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A71123 A learned and very usefull commentary upon the whole prophesie of Malachy by ... Mr. Richard Stock ... ; whereunto is added, An exercitation upon the same prophesie of Malachy, by Samuel Torshell. Stock, Richard, 1569?-1626.; Torshell, Samuel, 1604-1650. Exercitation vpon the prophecy of Malachy. 1641 (1641) Wing T1939; ESTC R7598 653,949 676

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we spoken against thee 14 Ye have said It is in vaine to serve God and what profit is it that we have kept his commandement and that we walked humbly before the Lord of hosts 15 Therefore we count the proud blessed even they that worke wickednesse are set up and they that tempt God yea they are delivered 16 Then spake they that feared the Lord every one to his neighbour and the Lord hearkened and heard it and a booke of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord and that thought upon his Name 17 And they shall be to me saith the Lord of hosts in that day that I shall do this for a flocke and I will spare them as a man spareth his own son that serveth him 18 Then shall you returne and discerne between the righteous and the wicked between him that serveth God and him that serveth him not VERSE 1. Behold I will send my messenger and he shall prepare the way before me and the Lord whom ye seek shall speedily come to his Temple even the messenger of the Covenant whom ye desire behold he shall come saith the Lord of hosts IN this Chapter are two things laid down one an answer to the blasphemies reproved vers 17. of the former which is contained in the 6. first verses The other an expostulation or contestation with them of their prophanesse obstinacy and other impiety ad finem For the first The sum of it is thus Hitherto hath God so shewed himselfe a most equall and upright Judge that yet before he manifested himselfe a most mercifull father and never yet condemned and punished any people or any Nation with destruction banishment or other punishment but he first by his Prophets or by other means endeavoured to draw them to repentance and their duty from their madnesse and corruptions And so it comes to passe that either truly repenting and desiring the mercy of God they obtaine pardon or remaining obstinate and impenitent they are most justly punished Now this ancient manner of shewing his judgements either privately or publiquely God commands here to be expected for he saith he is about a most excellent worke whereby he will make manifest to godly and sound hearted men the greatnesse of his mercy and will give proofe of the severity of his judgements to the wicked and those who are obstinate in their sin The manner how this is expressed unto us is by a Prophesie of two persons to come the one of Iohn Baptist the forerunner calling men to repentance and shewing Gods purpose both touching the godly and the reprobate The other of the Ruler and Saviour of the world the Judge of quicke and dead whose admirable power is manifested both waies both in saving of the good and faithfull and in judgeing and punishing the wicked The Prophesie is then of two persons and of their duties The first is Iohn Baptist the son of Z●charias who was and did shew salvation a comming and teach men the meanes how they might obtaine it who for the similitude of his minde manners studies and whole life was called another Elias for to understand this as the Hebrewes did of an heavenly Angel is marvelously absurd seeing our Saviour Christ in the Gospel hath manifestly affirmed that it was Iohn Math. 11.10 who was sent not by the councell of man neither came by his owne ambition but by the authority of God he undertooke this duty Behold Signifieth a certaine and a most famous and publique thing And speaking of this he useth the present tense he noteth the certainty of it that is as sure as if it were already done and as sure as if it were beheld with their eies But there is in this thing a difference betwixt the Prophet and the Evangelist one giving it to Christ the other unto the Father divers reconcile them diversly but that which seemeth most plaine and true is this That some works are proper to the persons to every one in their essentiall proprieties as to beget be begotten and proceed and these are not communicable but some are externall and common and sometimes are given to one person sometimes to another to manifest the unity of essence in the trinity of persons As Isaiah 6.1 I saw the Lord sitting on a throne Some thinke St. Basil and others that it was the Father who appeared in that vision Yet John 12.41 It is given to the sonne And Acts 28.25 Saint Paul giveth it unto the spirit So that which is spoken of the holy Ghost 2. Pet. 7.21 is affirmed of the Father Heb. 1.1 now like to these is this The sending of Iohn being common to both is by the Prophet given to the Son and by the Evangelist to God or by Christ in the Evangelist to shew that he was one in nature with the Father and another in person Now Angel heere is a name noting an office or ministery and not an essence or nature Cyrillus He shall prepare the way before me The effect of his office and ministery to make ready for Christ that is by preaching saith and repentance he might fit men ready to receive Christ whom he preached not to come but declared and pointed at him being present and already come And so he differed from all the former Prophets In which state he denied himselfe to be a Prophet Iohn 1. And the Lord whom ye seek The next Prophesie is of Christ himselfe and the Lord whose comming and person is described in this verse his power verse the second and the effects of that power in respect of the godly and elect verses third and fourth and of the wicked and reprobate verses five and six First of the comming of Christ which is described to us first when he should come speedily or immediately that is when John had once entered his office and begun to preach Christ should come preaching also repentance and the Gospell and so he did Marke 1. Secondly the place where he should come that is the Temple By which what should be meant divers men have divers conceits Saint Cyril understands the wombe of the virgin Saint August and Theod. the humanity and flesh of Christ because of that destroy this Temple Iohn 2. but neither of these can be seeing John must first be sent to preach which was not till Christ was thirty yeares of age for his sending was not his birth but his office or for it So Christs sending was not his incarnation but his office for then is he said to come when he began to preach worke miracles and execute his function So John 1.26 27. and Math. 3.11 By Temple then we understand literally the Temple at Jerusalem and in it the Church for in it Christ ought to be to teach to do and execute his calling and function by the decree of God And there to build himselfe that spirituall Temple which is made of living stones And this some gather from the preposition El ad which signifies not
of the great patience of God and censure not his justice for sparing of them who knowes his times better then we can descerne and reprives but men for their plagues as Judges do malefactors till their iniquity be found out and till their Epha be full and in compassion towards them trouble at the remembrance of their fearfull end when that shall be Job 21.30 But the wicked is kept unto the day of destruction and they shal be brought forth to the day of wrath Vse 2 This may instruct men that in a plague and misery to be spared and to be delivered is not simply and in it selfe a blessing for as all outward things are as the mind of a man is and meates as the stomack so in this deliverance A theefe accounts it a benefit to be reprived for a while yet it is not but according to the intent of the Judge and the use he makes of it So in this we have all escaped Gods rod and his plague blowing up and destruction offer it we all blesse God but to all it is not a benefit in it selfe seeing even wicked men are spared and delivered that their sin may be full and they receive the more full revenge and a more fearefull reward Vnusquisque consideret non quid alius passus sit sed quid pati ipse mereatur nec evasisse se credat si eum interim poena distulerit cum timere plus debeat quem sibi Dei judicis censura serva vit Cyprian de lapsis 21. As he that hath escaped a serpent and is fallen into the power of a Lion Therefore let every one examine whether it be a blessing to him to be thus delivered if the patience of God hath brought him to repentance and reformation but otherwise thou art delivered rather in anger then in mercy and art deceived as the sicke man that thinks a good turn is done him when he hath what meat and drinke he desires unlesse that which the fire could not soften the sunne do and that thy heart relent as Saule at Davids kindnesse who had spared his life when he might have taken it away 1. Sam. 24.17 VERS XVI Then spake they that feared the Lord every one to his neighbour and the Lord hearkened and heard and a booke of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord and that thought upon his name THen spake they that feared the Lord. The Prophet having reproved the blasphemy of the wicked shewed their grounds on which they denied the providence of God he now answereth them First in this vers by opposing unto them the contrary opinion of these who did truly fear God Secondly vers 17. By a sweet promise on Gods part of great goodnesse and mercy towards the godly who rested in his pomises Thirdly verse 18. Denouncing a judgement which the wicked should have experience of when they should see the difference betwixt them and those who feared him Then spak they that feared the Lord. In this verse the Prophet brings in the godly answering and incouraging one another contrarie to that which the wicked had said And so it is i. The godly of those times though happily but few at what time the wicked spoke thus blasphemously did mutually exhort one another not to faint or be dismaied by those speeches of the wicked or by them to be drawne from their pietie to wickednesse and corruption but they had their mututall speeches to further one another in their good course as the others had to harden one another in their wicked courses But what said they St. Hierom and some others thinke that the Prophet hath not told us but that telling us the just did speake it must be supposed that they spoke fitting and good things in defence of the providence of God and his government and such things as they had learned by the Scriptures and had received from the instruction of their teachers but saving their judgments I rather encline to those who think the words following to be theirs and not Gods words who seemeth not to speake till the 17. verse Thus then in comforting one another they sayd The Lord harkened and heard i. Howsoever they imagine that the Lord sees and heares nothing respecteth nor regardeth what is done or said yet he hath heard and doth most diligently observe what is said and done for so much hearkening doth carry and will import namely care and diligence As Psalm 5.2 2 Chron. 