaned the Sabbath ver 16. The Men of Tyre who being Infidels saith Menochius gave the Grand Occasion of this grievous Sin for Tyre a near Neighbour to Judea and famous for Fishing because it bordered upon the Sea and a great Mart-Town for all manner of Merchandise Ezek. 27.3 c. yea those Merchants of Tyre had their Factors dwelling in Jerusalem who Sold all sorts of Ware publickly upon the Sabbath-day unto the Jews which they ought not to have done for that was God's Market-day and not Man's Nor ought the Jews to have bought them for thereby they made themselves worse than the Tyrians because they knowing God's Law ought to have been better had there been no Buyers there would soon have been a ceasing of Sellers c. Jeremy condemns it Jer. 17.21 Remark the Third The Place where all this was done 't was in Jerusalem that Holy City whose Citizens saith Vatablus should more conscientiously have kept the Commandments of the Lord they being then the only People of God in the whole World and where the Sanhedrim sate and great store of Priests and Levites to Instruct them N. B. This is added as a notorious Aggravation of their Sin in a City where God's House and Presence was So that this Prophanation of the Sabbath in such an Holy City was a manifest high Affront both to God and Man Remarks in the next place upon the Third Remedy are First Nehemiah was Centoculus had as it were an hundred Eyes an Eye in every Corner to observe whatever was out of Order therefore 't is said He saw this Sin also in Judah ver 15. He sits not down satisfied with Discovering and Redressing the two former Maladies but quickly discerning this Third likewise he smartly sets himself to Remedy this also chusing rather as a Learned Commentator Phraseth it to be accounted a busie Justice than a quiet Gentleman To which I add This good Man was thus Seraphically blown up with such a pious Zeal as if he were resolved it should never be writ upon his Tomb-Stone after his Death This Man did no good among his People Ezek. 18.18 Remark the Second He solemnly protested against these Sinful Actions and admonished them before Witness saith Vatablus to forbear ver 15. but he is more sharp with the Rulers saith Wolphius than he was with the Vulgar Jews or Tyrians the Buyers or Sellers ver 17. because the Sin was committed either by the Countenance or at least by the Connivence of those Rulers who ought to have restrain'd and severely punish'd such notorious Offenders therefore in an high Transport he calls them a Company of Traitors to Church and State ver 18. Abetting their Predecessors Sins which had so lately provoked God's Wrath against them Jer. 17.27 and now daring Jehovah to a Duel as Caligula did his Jove in renewing the same Sins as if stronger than God 1 cor 10.22 c. Remark the Third This Godly Ruler to prevent the Prophaning of the Sabbath Commands the City Gates to be shut when it began to be dark the Evening before the Sabbath ver 19. beginning their Sabbath at the Evening before Levit. 23.32 that there might be due Preparation and that the Sabbath might be Sanctified without any Interruption saith Sanctius and it soon began to be Dark at the Gates even at the Sun-setting
God Luke 3.38 to shew that he was the Womans Seed which as God promis'd to Adam should break the Serpent's Head Gen. 3.15 not only for saving the Jews that descended from Abraham according to Matthew's Genealogy but also for saving the Gentiles that descended from Adam according to Luke's Genealogy and therefore Luke relates how Christ did break the Power of Satan by the word of Truth who had corrupted Adam and in him all Mankind by his words of falshood immediately after he had shewed Christ's Descent from Adam Luke 3.38 he shews Luke 4.1 how the Tempter is Master'd by Christ in three Temptations Remark the Third This First Line after the Captivity of fourteen Generations for which there is no Record elsewhere in the Canonical Scripture 't is taken for granted saith Dr. Lightfoot that both Matthew and Luke took from some Records then extant among the Nations and were look'd upon as Authentick as appeareth by the Septuagint Bible which was commonly currant in the time of the Evangelists and which certainly Luke doth generally follow in his Quotations out of the Old Testament and the Septuagint hath this Genealogy just as Luke here hath it As the Jews were ever in their worst of Times very careful to keep their Books of all their Genealogies Ezra 2.62 c. so more especially they could not but be most careful of keeping the Records of the Royal Line of the Family of David because they had raised Expectations 0536 of the Messiah from it for the Jews generally received these two Remarkable Maxims 1. That there was to be no King for Israel but of the House of David whose Son their Messiah must be by Descent And 2. That the Family of a Mother is not called a Family Hereupon hath Matthew most pertinently brought Christ's Pedigree through the House of David and Solomon and ended it in Joseph a Male whom the Jews look'd upon as the Father of Jesus Mar. 6.3 c. to shew him the Son God promis'd to David as Luke shews him the Seed of the Woman God promis'd to Adam Remark the Fourth Tho' we meet with some stronge Stories both in Josephus and in the Maccabees Books concerning some of those first fourteen Generations after Zerubbabel of David's Line the Truth whereof is doubted by some Learned Men Yet so far as such Successors are expresly named by the Holy Evangelists it must be believed they were so because the whole word of God is infallibly true John 17.17 2 Tim. 3.16 and not one jor or tittle thereof in matter of Substance hath passed away or ever shall until all be fulfilled Matth. 5.18 Luke 16.17 And tho' those two Genealogies of Matthew and Luke seem hard to be Reconciled yet the Apostle hath caution'd us against giving too much heed to endless Genealogies which administer Questions rather than Godly edifying in the Faith 1 Tim. 1.4 and Tit. 3.9 And seeing many Men in Scripture had two Names as Esau was call'd Edom Gen. 25.30 and 36.1 8. Jethro call'd Raguel Gideon Jerubbaal Vzziah Azariah c. so Simon call'd Peter John 1.42 Joses Barsabas and Justus Acts 1.23 c. Some do suppose that those Men of this first Dynasty had two Names one of those Evangelists reciteth one and the other another of these Names and so might well accord in their Record of the same Person Remark the Fifth Tho' all those Pagan Kings of that time were inveterate Adversaries to the Jewish Church and kept the Jews in grievous Subjection more especially to suppress as much as might be the Posterity of David's Family and at least to hold them in a low Condition because it was a certain and received Truth among that People that Messiah the Prince Dan. 9.26 should shortly come out of that Family therefore those Persons named by the Evangelists might mostly be private Persons as Joseph and Mary were when Christ came into the World Wherefore Dr. Prideaux doth well make it one of his Inquiries Whether those fourteen Chieftains whom Dan. Paraeus calls Dukes or Captains all of the Line of David had any Authority of Magistrates among their Countrymen This is the more doubtful because they all lived in those Calamitous Times of the Jewish Church after the Captivity Remark the Sixth 'T is therefore not improbable but some of the●● might be only private Persons and not be betrusted by their Oppressors with any publick Authority yet by the consent of their own People they might be Law-givers to them as Principal Men amongst them and this is the more probable because the Patriarch Jacob Prophesy'd that the Scepter shall not depart from Judah until Shilo come Gen. 49.10 N.B. However this Genealogy Recorded by two Evangelists and both by Divine Inspiration may well serve to shew forth the shining Truth of God's Promise compleatly Accomplish'd in the Incarnation of Christ and is likewise no less a Demonstration of God's special Providence over his Church to preserve her in the worst of Times therein declaring in what Line to wit the Line of David the Church was preserved the Evangelists Recorded it that we may believe it and ever live John 20.31 The Second Dynasty or Government over the Jews according to Paraeus Prideaux Alsted c. was that of the Asmoneites or Maccabees Men extraordinarily raised up by God to Defend the True Religion These were call'd Asmonei from the first of that Rank Mattathias Asmoneus and Maccabees from the four first Hebrew Letters in that Sentence Lord who is like unto thee c. which Initial Letters put together make up the word Maccabee c. Exod. 15.11 And Judas Maccabeus the Second of this sort of Governors carry'd these four Capital Letters M. C. B. J. in his Standard the whole words ru●ning thus Mi Chimka Beelohim Jehovah Who among the Gods is like unto thee Jehovah N. B. I shall in this Discourse still stick so close to the Scripture of Truth as the nature of the Subject will admit leaving the large Stories of those Maccabees to the various Ecclesiastical Writers upon them as the Apocrypha Josephus Paraeus Prideaux Clark c. Remark the First Mattathias Asmoneus the Father of those