6. And so by this they confirme the contrary to that which the wicked had said that God did not regard that it is manifest that he heares their words not a word drops from them which is unknowne to him much more all their actions are diligently and attentively regarded And that it may appeare it is not for a space or a short time but perpetually therefore he hath a booke of remembrance which is not spoken as if God had any such booke or stood in need of it as if he were subject to forgetfulnesse but it is spoken in respect of men by which they may be assured that the will and decree of God touching them and the wicked is certaine and constant which is better expressed by a booke then by words for that which is written is more durable and permanent whereas things spoken vanish away and are blown away in the aire For them that feared the Lord That is for such as feare him that he will not forget their labours and obedience but will recompence and reward it even to their very thoughts and intents thinking and remembring his commandements to observe and doe them Therefore spake they who feared the Lord. The Prophet answereth the blasphemy of the wicked in this verse by opposing unto them the contrary opinion of those who did truely feare God And in this First their encouragement Secondly their ground First Gods hearing and regarding Secondly his certaine decree for shewing good to them The first thing here is the encouragement one of another Doctrine It is the duty of every one fearing God to encourage and strengthen one another in the service and worship of God Here and Heb. 3.13 But exhort one another daily while it is called to day lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sin And 10.24 And let us consider one another to provoke unto love and to good workes Mich. 4.2 And here we may make that generall which was spoken particularly to Peter as to all Ministers so to Christians Luke 22.32 I have prayed for thee that thy faith faile not therefore when thou art converted strengthen thy brethren So Baruch and the Princes did helpe one another Jerem. 36.11.13.15.16 When Michaiah the sonne of Gemariah the sonne of Shaphan had heard out of the bookes all the words of the Lord Then Michaiah declared unto them all the words that he had heard when Baruch read in the booke in the audience of the people And they said unto him sit downe now
Targum or Chalde paraphrase in what have we multiplyed speech against thee Vers 14 15. Secondly in particular verse 14 15. Yee have said It is vaine to serve God and what profit is it that wee have kept his ordinance and that wee have walked mournefully before the Lord of hosts And now wee call the proud happy yea they that worke wickednesse are set up yea they that tempt God are even delivered This is the proofe of the accusation against them These were their stout words against God Yee have said It is vaine to serve God Vulg. He is vaine who serveth God There is nothing got by it A profane atheisticall conceit now adayes also entertained of many And what profit is it that wee have kept his ordinance or his observation sayth our margin The Geneva his Commandement The Hebr. is Shamarnu mishmartó That wee kept his custody or his ward that is the office imposed by him upon us So Esay 21.8 I am set Mishmarti in my ward whole nights 1 Chron. 9.23 They had oversight by ward● Mishmaroth The priests were divided in 24 Mishmaroth Custodies or Wards which they entred upon by their turnes every Sabbath To which here seemes to bee an allusion And that we have walked mournfully or in blacke before the Lord Pagn and the Geneva that we have walked humbly The Lxx suppliant The Chald. With a spirit cast downe Piscat Mournfully before that is for feare of Iehova that we might reconcile him unto us The French that wee have walked in poore estate The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 obscurely in mourning or in black We have the word 1 Kings 18.45 The Heavens Hithkadderu were black with Clouds And Ps 35.14 Koder I bowed downe heavily as one that mourneth for his mother Black is the colour of mourning Our comment gives this sense What profit have we that we have walked humbly that is that wee have not resisted nor revenged our selves but referred all to God what have wee got by it Now then or Therefore we call the proud happy They who tread upon modest men and rayse themselves high and worke their own ends confidently and daringly they thrive and therefore them wee call that is count happy Hierom here calls them arrogant men Boyling raging men swelling and presumptuous Zedim comes of a roote that hath all these significations Yea they that worke wickednesse are set up or built up that is They have children houses lands and honors c. Chald. They are established The Lxx 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are reedified They prosper and have all things well about them As the word is Iob 22 23. If thou returne to the Almighty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou shalt be built up that is Thou shalt prosper Yea they that Tempt God are even delivered The grudging and blasphemous speeches of these wicked men are still continued those that continue in sinning and ad sinne to sinne and as it were dare God to try what he will doe or how hee will deale yet they are delivered we see them to bee safe secure bold and prosperous See Ps 95.9 2. This blasphemy of theirs thus discovered is answered First by opposing the contrary discourse of the godly verse 16. Secondly by shewing Gods taking notice of both ver 16. latter part Thirdly by declaring gods gracious promise to deale well with the godly ver 17. Fourthly by warning the blasphemers that Gods dealings shall be manifest even in their eyes ver 18. Fifthly by a further amplification of that point of Gods manifest dealing chap. 4. ver 1. ad fin Vers 16 First their Atheisme and blasphemy is answered by opposing to these blasphemous conceits and words of wicked men the contrary opinion and discourse of the godly ver 16. Then they that feared the Lord spake often one to another In the greatest apparent Ataxy and disorder and in the time of the stoutest language and behaviour of ungodly men They that feared the Lord being acquainted with his wayes and manner of working spake often for their mutuall encouragement and otherwise to one another that there would come a day or that God is righteous or that he only deferres or such like things they spake whereby they defended the cause of God against wicked Atheists This I conceive to be the sense of these words but for the manner of the Prophets bringing them into his discourse interpreters have not satisfied me I conceive him in the midst of his discourse wherein in the person of God he bends and directs his speech all this while to them that were before him the wicked whom hee laboured to convince Now hee breakes off and turnes his speech to God or to his owne soule or to the godly yet with an intention in a fine and insinuating way to instruct the wicked blasphemers that heard him In this manner your words have bin stout yee have said t is in vaine to serve God That men thrive most by wicked courses but oh my God thou knowest or oh thou my soule thou knowest or oh yee that feare God yee know whatever these blind and profane men use to thinke and say yet then in the greatest seeming disorders yet then they that feared God have other conceits and encourage one another and speake otherwise and thou oh God takest notice of them or oh my soule thou knowest or oh yee that feare God yee know that the Lord hearkens and heares and sets downe all in his booke c. But this conceit upon the place I doe with all submission leave to the judgement of those that can more clearely and with more facility give satisfaction to themselves about the coherence of these words Secondly he answers their blasphemy by shewing Gods taking notice of the different speeches and cariages of men ver 16. The latter part of it Then the Lord hearkened and heard it and a booke of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord and that thought on his Name I take not these to be the words of the godly as Tremell Tarnovius and generally all understands them by supplying the text with the word Saying They that feared the Lord spake to each other Saying The Lord hearkned c. But I conceave as I said in the former member of the verse that they are the words of the Prophet who answers their blasphemy by telling them in that way of rhetorique that I have exprest above that God is not so regardlesse as they imagine and speake but hee heares both their Atheisme and likewise what defense the godly doe make and puts it downe as it were for a remembrance to reward it in them I herein follow S. Hierom and desire leave to depart from the reverend author of our commentary who interprets them as the speeches of the people according to the supply in the Tremellian Bible And a booke of remembrance was written before him for them c. It is a Metaphor from the use of Kings to set