Maccabean Governors was but of the Order of the Priesthood and so of the Posterity of Levi and not of J●dah which seems to sound some prejudice to God's Promise and to Jacob's Prophecy That the Scepter shall not depart from Judah c. Gen. 49.10 But it must be consider'd that 1. The Tribe of Levi and of Benjamin were now in the failure and falling away of the Ten Tribes Incorporated into this of Judah from whence the whole Country was called Judea and the whole People of whatever Tribe they were generally now were called Jews 2ly Notwithstanding the many Vicissitudes that attended the Jews after their Return from Babylon wherein they had various Governors some Constituted by the Kings of Persia as well as of Babylon during the Seventy Years Captivity and some chosen their Captain-Generals
and Dead at the last day v. 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31. This last was his Epilogue Thirdly The Issue and Effects of his Sermon upon his Auditory consisting both of Jews and Gentiles and those learned and unlearned Some were effectually called but others were hardned And tho' there was a Synagogue of the Jews in this City yea and Great Heathen Scholars in that Vniversity both which never had heard any thing preached concerning Christ Crucified c. though probably those learned Gentiles might have heard from those Devout Jews there some report of the True God yet Paul the Preacher after he had done this Sermon is permitted to go out in peace without punishment tho' he had loudly Declaimed against the Idolatry of the place verse 32 33 34. But more of this last in the Remarks which follow The first Remark is Humane learning alone cannot learn any place or people the Divine Truths of Christ and his Gospel N.B. This Athens which Paul came to that he might be out of the reach of his Adversaries was the most Soveraign City in all Greece and had in it the most famous University so that it was most higly honoured with that Eminent Title of being called the Greece of Greece and the very eye of Greece as Greece was accounted the eye of the world which was all reputed blind in comparison of it yet notwithstanding all their Scholarship all their learning could not teach them to attain any saving knowledge until Paul came and preached it to them but on the contrary that City and University too was wholly given to Idolatry verse 16. Insomuch that Pausanias reckons up more Idols almost in Athens than in all Greece besides And Xenophon telleth us that the Athenians did keep double their Superstitious Holy days and Festivals to what other Grecian Cities did And Josephus in his 2d book to Appion saith that those Athenians exceeded all other Cities in their Idol worship worshipping Shame Fame Desire c. in their peculiar Temples as Cicero and other Authors among the wiser Heathens do acknowledge Yea to Sum up all in one word one of themselves do confess that our Region is so full of Idols that it is easier to find a God among us than a man their Idols and Images being as numerous as their Inhabitants N.B. All which teacheth us not only how defective humane learning is alone in the knowledge of Divine Mysteries though it be call'd a good Handmaid yet it is always but a bad mistress where it is not subservient to Grace but also that Corruptio optimi est pessima Tho' learning be a good thing in it self yet when it is corrupted by a busy Devil and a base heart it degenerates into the worst instrument in the world as it did here We read how the Angel spake by an Ass Num. 22.28 yet the Devil spake by a Serpent more subtle than all the beasts of the Field Gen. 3.1 The second Remark is All known and notorious Acts of sin especially that God provoking and Land destroying sin of Idolatry are unbearable to behold by any gracious Spirit Thus it was unto blessed Paul here his Spirit was stirred up in him c. verse 16. The Idolatry that was practiced by the people of this place before his eyes did plainly put him into a Paroxysm as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies the same with Acts 15.39 He was almost besides himself being in a transport by beholding their abominate Idolatry This drove him into a strange Concussion of contrary passions Paul here was highly affected with divers affections and passions of Mind As 1. With Grief for so learned and yet so blind a City and University so miserably dovoted to such Sottish and Simple Superstition 2. With Anger and Indignation against the Superabounding Idolatry of that people who should have made a better improvement of their Learning 3. With Zeal and