Lord loved which is spoken of this people and land And hath married the daughter of a strange God In the originall it is Hath the daughter but the meaning is Hath married the daughter that is such as professe and worship a strange God not that they were Gods or thus acknowledged by him and the Word but it is an usuall thing in the Scripture to call things not as they are or as the Scripture judgeth of them but after the affection of those of whom he speaks as 2 Cor. 4.4 Phil. 3.19 So these were not true Gods nor no Gods indeed but so accounted of And this name is communicated to them Origen hom 14. in Numeros hath this rule That wheresoever the name Iehovah is there is meant the true God the creator of the world but the other names of God are attributed both to the true God and to false Gods Iudah hath transgressed an abomination is committed Thus the Prophet speaketh not for the particular onely but the generall that transgressions even all are an abomination to the Lord those things he abhorreth And so that is the point Doctrine Transgression and sinne all and every one is an abomination to the Lord that which his soule loathes hates and abhorres Hence he speaketh so often of sinne and gives it this name of abomination as in very many places in the bookes of Moses as Levit 18.26.27.28 Deut. 20.18 Hence he speaketh of particular sinnes as Prov. 11.1 and 12.22 Rev. 2. Hence he is said to abhorre the man that is wicked not that he doth his person as he is his creature which he loves but as hee hath made himselfe such Psal 5.6 Reason 1 Because he is righteous and holy himselfe Now the more righteous the Judge is the more he hates iniquity and sinne He is righteousnesse and holinesse it selfe Now as the Sunne is the greatest enemy to darknesse because it hath light of it selfe and is as it were light it selfe So in this Reason 2 Because he loves his creature and sinne is that which destroieth it Now no man can indeed love any man but he will hate that which is the cause of the ruine and destruction of him Vse 1 This may let us see and give wicked men themselves to understand in what state they stand Vera calamitas Deum offenderet eorum quae ipsi non placent aliquid facere Chrysost by reason of their sinne God hates their sinne and abhorreth it and them for it How fearfull then is their condition for he cannot hate but unreconciled his face and hand shall be against them for their sinnes Revel 2.6 Object Then is every one in a fearful case for all sin even the best Ans The first is true yet followes not the second because though they sinne and have it yet they hate it Now God onely hates men for their sinne when they love it not when they hate it and he will onely then judge them when they will not judge themselves 1 Cor. 11.31 As in a land and state when the Magistrates will not punish then God will goe the circuit and hold an Assize and bring his plagues and judgements upon them but when they doe it is an explication of his wrath so in a particular man which is a little world a little countrey Vse 2 To teach us that it is dangerous to have societie with men who embrace their sin and love it Vse 3 For imitation if God hate sin and it is abomination to him it should be so to his they should hate it first and principally in themselves and their dearest friends for if it be not first that hee hate the same sinne in himselfe and friends he hates it not though he oppose it in others But if he be Gods he hates the evill in himselfe which he doth then hates he it in others and must doe it for that God commends in the Church of Ephesus and so commands in others Rev. 2.6 In Israel and in Ierusalem The people and place which he enriched with such benefites honored with such priviledges made it the place of his worship and the Kings seat therfore them to do it it is more heynous Doctrine Their sin is the greater and more heynous who have received the most blessings from God or the greatest priviledges Vide cap. 2.12 Doct. 1. For Iudah hath defiled the Holinesse of the Lord. This is a further amplification of their sin because it did pollute the people and place dedicated to the Lord and so made holy to him Doctrine Sinne is a filthy and polluted thing that which polluteth and defileth both places and persons where and by whom it is committed So here and Zachar. 13.1 sinne is called Vncleannesse Hierom translated it as the word will carry it Menstruata menstruous then which saith he Nihil eras in lege immundius qua quicquid tangebat immundum faciebat Rev. 3.18 Thy filthy nakednesse And Micha 2.10 Because it is polluted Vse To teach every man to be willing to receive a reproofe and to indure to be told of his offences and corruptions from this reason because they are they which pollute and defile him In a garment saith Chrysost ho. 17. ad popul Antioch Put on auquerly or unhandsomely if a boy tell thee of it thou wilt not much blush because it is no great shame the greater shame were to goe with it so out of order And if durt be upon the garment or face and one tell thee of it thou wilt thanke him and take it kindely how ought thou in this for by this reformation may be had and thou mayest be made cleane and kept clean for though it is somewhat difficult and hard for a man to part with his sinnes and overcome them himselfe yet if he have many admonitors or be often admonished at length he may be rid of them The holinesse of the Lord. So is the Church called either because of Gods presence which makes it holy or else because they were dedicated to God and made his proper and peculiar people for a sanctified in Scripture so signifies to be set a part to a holy use and a sanctified end as is said of the Sabboth Doctrine The Church and children of God must be holy unto the Lord separated from the world and corruption and dedicated to him and his service sanctified and set apart for holy things and holy worship as the instruments of the Temple the sacrifices and other holy things once dedicated to God might not be taken and applyed to prophane uses or common uses no more may men once dedicated to God give themselves to corruption and sin nay much lesse for those things were but the shadowes men are the substance those but the types they the truth Therefore must they be continued to holy things by his service as they are dedicated James 1.27 Pure religion and undefiled before God even the father is this to visite the fatherlesse and widowes in their
perceive that their masters overheare them talking of any thing or oversee them doing of any thing speake and doe well this is eye service or eare service yet God would be served with eye and eare service and he that seeth in secret will reward openly And the words are Attendit Iehovah auait He hearkened and heard he so heares that he also attends or regards it A man may overheare a thing and not regard it and so as good as he heard it not Eccles 7.22 But God as he heares so he regardeth Contrary to that the wicked say Psa 10. That God regardeth it not Zeph. 1.12 But God doth regard the words of the tongue because he hath made a law as wel for the words as deeds God made the tongue and therefore will have the fruit 1 Cor. 6.20 For ye are bought for a price therefore glorifie God in your body and in your spirit for they are Gods so with tongue as well as hand and therefore we must looke to give account of words as well as of our actions Matth. 12.36 But I say unto you that of every iale word that men shall speake they shall give account thereof at the day of judgement Jude verses 14.15 And Enoch also the seaventh from Adam prophesied of such saying behold the Lord commeth with thousands of his Saints to give judgement against all men and to rebuke all the ungodly among them of all their wicked deeds which they have ungodly committed and of all their cruell speakings which wicked sinners have spoken against him Plumea verba plumbea pondera windy words if they be wicked words lye as a dead weight on thy soule Take heed of lifting up his name take heede of an oath for it bringeth an heavy burthen But it is our incouragement I say that God rewards us for good words as well as for our deeds though they seeme to be but little worth they are arguments of a sanctified heart and of the feare of God as it is Matth. 