Ardent Desire to undeceive them and better inform them with his Evangelical Instructions And therefore wherever any persons whether in the Synagogue or in any other part of the City would but lend him a little Audience such were his transports of Zeal that he would preach to them verse 17. practising that in his own person what he exhorted Timothy and all Ministers to do namely to preach in Season and out of Season 2 Tim. 4.2 Giving still to the Jews the priority and to those Proselytes of the Gentiles who were come over from Paganism to the Jewish worship He throws the net of the Gospel still where the most Fish were stirring The third Remark is Christ and his Doctrine of the Gospel is the Grand stumbling-block to the blind World both Jews and Gentiles Learned and Vnlearned 1 Cor. 1. ver 18 19 20 21 22 23. The Jews would not believe in a Christ whom they had Crucified not giving Credit to Christ's word without signs and wonders tho' they wanted them not Matth. 12.38 John 4.48 the Greeks or most learned of the Gentiles looked upon it as an Idle Story that he who is and was God blessed for ever should be Crucified because this could not be demonstrated to them by natural causes and Rational Arguments which they only depended upon knowing nothing of any Divine Revelation Their deep Theorems of Philosophy as King James the first said made them not better but worse men even mere Atheists especially those Epicurians and Stoicks verse 18. who held nothing to be desirable but what delighted their senses this made them more Swine than men and to Ridicule the Doctrine of Paul as a new Doctrine and himself a babler introducing Anastasis or the Resurrection he so often named as a new Goddess to their more than a good many Goddesses which they adored already N.B. While Paul told them of the true God in opposition to their Idols they cry not out so much against him for they could not but hear something hereof from the Jews and Proselytes that lived among them but when he preached to them a Christ Crucified Risen and Glorified this was a novelty tho' truth is elder than the oldest errour which startl'd them they draw him to their most cruel Court consisting of their most learned men v. 19 yet not so much to condemn him for it as to be informed better by him of it c. The fourth Remark is Behold here the wonderful work of the over-ruling Providence of God over the Acting of all evil men Tho' those vain Philosophers apprehended Paul as a babler 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as such a contemptible person that had nothing to live upon but upon the off falls of Corn which in measuring falleth off the Bushell when stricken and was used to be picked up by the poorest of the People as the Greek word signifies or as a setter forth of strange Gods out of his own private opinion which they only allowed to be done by publick Authority even as many as they pleased Or as some interpret
N.B. 200 years may be allowed him for growing into his virile State of Domineering Royalty which carries the Account to the year 600 and whether we ought to reckon from his first Rising or first Reigning hoc restat ad probandum Guessing is but a vanity where there wants Scripture light to ground and guide And 't is but a too lightly valuing a man's Reputation to venture rashly upon such Rocks as too many famous men have split their Credit upon by their particular determinations which time the best Expositor hath confuted as false but much more of this in my discovery of Antichrist largely handled there c. The second Remark is Tho' Antichrist have still many scores of years wherein to continue and make war with the Saints Rev. 13.5 7. As fixing the Epocha upon the Sixth Century doth necessarily imply N.B. Yet our Lord hath hitherto Interlaced with the tedious time of this Beast's Beastly Reign some lucid intervalls to support the feeble faith and trembling hopes of his people As in the ten Primitive persecutions God now and then stoped the carreer of those Pagan persecutors and gave his persecuted Saints a little leave as in Job's phrase to swallow down their spittle but more especially when Constantine came to the Crown N.B. And after the Church had about 97 years Rest by times which may be well meant That silence in Heaven for half an hour Rev. 8.1 At the opening of the seventh seal after the six seals had destroyed the Pagan State which the Dragon had made his drudge to destroy the Gospel-Church that brought forth the Trumpet-Prophecy so therein all along God gave his Church some little revivings in their bondage under the Papagan power or Antichrist hitherto and will do so till the vials destroy him The third Remark is Nor was this all to give his persecuted people now and then some respite intermission or some cooling times from hot persecutions only but God also scatter'd Cordials for Corroborating and Comforting their Spirits in the Evil day N.B. as 1st It was a comfort to the Church that all the Pagan persecuting Emperors were so short lived insomuch that 27 of them God blew out of the Imperial Chair in the space of 200 years and then the Devil was defeated of his first design for so far was he from routing up the Church by the Pagan power that it self was routed up by Constantine c. This the Church over-lived to see N.B. 2ly No less Joy it was to the Church to see the Devil defeated in his second design against her by his powring out the Puddle water-flood of Arrianism for then the Lord his her in the Wilderness Rev. 12.6 14. And made the Earth help her verse 16. to wit the Goths and Vandals which the four first Trumpets Summon'd in upon the Roman Empire in the year 410 and wasted the western part of it about the 480 d. year All which Interspace the Church injoy'd peace in the Exercise of Religion yea and during this double design of the Dragon against the Church the former in the form of a Pagan the latter of a Christian Arrian yet denying Christ's Deity c. beside the white robes given to those crying Souls under the Altar Rev. 6.11 N.B. The whole 7th Chapter of Sealing and Securing 144000 is brought in for the comfort of the Church Nor did his second design succeed for beside the hiding place prepared of God for his Church in persecution she was born as upon the wings of Eagles as Exodus 19 4 and Deut. 32.11 to soar above its reach Rev. 12.6 14. So that the Church had a liberty to condemn the Arrians Pelagians Nestorians and Eutychians by the 2d and 3d General Councils which swallowed up the Flood N.B. 3ly Still 't is a comfort to the Church to be preserved under Anti-christ the last attempt of a daring Devil when he found it impracticable to destroy the whole Church he makes war against the Remnant of her seed that keep close to the rule of God's word Rev. 12.17 tho' he slay the witnesses yet he cannot bury them God stirs up Friends to preserve them from perishing And as the fifth Trumpet blew up the Saracens who entered Spain the 714 years within 80 years time over-ran it and many other Countries Italy it self c. were got to the very gates of Rome which could not but cause the Pope to pull in his pushing horns so the Sixth Trumpet brings up the Turks about the twelfth Century in Ottoman's year as 't is said 1296 Joyning with the Saracens They are a curb to Papistry and a scourge to Papists Rev. 9.20 for none worship Images as Papists do As the Turks hath been a Rampart to the Protestants so hath he been and is still Rampant to Popish Countries what father Service God hath for him of that Kind is yet unknown but the sounding of the seventh Trumpet which pours out seven Vials gradually upon the beast to destroy him brings the greatest comfort Rev. 11.15 The accomplishment of this is that which we must wait for the vision being yet for an appointed time Hab. 2.3 Dan. 8.19 c. then expireth the Kingdom of the Beast and then Christs Kingdom beginneth Then the Temple of God for Christ's worship and wittnesses both which hath been supprest shall be opened Rev. 11.19 This is the third State of the Church described Rev. 20. A serene and peaceable state till the battel with all the wicked of the world which shall end with Christ's coming to Judgment and then follows the Triumphant state Rev. 21.22 Chapters Seeing these sayings there can agree with no other State Rev. Chapters 12 13.14 15 to 20. do explain what is foretold in Chap. 11. The 4th Remark is There is certainly a time predicted and prefixed by God wherein the Beloved City as the Church is called Rev. 20.9 shall have a Golden Age and Halcyon Days for a thousand years upon Earth which space of Time is repeated six several times expresly Rev. 20.2 3.4 5 6 7. tho' this whole Book of the Revelation be mostly mysterious and as Jerom saith Epist ad Paulinum quot habet Verba tot Sacramenta so many Words so many Mysteries which may most surely be asserted concerning the 20th Chapter that hath been a subject of so many differing and contrary Interpretations and variety of Opinions which is wittily called an Holy Disease Yet this was the Judgment of the Antient Fathers in the very next Age to the Apostles As 1. Tertullian contra Marcion 2. Irenaeus Tract contra omnes Haereses 3. Justin Martyr who of a Philosopher became a Christian about thirty years after the death of this John the Divine the Pen-man of this Book of the Revelation 4. Papias who was St. John's Scholar and a godly Bishop in that Time 5. Hilarius a Divine of eminent Endowments 6. Lactantius that Eloquent and Candid Writer call'd the Christian Cicero Instit lib. 7. where he expresseth this