12.34.35 O generation of vipers how can you speake good things when ye are evill for of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things and an evill man out of an evill treasure bringeth forth evill things And a booke of remembrance was written before him That is he keepes the remembrance of the things he knowes Doctrine The Lord as he seeth and knoweth all things so he remembreth them as he hath knowledge without ignorance of any thing so he hath remembrance without oblivion of the same things good or evill Therefore is he here said to have a booke because things are more certainely and perpetually kept in it then left to remembrance of man Hence is that Amos 8.7 The Lord hath sworne by the excellency of Iaakob surely I will never forget any of their workes Heb. 6.10 For God is not unrighteous that he should forget your worke and labour of love which ye shewed toward his name in that ye have ministred unto the Saints and yet minister Psal 139.2 Jer. 44.21 Psal 56.8 Thou hast counted my wandrings put my teares into thy bottell are they not in thy register Dan. 7.10 Revel 20.12 A similitude taken from Kings who have things written for memory Ester 6.1 though God need not Reason 1 Because of his eternall and infinite apprehension being as able to apprehend things and keepe them done thousand yeares since as but yesterday as man is able to remember things done but yesterday as that Psal 90.4 2 Pet. 3.8 Reason 2 Because he is absolutely perfect without either sinne or imperfection therefore without oblivion that in many things is sinne and in any thing imperfection even as ignorance of things necessary to be knowne and which may be knowne is sinne of things not necessary is imperfection and infirmity though without sin Object Isaiah 43.25 I even I am he that putteth away thine iniquities for mine owne sake and will not remember thy sinnes Then God doth forget and there is oblivion in him Answer Gods forgetting of sinne is like his not seeing of sinne Num. 23.21 which is not that he seeth not the act and thing done but hee seeth it not to impute it to them in that respect hee is as though he saw it not So he forgetteth not the act and the thing done but not to impute it to him or to punish him for it which is in effect to forget it As his remembrance is taken for the effect of his remembrance As Isaiah 38.3.9 I pray thee let me have the effect and feeling of thy remembrance let me know by experience thou dost remember me So his forgetfulnesse or forgetting is taken for the effect and feeling of it They should finde he had as it were forgotten Vse 1 To let us see the folly of wicked men as in committing sinne in secret and darke thinking the Lord cannot or doth not see so in seeking to cover it committed and labour to bring an oblivion of it who though the corruption cleave to them as Jer. 17.1 The sinne of Judah is written with a pen of Iron and with the point of a Diamond and graven upon the table of their heart and upon the hornes of your Altars Yet they by all meanes labour to forget it and if they have escaped and prospered with it for a month or two or a yeare or two c. they thinke also God hath forgotten it But doe they not deceive themselves when with God is no oblivion no forgetfulnesse What benefit can they then get by this even as a malefactor that hath committed some haynous offence whom the Magistrate lets alone to see what he will doe whether he will seeke his pardon or no and he goes about to corrupt or remove all that should give evidence against him when it is in the power of the Judge both to be witnesse and Judge and proceed of his owne knowledge and out of his owne memory of the act and who also cannot forget So here What got the sonnes of Iaakob by smothering their treachery to their father and brother It may terrifie the wicked that every evill word is registred Matth. 12. and though God should not the Divell would keepe them in mind to accuse them Rev. 12. yea and their owne consciences Gods register booke Vse 2 To instruct every man to keep his bookes of account well and to remember all his debts and his sinnes seeing they shall be remembred though he would forget them or could when as his remembrance of them to humble himselfe and to get his pardon makes God to forget them Saint Chrysostome would have a man not to forget his sinnnes after pardon * Non ut taeipsum c. Chryso ho. 12. ad popu Antioch Not to consume thy selfe with the thought of them but to teach thy soule not to grow wanton nor to fall into the same sinnes againe But most necessary before
downe the good services done unto them As we have an instance of that custome Esth 6.1 Wherein Mordecai's service was remembred And Corn. a lapide tells us that the Pope hath a booke of the merits of his Prelatesi whom hee promotes accordingly The prophet speakes Anthropologicè not that God needs any memoriall but because men doe keepe such bookes and the Lord will as surely remember to reward his as if they were written in a register Sepher Ziccaron The Lxx 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A booke of memorialls A chronicle An history As God hath a bottell for his peoples teares so he hath a Chronicle for their sufferings Vers 17 Thirdly he answers their blasphemy by declaring Gods gracious promises of dealing well with the godly and such as feare him ver 17. And they shall bee mine saith the Lord In that day when I make up my Iewells and I will spare him as a man spareth his sonne that serveth him A text of most sweete and comfortable contents But for the choyce and practicall Notions which it doth afford for the encouraging and supporting of the soule I doe refer to a discourse upon this verse by that excellent preacher my Reverend and worthy friend D. Richard Sibbs now with God They shall bee mine Vulg. and Genev. They shall be to me In that day when I make up my Iewells Vulg. They shall bee to me in the day in which I doe that is Doe judgment as they that follow the vulgar make good the sense as well as they can for peculiar The Geneva they shall be to mee in that day that I shall doe this for a flock The old autorised English Bible They shall be to me in the day that I shall doe judgement a flock And Peculium the word of the Vulg. Latine sometimes signifies a flock As in Plautus Asinar Quanquam ego sumsor didatus Frugi tamen sum nec potest peculium numerari But properly it is that part of the flock which the father 's granted their children or the masters to their servants as a stock whereon to exercise their industry according to Hottoman A stock of Cattell peculiar And so it somewhat agrees with the Hebrem Segulla a select portion So Deut. 6.6 The Lord hath chosen thee to be Segulla a speciall people unto himselfe But it is properly some rare or deare treasure a brooch or rich tablet or pendant a Jewell a rich and peculiar treasure As Eecle 2.8 I gathered me Segullath melachim the peculiar treasure of Kings Exod. 19.5 yee shall bee a peculiar treasure unto mee above all people Lxx 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A peculiar people The Lord promiseth to take such care of the godly and to lay them up so safely as one would a speciall jewell And I will spare him as a man spareth his sonne The Geneva his owne forme that serveth him I will bee indulgent towards and have pitty upon the godly I will deale tenderly pardon and remit their punishment See 2 Sam. 22.7 David spared Mephibosheth Or I will have compassion So the word is ordinarily translated as 1 Sam. 23.21 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yee have compassion on me Vers 18 Fourthly he answeres their blasphemy by warning them that Gods dealings and judgements shall bee so manifest even in their owne fight that they shall be clearly discerned from the godly ver 18. Then shall yee returne and discerne between the righteous and the wicked betweene him that serveth God and him that serveth him not You oh wicked blasphemers shall change your opinion and whereas you said the wicked prosper and it is in vaine to serve the Lord yee shall see a great difference betweene them and how much they gaine by it that serve the Lord. So. S. Hierom c. See the point wholesomly and profitably handled in a Treatise of D. Preston● on Eccles 9.1 2 3 4 annexed to his treatise of The new Covenant Verse 1 Fifthly and lastly Chap. 4. he answers by a further amplication of that which was proposed before to shew Gods different dealing with the righteous and the wicked by an Hysterosis the righteous were first named in the proposition verse 18. but the wicked are first treated of in this amplication Chapter 4 ●h as the Hebrew Bibles that we now use and the Latine and our English and most others doe distinguish it which yet Tremellius and Piscator and some others doe continue to the former Chapter making but 3 Chapters of this prophecy and so the first verse of this Chapter to be the 19th verse of the third and so on Where let me take oocasion by the way to note it that all antiquity was ignorant of the division of the Bible that wee now use which was made about the yeare 1250 The worke as Genebrard thinks of those Schoolemen who assisted Hugh the Cardinall in gathering The Concordances and an invention so usefull and so much approved that the Iewes themselves after followed it in the Hebrew Bibles The Ancients indeed had their Titles and Chapters or versicles too but not so as wee divide them but usually in shorter periods as appeares by that of Caesarius We have saith he foure Gospells which consist of one thousand one hundred sixty two Chapters And Euthymius quoting Math. 26.58 calls it the 65th Title and quoting Mat. 26.74 calls it The 66th Title Their Titles were as our Chapters and their Chapters much what as our verses For instance S. Mathew which we divide into 28 Chapters they divided into 68 Titles and 355. Chapters But all distinguished not alike As the Iewes had their Parschiot as namely Bereschit Noah c. according to which they cited the Scripture of the old Testament So the fathers some of them divide bookes according to the Histories as Cyrus Prodromus makes his First title In the beginning was the word his second Title There was a marriage in Cana His third Title Christs night disciple Nicodemus c. Some divided them according to the miracles as Gregory one Title Of the mariage in Cana another Of the five Loves c. Cyril as hee wrote 12 bookes upon Iohn so hee divides the Evangle the first begins at Ioh. 1.1 The second at Ioh. 1.29 The third at Ioh. 5.35 c. S. August makes a Period in every Tract and S. Chrysost in every Homilie S. Hierome on these small prophets oft begins a booke in the middle of a Chapter as we have them now divided In Oecumenius his Enarrations hee hath 40 where we make 28 Chapters on the Acts hee hath 20 where wee make but 16 in the Epistle to the Romans c. many of them indeed oft end their paraphrases and discourses where our Chapter end But that is because the matter in hand breakes off there The truth is Distinguishing of the Bible into Chapters and verses much helps the reader but it is so divided as sometimes obscures the sense as we oft finde in reading the Bible and of which the learned