was the common stock out of which the following days works were deduced having its Original from God alone without any concurring power or foregoing Matter as the word God created noteth Whatever is or existeth besides God must proceed from God who is the Original of all All Creatures were in God before the Creation as effects are in the cause as the Rose before the Summer when it is neither spread nor sprung is in the Root the Idaea of all was in his understanding and will Thus David saith Thine Eyes did see my substance yet being imperfect and in thy books all my members were written which in continuance were fashioned when as yet there was none of them Psal 139.15 16. God had all the Names and Number of every part of the Creation as it were writ down in his Common-place-book like a curious workman that works all by the book and by a Model set before him he draws first a rude Draught then polisheth and perfecteth all The Third Enquiry is What is the Form of the Creation Answ God having made this rude Mass or first Matter of nothing by his Almighty Creating power in process of time and by degrees this Tohu Vabohu or Material Mass without form and void hitherto the Lord gave every part a proper and particular Form and perfection both in the higher and lower world beautifying Heaven with two great Lights and bespangling it with a numberless number of Stars so it became a stately Star-chamber for glorious Angels and glorified Saints to dwell in though that stupendious Arch-work of Heaven be not born up by props and pillars yet falls not upon our heads to the earth and clothing the earth with grass garnishing it with Flowers and furnishing it with Fruits This is called Creation-Mediate because her Matter praeexisted as Plants and Animals were Created out of the earth and out of the waters Gen. 1.20 24 25. but the production of that Matter out of which they were Created is called Creation-Immediate as it was made of nothing simply yet inasmuch as this Matter was a subject that had no Hability in it self to produce any thing the earth a dead lump had no power of it self to produce Plants or living Creatures no more than the Rock in the Wilderness had power to produce Water Exod. 17.6 Hence Gods producing all sorts of Creatures out of the first Matter is call'd Creatio Mediata as Gods making the first Matter out of nothing is call'd Creatio Immediata These two are call'd the primary and secundary Creation The form of the Creation is twofold 1. That which is common to all Created things was the Existency of all things which Existed not before that God gave to them in one moment by his Almighty Word and All-working command yea a most perfect Existency all his Creatures were very good Dei dicere est efficere God spake the Word and it was done so that Creation was no Motion but a simple and bare Emanation which is when without any Repugnancy of the Patient or toilsome labour of the Agent the work doth freely flow from the action of the Working Cause as the shadow doth from the Body This wonderful work of the great World made by Gods Irresistible Word is the shadow and obscure Representation of his unsearchable Wisdom Power and Goodness 2. That which is proper and peculiar To each Creature both Coelestial and Terrestrial God gave a distinct and differing Form making the Stars above and all things below to differ in their kind one from another This Formation of all things in differing Species out of the first Matter without either Successive Motion preceding Mutation or gradual Alteration no Created Being could possibly effect but God the Father alone by his Eternal Word and Spirit made all out of the first Matter and gave to all their several Form which was not in the first Matter but was Created out of nothing perfection was the Form and Beauty of the World and of every Creature in the World All the works of God are perfect works Deut. 32.4 Nothing could have been made more perfect essentially though God could have made some things better than he made them accidentally as he could have made Worms to be Angels and he could have given more excellent endowments to every Creature respecting the parts of the