hiric being put for pathach is of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and hath all those significations To grow To multiply To grow fat To expaliate To bee wanton To leape and friske As calves of the stall Chald. Tigur Pagn The French the Geneva As fat calves The Lxx Like calves at liberty Vulg. As calves out of the herd that feed and pasture together among the rest and grow fat at grasse as it is Ier. 50.11 But Marbek is Saginarium The place stable or as our English hath it The Stall where calves are fatted Jer. 46.21 Her hired men are like bullocks of the stall So the Hebr. and the margin there agreeable to it 1 Sam. 28.24 The woman had a calfe of the stall Our Transl render it according to the Chalde A fat calfe And yee shall tread downe the wicked 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a word used nowhere else in the Bible The Chald. You shall thresh The Lxx and Tertul. quoting this lib. de Resurr Vulg. Pagn Ours c. You shall tread upon or tread downe the wicked that is You shall be over them A plain difference then shall be found between you and them notwithstanding mens profane conceits to the contrary For they shall be ashes under your feet Montan. and Geneva Dust under the soles of your feet In the day that I shall doe this What day that is see before upon verse 1. From this prophecie of the approaching of Christs comming he takes occasion in the name of the Lord 1. To exhort them to study the Law Verse 4. 2. To prepare their expectation of Christ by prophecying again of his fore-runner Verse 5 6. Verse 4 I. He takes occasion to exhort them because as it is very probable hee knew himselfe to bee the last of the Prophets and that they should be destitute of that helpe any longer diligently to search and study the Law in the meane season till the comming of Christ to whom the Law in all the parts of it doth lead vers 4. Remember yee the Law of Moses my servant which I commanded him in Horeb for all Israel with the Statutes and Judgements The Law here may be taken comprehensively for all the doctrine of Moses which is divided Deut. 6.1 into 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Commandements the morall Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Statutes the ceremoniall Law and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Judgements the Judiciall Law or it may be taken principally for the Morall the other two being afterward repeated The Law of Moses It is usuall for writings to carry the names of them that pen them as Davids Psalter And Moses was the Law-giver to Israel from God Hee hath his name from that accident in his infancie Exod. 2.10 Shee called his name Moses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mosche that is Drawn out and shee said because 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I drew him out of the water In ancient time they wrote his name Moyses either thinking it to bee compounded of the Aegyptian words Mo Water and Hyses Saved or being acquainted with the Syrians pronunciation Muses as the Syrians at this day and the Turkes doe pronounce it as Cutlu Muses an usuall name among them that is Happy Moses and joyning ours with it of Moses and Muses made Moyses but corruptly Thus Drus in quaest Hebr. Among the Aegyptians he was called Mneves as Fr. Junius quotes it out of Diodorus Siculus See his note ad Exod. 2.10 Ioh. Weems Christ Synag lib. 1. cap. 1. pag. 21. following Aben-ezra sayes they called him Monios But see Junius Loco citato Moses is mentioned by some Heathen Poets as a Law-giver Iuvenal Sat. 14. Tradidit arcano quodcunque volumine Moses And Arator Non haec jejunia Moses condidit The law which I gave unto him in Horeb A mountain in the Country of Amalek and in the wildernesse of Sinai so called because of the drinesse and barrennesse of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To be dried and To wither It is called 1 King 19.8 Horeb the mount of God not in regard of the height of it as tall Cedars are called The Cedars of God but because the Lord appeared there and gave the Law for Horeb is mount Sinai one mountaine with two tops the Easterne called Sinai and the Westerne Horeb. Iac. Bonfrer in his Onomasticon tells us he hath disputed this question upon Exod. 3.1 which booke I have not and therefore referre the Reader to consult him there It is at this day called Saint Catharius mountaine Which I gave him God gave Moses the Morall Law writ with his owne hand as Deut. 10.2 seemes to prove See Weemse Expos vol. 1. lib. 1. exerc 3. For all Israel Pagn To Mont. upon 1 for the use of all Israel With the Statutes and Iudgements Of them before Only let me not passe this verse without notice of that which to me seemes very observable That the truth is Commentators upon this place can scarcely make a cleare and faire coherence of this verse with the fore-going but as if the Prophet were full of this necessary point Hee inserts it though to our seeming somewhat abruptly rather than not mention it An observation that offers unto our thoughts The very great necessity of acquainting our selves with Gods Law the benefit of which I referre the Reader to find commended unto him in a learned and very fruitfull Treatise of Mr. H. Mason Hearing and Doing chap. 5. This point hath beene much beat upon by the Fathers in their Sermons or Homilies to the people in their Exhortations and Epistles to their private and deare friends Many of our men in handling the controversie about permitting the reading of the Scripture to the people have collected many and plentifull instances I spare them Only I would note the piety of some persons in their assiduous study of Gods Law It is a known History which they relate of Alphonsus King of Arragon Let mee adde what Herebert Rosweyd the Iesuit reports of Thomas a Kempis the devout Author of those books which are and deserve to be in every ones hand De Imitatione Christi That as he spent his houres in reading the holy Scripture so hee wrote out the whole Bible divided into foure Tomes fairely and legibly with his own hand And yet a great scholler too he was a man wedded to his book so much that this was his usuall saying and that which hee was wont to write in the beginning of his books In een hoexken met een boexken In omnibus requiem quaesivi nusquam inveni nisi in angelo cum libello I have sought content in all things but never found it unlesse with a booke in a nooke But his most delight was in the booke of God How much was his zeale beyond the temper of these times when many think it would hinder their schollership to read much or oft in the Bible which perhaps also is not to bee found in some well furnished studies The neglect of which and
Cardinals but the businesse was through the occasions of the Roman Sea intermitted more then 20 yeeres from the dissolving of the Councell till Sixtus the V. performed it Lucas Burgensis in a particular tract hath collected all the Corrections made in that Edition That of Sixtus was two or three yeeres after purged by Clement the VIII and yet Brugensis hath found a Catalogue of Errata still and brings in Bellarmine confessing as much and yet the worke from the first to the last was not lesse then of 46. yeeres and boasted of with high and Papall language Sixtus his Bull is now left out of the Bibles and so is Clements Breve Apostolicum out of most Antib Bibl. p. 162. which yet the reader shall finde carefully preserved and to good use by Amama in his Antibarbarus Biblicus Wee for our part count no Translation authenticall and esteem it a tyrannie both in the Popish and Lutheran Churches that no man without circumlocutions and insinuations and apologies may shew the very least dissent But the strife about the Translation equals not that which hath been about the Sence The Acts that have beene used by the Romanists for the settling and establishing The Right of Interpretation upon the Bishop of Rome have been well known wherby they have laboured to make him the Oracle to the world as the Turkish Mufti is by the relation of Busbequius in those parts Busbeq epist 3. finding it to be the most expedite way to gaine the opinion of the publique and authorised interpreter But we have little reason to yeeld over the Title to him knowing how readie he and his servants are to make advantage of every thing that hath any likelihood to advance them yea how they wrest and abuse Scriptures to the maintenance of everie cause of theirs especiallie the intolerable pride and usurpations of the Pope Arch B. of Cant. in his 2 enlarged Edition of his most learned relation of the Confe sect 26. nu 12. p. 209. An instance of this wee have in that notable observation which my Lord of Canterbury his Grace hath made upon the Frontispice of John de Puente his booke of The Agreement of the two Catholike Monarchies where the Text Genes 1.16 is applyed as Innocentius had done long before and the words Luminare Majus The greater light are over the Portraiture of Rome An observation out of a Picture whereby his Grace hath done the same service for the discovery of the Romish Arts which that other noble protestant my Lord Duplessis Myster Iniqui in presat did out of another picture or Frontispice printed before two bookes one at Bononia An. 1608. the other at Naples An. 1609. wherein Pope Paul the V. is lively pictured in a Table with this Inscription TO PAUL THE FIFTH VICE-GOD THE MOST INVINCIBLE MONARCH OF THE CHRISTIAN COMMON WEALTH AND THE MOST STOUT MAINTAINER OF THE PONTIFICIAN OMNIPOTENCIE This Table hangs within a triumphall Arch on either side hung with Crowns Diadems and Scepters after the severall fashions and wearings of the Kings of the whole world At the foot of the Arch sit on the one hand Europe and Africa with these words of the Prophet Kings shall be thy nursing fathers and Queens thy nursing mothers on the other hand Asia and America with the following words With their face towards the earth they shall licke up the dust of thy feet Esai 49.23 Above there are winged Schroles in one upon the right hand over some ruines of buildings is that text in Jer. 27.8 but somewhat altered The Nation and Kingdome which will not serve him that Nation will I punish saith the Lord with the Sword and with Famine and with pestilence In the other on the left hand that place Dan. 7.14 applyed with more blasphemy There was given him dominion and a Kingdome and all people shall serve him his dominion is an everlasting dominion which shall not passe away and his Kingdome that which shall not be destroyed Others also of them have beene as bold with the holy Text. The Bishop of Bitonto in his Sermon at the opening of the Councell at Trent Hist. Conc. Trid. l. 2. adan 1545. advising men to obey the Councell said Else it will be said the Popes light is come into the world and men loved darknesse rather then light So applying the Text Joh. 3.18 But the judicious writer of the History notes it That many were offended with that speech It will alwaies prove an intangled title to the Pope Who then must be the Judge Erasinus is faine to leave his Butcher and Fishmonger wrangling in this point Eaas Colloq 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and when they have said all yet unresolved There are many that would cast it upon the Fathers and that we must stand to what they say But that were to make them not expounders but lawgivers Wee regard them highly but yeeld them not the Royalty of a Mint as Mornay speakes D. F● White Orth. Faith ch 4. parag 1. besides we neither finde all difficulties explicated by them nor in what they doe explicate an agreement In the very Councell of Trent another saying of Cardinall Cajetans That a new sence of Scripture is not to be rejected though it be against the old Doctors seeing power is left now also to interpret was by some much commended who thought it a tyranny to forbid the faithfull the use of their owne proper ingenie others indeed opposed it accounting License worse then Tyranny among others Richard of Mans a Franciscan friar went so farre as to say The Doctrine of faith is now so cleared that we ought to learne it no more out of the Scriptures which heretofore were read in the Church for instruction but now only are read to pray by not to study There were not many that adhered to him the better part elivered themselves as Dominicus à Soto did That it was fit to keepe every wit within limits for matters of faith and manners but else to leave them to their liberty for the sense Others of them yet more plainely That it was not fit to restraine the understanding of the Scriptures to the fathers only whose expositions were most part Allegoricall seldome ltierall and those fitted to their owne time And many men have profitably used their liberty especially such as have sought out the literall sence The Allegory Luth. in Gen. 30. Luther cals it a beauteous whore that inticeth idle men who thinke themselves in Paradise and Gods bosome when they fall upon such speculations Such was their interpretation who by the cleane beasts in the Arke understood Virgins and by the uncleane Married Persons See Bp. Morton Appl. pn 2. l. 5. Ch. 15. And theirs upon Psal 74.13 Thou brakest the heads of the Dragons in the waters that is Devils are expelled by holy water sprinkled by the Priests Luke 5.4 Duc in altum that is Peter goe thou to Rome the head and
chiefe Citty and there spread thy net 1 King 17.6 Crowes brought flesh to Eliah that is Lay-men are to give all necessary things to Monks Philol. Sacr. l. 2. Tr. 2. pt sect 3. art 4. Solomon Glassius hath collected many examples I will only adde that of Antonius Archbishop of Florence upon Zach. 11.7 of Dominick and his Order Zachariah spake in the person of God Anton. Hist pt 3. Tit. 23. I tooke unto me two staves the one I called Beauty and the other funiculum Bands Beauty is the order of Preachers funiculus the Order of Minors who are girt with a cord Thus as the Camels they drinke not of the fountaine till they have pudled it with their feet Hier. in prolog ad Obad. St. Hierome had been much delighted this way but found his owne error When I was young saith he I interpreted the Prophet Obadiah allegorically because I was ignorant of the History I thought then I could read a sealed booke No man can write so ill but some will like it Such a one praised it but I blush't I now freely professe that was the worke of my childish wit this of my mature age But I shall not need to enlarge against this which even Salmeron and Ribera and other Jesuits themselves have inveyed against But the literall sence is the most noble and on all hands most allowed And that sence our Learned and Reverend Author Mr. Richard Stock hath every where sought and followed throughout this his plain and most wholsome Com●entary on Malachy every where observing so many of those circumstances as his Text would give him leave to observe which Glassius hath put together into two verses Quis Scopus Impellens Sedes Tempusque Locusque Et Modus Haec Septem Scripturae attendito Lector The Author Scope Occasion Theme Time Place and next The Forme These seven let him attend that reades the text I have published him out of his owne Originall notes and as largly as himselfe writ Onely whereas on the third Chapter verse the seventh he had more largely treated of the Doctrine of Repentance upon the request of his Auditory who desired him to divert his ordinary course as appeares by his Dedicatory Epistle to the Lord William Knowls that I have omitted because himselfe did publish it in his life time Anno 1608. I have followed his owne manner in the publishing of this and have set his quotations of Fathers and other Latine Authors in their owne words in the Margin and the Greeke Fathers rendred into Latine because many readers understand not the Greeke which is his own reason given in his Epistle to the Reader before that Treatise Out of which Epistle of his I will also answer to those that may dislike his frequent use of the Fathers in his own words If any saith hee dislike my alleaging of Fathers as some have my using of reasons to confirm the Doctrine but with very little reason as I suppose I must pray them to give me leave to use them till I can see that unlawfulnesse which they affirme to be in the practise and to censure me in charity for the use of them as I doe them for not using them I will looke as well to my heart in the use of them as God shall inable me and when I shall see the hurt of them I will as much indeavour to avoid them in the mean time I will make the best use I can of them to edifie the Church of God But I will detaine thee no longer in a preface but commend the booke to thy reading and that to Gods blessing Thine in the Lord SAM TORSHELL A Breviat of the Testimony given by Mr. Gataker to Mr. Richard Stock at his Funerall Sermon THAT the Reader if hee were not acquainted with the Author of this Commentary in his life time may know what he was I have thought fit to present unto him a briefer view of that more large Testimony which Mr. Thomas Gataker preaching at his funerall did deservedly give him After he hath commended him for his unweariable industry and singular proficiency in his owne and his abilitie and willingnesse to bee helpefull to others Studies even while hee was young in the Colledge Hee descends to the consideration of him in his publique calling That he proved a painefull a faithfull Minister of Christ a skilfull a powerfull dispenser of Gods word The proofes of which were his constant and incessant imployments in Preaching twice every Sabbath for many yeeres besides his Catechising the younger sort in the week days which he did with notable discretion the males and females apart the riper and forwarder in the presence of the ruder and rawer and then the rawer by themselves together with other offices of his Pastorall function privatly performed Which Ministery of his was very effectuall so that besides many other Christian Souls converted by him in which successe few Ministers were to bee compared with him many faithfull Ministers also received their first beginnings of light and spirituall life and grace from his Ministery So that he did not only winne many soules but many winners of Souls Those two things which make a Compleat man had an happy conjunction in him namely Integrity and Judgement The proofes of which were both the desire that many had to use him for the oversight of their last Wils and for the disposing of their estates And that so many reverend Ministers from all parts of the Realme did by Letters or otherwise usually seeke to him for the resolution of their doubts As these made him a Compleat man so he had that which made him a Compleat Minister namely That he could speake his mind fitly and That he durst speake it freely For the former his ability to expresse himselfe with cleare Method sound proofes choise words fit phrase pregnant similitudes plentifull illustrations pithy perswasions sweet insinuations powerfull inforcements allegations of antiquitie and varietie of good literature he was such an one as many strove to imitate not many of them matched For the other his freedome of speech in reproving of sinne even to the faces of the greatest many are able to testify and some accidents made it more publikely knowne then his desire was it should have been Among other particular commendations of him One was his zealous and earnest pursuit of reformation of some prophanations of the Sabbath wherein he prevailed also for the alteration of some things in that kind offensive as well with the maine body of the City as with some particular Societies Another was his pious care diligence in the religious instruction and education of those that were under his private charge children and others In these and the like imployments hee spent his time he spent his strength till God put an end to his incessant labours here and translated him to the place of his endlesse rest February 1. 1639. Imprimatur THO. WYKES The Summe or Argument of the whole Prophesie