world but in respect of the whole the World was perfect both in respect of Degrees and Parts Every days Work was good Gen. 1.4 10 18 21 25. in respect of the parts severally but when the whole is spoke of all together 't is said They were all very good v. 31. The Fourth Enquiry is What was the Final Cause or End of it Answ The End of the Creation is twofold 1. The Supreme End 2. The Subordinate The first is the Manifestation of Gods Glory the second is the Instruction and Comfort of Man Gods Master-piece 1. Of the first God who is the most pure Act as before may be considered under a twofold Act. 1. Internal 2. External 1. The Internal or inward Act was not onely his actual enjoying of himself and solacing himself in himself from all Eternity thus God was happy in himself and was an Heaven to himself and needed no Created thing to make him more happy he was God blessed for ever without and before the Creation but also his Decree which was one eternal voluntary constant Act of God absolutely determining the Infallible future Being of whatsoever is beside himself unto the praise of his own glory Eternity is an Everlasting Now. whatever God thinketh or willeth he always thought and willed and always doth and will both think and will there can no more be a new thought or a new purpose in God than there can be a new God Gods thinking or determining is God himself whatever is in God is God as before God decreed the Futurition of the Creatures freely not from any necessity of Nature but only from his meer good pleasure Psal 115.3 Isa 49.3 Dan. 4.25 Eph. 1.11 c. God had no need of the things decreed had he so pleased they had never been but continued for ever in their Nothing-state yet God might have been without them and happy without them though they had never been he being Eternal All-blessed All-glorious light life and love all in himself This Divine Decree gave not only a possibility that all Creatures may be but also a futurition or certainty that they all shall be they shall have an Existence an actual being in time according to Gods determination before time 2. The External or outward act of God is his Efficiency or working all that he decreed according to his Decree Gods Decree was the great design of future Action and Gods Efficiency is the execution of that design those two answer each other as the pattern and Tabernacle Exod. 25.40 and as the pattern and Temple 1 Chron. 28.12 As the actual framing of Davids Body answered the Idaea or Platform thereof
drawn in Gods Book Psal 139.16 Not unlike to the Letters printed upon the Paper which do answer the Printing Type The Divine Efficiency doth answer to an hairs-breadth the Divine Decree both in Creation and Providence Gods Decree is the standing Rule of his Efficiency Those exact slingers Judg. 20.16 could not hit the mark so well as God doth by his External Efficiency his own Internal and Eternal Decree There is no variation of the Compass in this case at all The supream end hereof is the manifestation of his own glory more particularly of his wisdom power and goodness Psal 8.1 19.1 103. last 104.31 145.10 148.5 Prov. 16.4 Isa 43.21 Rom. 11.36 Revel 4.10 11. 5.13 'T is true God had a complacency in the work of his hands when he saw it was all Tob Meod superlatively good Gen. 1.31 The Lord rejoyced in his works Psal 104.31 It did God good a● it were to see all good and very good It was a delight to him but God saw this long before even from Eternity Non datur prius posterius in Deo The phrase imports God would have Man to see the wisdom power and goodness of God in all which he thus commends to our consideration a curious and glorious frame full of admirable skill and variety 2. The Subordinate or Subalternate End is for Mans Instruction and comfort 1. For Mans Instruction Hereby Man learns that there is a God Isa 40.26 Rom. 1.20 there is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 something knowable to Natural Reason concerning a Deity the World could not make it self neither could it be made by Chance or by a Concussion of Atoms c. The print and Character of the God of Heaven is legible upon every pile of grass growing on earth Praesentem Monstrat quaelibet Herba Deum Ovid. Let no man say he is not Book-learnt for every one may read the Book of Nature though he cannot read the Book of Scripture and learn thence the knowledge of God the Creator though not God the Redeemer and so abhor Atheism Ignorance and Idolatry Cursed be that God which made not Heaven and Earth Jerem. 