ye say The Table of the Lord is polluted and the fruit thereof even his meate is not to be regarded 13 Ye said also Behold it is a wearinesse and ye have snuffed at it saith the Lord of Hostes and ye offered that which was torne and the lame and the sick thus ye offered an offering should I accept this at your hand saith the Lord 14 But cursed be the deceiver which hath in his flock a male and voweth and sacrificeth unto the Lord a corrupt thing for I am a great King saith the Lord of Hostes and my Name is terrible among the Heathen The parts of this Chapter are two 1. A Preface or Inscription 2. The Oracle or Prophecy 1. The Preface in the first verse generall to the whole 2. The Prophecy in the rest 1. An expostulation with the people and Priest for their ingratitude and corrupting of his worship from verse 2. to the 9. 2. A Commination of judgment deserved by it or a Commination of divers judgments from vers 9. to the end In the Preface or Inscription we conceive two things The substance and circumstance of it 1. The substance being the subject or matter of the whole is in that it is-called a Burden 2. The Circumstance of the person which is three-fold 1. From whom as the Efficient 2. To whom as the Object 3. By whom as the Instrument VERSE I. The burden of the Word of the Lord to Israel by the ministery of Malachy THE Burden Here is the matter or subject of this Booke or Prophecy He calleth it a burden usuall with Prophets in their writings all almost in some place or other But Nahum Habakkuk and Malachy thus begin their prophecies It signifies as Hierome a woefull and sorrowfull prophecy full of threats and judgments called therefore a Burden because it presseth those against whom it is spoken the hearts and spirits of them as a burden the body and suffers them not to lift up their heads and themselves as in former times Some thinke it signifies not onely this but also the Commandement of the Lord by which the Prophet was burdened as from the Lord that he should declare it in so many words unto Israel which they thinke follows thence because it is to Israel not against but I feare this is somewhat nice for it was so to them as it was against them for their sinnes and that which is against is as much as a burden to the Prophet but this must be understood Tropicè here being a Synecdoche for the whole Prophecy is not a burden or threatning of punishment but part onely of it and so the whole is denominated of the part Doctrine The punishment of sinne the affliction God inflicts upon men for their sinnes and transgressions is a burden not a light one not such as are the feathers of a bird onus sine onere but as a talent of Lead spoken of Zach. 5.7 heavy and grievous so is it here and in many places of the Prophets as Nah. 1.1 Hab. 1.1 Jerem. 23.33 fine he shewes what is the burden I will cast you off and send you into Babel captives vers 36. that is whosoever shall say The burden he shall for that word beare his burden that is be punished of the Lord it is proved further by Matth. 7.9 Galat. 6.8 Hence is the complaint of David Psal 32.4 Thy hand was heavy upon me Reas 1 Because sinne the deserving and procuring cause is a very grievous burden Psal 38.4 Matth. 27.38 that is to living men and such as have the use of their sences not to dead and benummed men then the punishment is grievous Reas 2 Because the wrath and displeasure of God which is the efficient cause of it is very heavy and grievous The displeasure of a Prince is heavy the Kings wrath is as the roaring of a Lion Prov. 19.12 Now hence are afflictions heavy and burdensome Reas 3 Because none can give ease in it or deliver from it save God onely Hos 1.6 1 Sam. 2.25 2 King 6.26 27. The wound that is had by the biting of a Scorpion is grievous when nothing can cure it but the ashes of that Scorpion much more this Vse 1 This may teach us what to judge of those men who are in some affliction under a judgment and yet finde no burden but goe as light under them as a bird doth under her feathers and sometimes make advantage of them as beggers doe make gaine of their sores they are senselesse they are benummed they are dead men In common sence if any have halfe an hundreth weight laid upon his hand or foot and pressing him sore and he feele it not what judgment is to be given of it but to be a mortified and a dead member so alas how many dead men are in our times and daies The burden not of the Word onely but of the rod of the Lord not threatned but executed hath beene upon our Land and Church by the fearefull Plague now well towards three yeares wee have walked in the land of the dead we have beene in the house of mourning Indeed the living hath laid it to his heart but so few have done it that the dead are more than the living not onely our wanton women and voluptuous men to whom that 1 Tim. 5.6 They are dead while they live but our worldly men our ambitious and others all dead for this they have not felt We sorrowed for fifty odde thousands that dyed in the former yeare we have as much need to sorrow for so many thousands yet living and dead amongst us they never indeed felt nor yet doe feele this burden Their irreligious carriage when it was here amongst us both at home abroad in the City and abroad their small conformity since to the Law of God little reforming of their corruptions nay their monstrous deformity in themselves wives and children perswades my heart as 't is Psal 36.1 The transgression of the wicked saith within my heart there is no feare of God before my eyes so that they had no feeling of this at all for they who truely felt it would grow somewhat better if not altogether reformed If an heathenish people who knew not God at the burden of the Word of the Lord did so humble themselves that the Lord said Jonah 8.10 He repented of the evill he said he would doe to you and did it not what shall be thought of Christian men by profession living in the Church of God if at the burden of his Word they repent not nor depart from their evill wayes but Isaiah 8.8 Though they be stricken revolt more and more it is because they are dead men and cannot feele it Oh then weepe not for me but for your selves and children as those not for the departed but for the living dead for if it be true The beginning of the remedy is the sence and acknowledgment of the malady how farre are they from cure that have not yet
that he may have God to forget them who as he justifies him that condemnes himselfe pardons him that accuseth himselfe so he forgets his sinnes who remembers them himselfe in that forgetfulnesse is incident to him And as Saint Ambrose * Novit omnia Deus sed c. Ambrose God God knowes all things yet he expects thy confession not that he may punish but pardon thee So the Lord remembers all yet he expecteth the sinner should remember him of them not that he might punish them but pardon them Vse 3 Comfort for men as to doe well because the Lord seeth so though they doe not see their rewards and finde but a meane recompence among men as if all their labour were forgot yet to hold on and continue and not to faint for the Lord cannot forget and as he in sinne he remembring of it cannot but punish it in time so in good he cannot but reward it And as the way to have remission of sinnes and to have them forgotten is to remember them so the way to have reward of our workes is to forget them As Saint Paul Phil. 3.13.14 For them that feared the Lord. Some thinke the Lord tooke speciall notice therefore of it because it was so rare and commendable a thing for any to hold his feare faith and a good conscience in the midst of that wicked and froward people Doctrine It is a thing most commendable for men to be upright in the midst of a wicked and froward people and not to be carried with the stream Rev. 3.4 For them that feared the Lord. The Lord hath a booke of remembrance for them which is not barely to remember what they have done but effectually to remember it that is to reward it and so much for them importeth that it is for their benefit and profit and to recompence and reward them Doctrine It is not in vaine to serve the Lord but godlinesse is gainefull and they who feare the Lord and thinke upon his commandements to doe them they shall be blessed and have their reward in their measure in this life in the full measure in the life to come so much is affirmed directly here Jam. 1.25 Blessed in the deed Reason Because justice requires it and equity that he should not dismisse his servants empty handed specially old and who have spent their strength in his service Heb. 6.10 But of this