10.11 This verse spoken at Babylon and therefore writ in the Chaldee Tongue whereas all the rest of the Prophesie is set down in the Hebrew was given to Gods people to make use of when the Babylonians sollicited them during their Captivity to worship their Idols in the Babylonian Language as a detestation of their Babel Idols saying to them Cursed be your Gods for they made neither Heaven nor Earth The same we may say of all the Idols both of Pagans and of Papagans 2. For Mans Comfort the Maker of Heaven and Earth may be hoped in for help above all Mortal Princes for he is a King Immortal and he is the all-powerful Creator and therefore can help without a peradventure Psal 146.3 4 5 6. Let Israel rejoyce in him that made him and new made him too Psal 149.2 or Hebr. in his Makers implying the Trinity of persons concurring both in Creation and Re-Creation or Regeneration which while Olymphus the Arrian Bishop denyed he was struck dead with three Thunder-bolts in a Bath How ought we to hang our Hope upon this great Creator that did hang the heavy Earth upon nothing Job 26.7 and yet it remains for almost six thousand years unmovable he commanded and it stood fast Psal 33.9 The whole Order of Nature remaineth as he first set it firm fast and unmoveable though it hang on nothing but upon Gods precept how much more ought we to be steadfast unmoveable 1 Cor. 15.58 having the sure word of Gods promise to hang upon 2 Pet. 1.19 The Devil and his Imps would overturn the comely Order of Nature they would as it were mingle Heaven and Earth together and so soon mar all but God confounds the Counsels and disappoints the Attempts of those tumultuating trouble-States and maugre their malice he preserveth Polities Laws Judgment and Equity without which Humane Societies could not long subsist God hath decreed to maintain Civil Government amongst Men to relieve the oppressed to punish the wicked to uphold his Church which hath so few friends on earth and so many Enemies both there and in Hell in despight of all This Decree of God not onely for her preservation in the world but also for her Exaltation above the world stands firm and inviolable as a Mountain of Brass Zech. 6.1 This shall bring her highest Adversaries into the lowest place even to that place which is fittest for them to be the footstool of Christ The Churches help is from the Lord that made Heaven and Earth Psal 121.2 and he will rather unmake both again than his people shall want seasonable help her help is in the Name of the Lord who hath made Heaven and Earth Psal 124.8 Gods power is the prop of her Faith and pricks her on to Prayer therefore we may commit our selves to him as to a faithful Creator 1 Pet. 4.19 a God of infinite might and mercy The Lord that made Heaven and Earth and therefore hath the blessings both of his Throne and of his footstool in his own hand will bestow his blessing both on and out of Sion Psal 134.3 God hath hitherto been our Eben Ezer The famous particular Remarks of the Wisdom Power and goodness of God in the Creation written as with a bright Sun-beam upon a Chrystal-wall for our more particular instruction doth here follow 1st The unchangeable Wisdom of God is made manifest 1. in the exact correspondency betwixt Gods Eternal Decree and his Temporal Creation which was the execution of it as before He is esteemed a foolish Builder or Workman who draws a better Mould in his mind and erects a worse with his hand but this Divine Artificer doth most dextrously accomplish by his wisdom in time what he had most wisely designed before time even from all Eternity 2. In the Curiosity of every Created thing there was both the heighth and depth of Divine Wisdom in every Creature hence David cryeth In wisdom hast thou made them all Psal 104.24 Every part of the Creation was performed in the perfection of Wisdom If God hath given man such wisdom as to contrive so many curious Engines and Artificial Instruments for measuring time almost to a perpetual Motion and Lands almost the whole Earth for all sublunary services how much more of wisdom hath the God of Wisdom who is wisdom in the Abstract wisdom it self that instructs man in all his Arts Isa 28.26 even in that plainnest of Husbandry and is call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hebr. 11.10 which signifies the most Exquisite and Artificial Artist The lending power must needs be a more exact Artificer than the borrowing power man borrows all his power from God and all his Art and skill from him therefore must God needs be a most skilful Operator infinitely transcending the most sublime contrivances of men every Creature may say