point formerly VERS XVII And they shall be to me saith the Lord of hosts in that day that I shall do this for a flocke and I will spare them as a man spareth his own son that serveth him AND they shall be to me saith the Lord. Here is the Prophets second answer from a gracious and sweet promise of God of his goodnesse and favour towards them who feare him even as an effect of his remembrance and a proofe he did not forget them And the sum of this promise is that in the time of the Gospell he would make his choice and refusall of the good and bad when it should appeare who was more excellent then others so that those who did believe should be taken into his family and should enjoy great commodities and great dignity both be his and so respected and enjoy the benefits belonging to his And they shall be to me And Here hath the force of an illation or reference to the former sentence ending that and beginning this i. To shew that I remember them I will make them mine so much the phrase in the originall signifies In that day when I shall make them my treasure my peculiar The Lord to shew how dear they should be unto him how he would defend them how he would honour and adorne them used this word which is used Ex. 19.5 translated chiefe treasure It signifies a portion of wealth got by a mans owne labour and industry which men used to love more earnestly and keep more diligently when they have it and so by this he tels them how dear and pretious they should be unto him who did receive the Gospell and truly professe him Some understand this of the last judgement only and that day which is not probable Some both of the day the Gospell and the judgement which hath great probability with it I will spare them or I will use mercy and compassion towards them I will receive them and specially love them and will shew my love in this in sparing them when they offend or as some in winking at their infirmities and corruptions and not rejecting their service for them which the similitude doth shew As a man spareth c. A similitude illustrating the promise of compassion and mercy shewing how great and how tender his compassions should be toward them when it should be as of a father to his sonne whom he loves both as his sonne and also because of that reverence honour and obedience he hath done unto him Now this that is first promised is that they shall be his for so is the phrase they shall be mine like that which we have Gen. 48.5 And now thy two sonnes Manasseh and Ephraim which are borne unto thee in the land of Egypt before I came unto thee into Egypt shall be mine as Ruben and Simeon are mine i. They shall not be as my Grand children but as my owne sonnes and in the division of the Land shall have their portions as any one of my sonnes so here they shall be mine i. I will adopt them and make them mine who are not so by nature nor of themselves Doctrine No man is of himselfe and by nature not of his parents the child of God but adopted so of God to it Reve. 2.17 and in thee a new name written In that day that I shall do this for a flocke Or rather in that day when I shall make them my chiefe treasure as it is translated Exod. 19.5 But all comes to one end to note how deare the Church and people of God are unto him Doctrine They who feare God and thinke of his name delight in his waies are more excellent then others and more pretious deare and beloved of God Rev. 2.9 with 1. Pet. 2.9 And I will spare them c. Another matter promised unto them in it two things First That he would wink at and passe by their infirmities when they served him and did the duties of his worship and passe by many infirmities in them which he will not do in another Secondly That when he did visite them yet he would do it in love and compassion and use them as a father his son that serveth him Doctrine This is a speciall thing promised to Gods children proper to them that in their obedience when they endeavour to serve and performe duties commanded he will accept it though it be mixed with many infirmities and will winke at them and passe by them as though he never saw them Mich. 7.18 I will spare them or have compassion of them When he
Pentaglot Malachy Ch. 1. Ver. 1.4 Malachy Ch. 2. Ver. 6. 11 Seder Olam Zuta Malachy Ch. 1. Ver. 1 Sepher Hakkabala Malachy Ch. 1. Ver. 1 Ioh. Selden de Dis Syris Malachy Ch. 1. Ver. 4 7 Septuag Versio passim Rich. Sibs Sermons Malachy Ch. 3. Ver. 16 Silvest Prier Summa Malachy Ch. 3. Ver. 5 Dom. H. Spelman Concil Pam. Brit. Malachy Ch. 1. Ver. 7 Archaeolog Malachy Ch. 2 Ver. 7 Rob Stephani Thesaur Ling. Lat. Malachy Ch. 1. Ver. 8 Rich. Stock Comment on Malachy passim Syriaca Versio Malachy Ch. 1. Ver. 11 T TAciti Deser Germ. Malachy Ch. 3. Ver. 5 Thargum Malachy Ch. 1. Ver. 4 11 12 Ioh Tarnovii excertation Biblic Malachy Ch. 2. Ver. 3 Paul Tarnonii Comment in Ioh Malachy Ch. 3. Ver. 1 Tertullian Malachy Ch. 1. Ver. 1 11 Tigurina Versio Passim Theodoret. Malachy Ch. 1. Ver. 1 Theodor Mopsvestenus Malachy Ch. 3. Ver. 1 Greg Tholosani Syntag Iuris Malachy Ch. 2. Ver. 15 Tollet Instructio Sacerd Malachy Ch. 3. Ver. 5 Eman Tremel passim in Marg. ad Zach. Malachy Ch. 4. Ver. 6 Ioh. Tritenhem de Orig. Franc. Malachy Ch. 3. Ver. 5 V LAur Vallae Castigat vulg Lat. Malachy Ch. 4. Ver. 5 Fr. Vatablus passim Vigilius Papa Malachy Ch. 3. Ver. 1 Virgil. Malachy Ch. 1. Ver. 10 Gerard. Vossius in Serm. S. Ephr. Malachy Ch. 3. Ver. 2 Iac. Vsher Archiep. Armachan Antiq. Eccl. Malachy Ch. 4. Ver. 2 Vulg. Lat. Versio passim W WAlafridus Strabo de exord Eccle. Malachy Ch. 3. Ver. 8 Mich. Waltheri Harmonia S. Scr. Malachy Ch. 2. Ver. 16 Ioh. Weemse Exposit of Moses Law Malachy Ch. 2. Ver. 11 Malachy Ch. 4. Ver. 4 Christian Synagogue Malachy Ch. 3. Ver. 8 Degenerate sonnes Malachy Ch. 3. Ver. 5 Iodoc Willichius in Taciti German Malachy Ch. 3. Ver. 5 Ioh. Winckleman Passim Wierus de praestig Daemon Malachy Ch. 3. Ver. 5 Ioh. Wolphius in addit ad P. Mart. in Reg. Malachy Ch. 3. Ver. 5 Z ZAnchius in Epistol Malachy Ch. 2. Ver. 11 De Divortio Malachy Ch. 2. Ver. 16 The end of the Catalogue AN EXERCITATION VPON THE PROPHESIE OF MALACHY IN the whole Booke of Malachy which seemes to be but one Prophecy or Sermon we may without any prejudice of others whose opinions the Reader may see in Ioh. Tarnovius in Mal. proleg 6. observe as the parts of it First The inscription or the preface vers 1. Secondly The prophecy it selfe Vers 2. c. ad fin proph I. The inscription or the preface vers 1. The burden of the Word of the Lord to Israel by Malachy Which is the title or head of the whole prophecy wherein we have First The subject The burden of the Word Secondly The circumstances of the persons 1. From whom The Lord. 2. To whom To Israel 3. By whom By Malachy I. The subiect or the subiect matter of the whole booke The burden of the Word So our last translation the Geneva English the Italian of Deodate a Il Carico Mintan Winkleman The Prophecy so Pagnin and Piscator The burthen some prophecy so Tremell The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the roote in Hebr. Nasa signifies To lift or take up to carry to beare According to which wee have a phrase in Scripture To take up a proverb And so wheras the Septuagint sometimes renders the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Verbum The word sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Oracle or Divine answer sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The vision here they render it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The assumption or lifting or taking up the word of the Lord. And they have exprest the Originall The lifting up of the Word against Israel Though the Greeks use the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and especially the Latines in another sense among whom Lemma is that word or short sentence which is lifted up upon the head of the discourse to bee the title or summary argument of the rest So the titles of Epigrams are called Lemmata as in Martial Epigr. Lib. 14. Lemmata si quaeras cur sint ad scripta Docebo Vt si malueris Lemmata sola legas If why the titles are ore-writ you aske I say The titles only if y 'had rather reade you may And in another place Vivida componis epigrammata Mortua ponis Lemmata The Epigramm's thou dost compose are quick but dull The titles are Much unto which purpose wee usually call the Versus intercalaris or the foote of the ditty which ordinarily containes and repeates the chiefe summe The burden in the Song But wee must finde more in the use and application of the word Burden here the burden of the whole prophecy is a burden against and upon Israel or the inscription title head or argument of this prophecy carries its signification with it It is a burden taken up at the command of God by the Prophet to bee layd upon Israel to crush them to make them sensible of their sinne and Gods wrath And therefore the Tigurine translation though it have as the French b La charge contre Israel also hath mistaken the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which usually signifies Ad To and so both our english translations have it according to most other translaturs To Israel And never c See Schindler pentagl in verbo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as I can finde Contra Against hath exprest unto us the meaning of the Prophets phrase in rendring it The burden against Israel And our old English autorised before this last for the Church hath a marginall note which short notes were made before those of Geneva which gives us the same meaning The Burden that is The grievous and threatning prophecy layd upon them as a Burden So in 2 Kin. 9.25 where the words are Nasa eth hammassa which Schindler renders He lift up that prophecy against him And so also Drusius lect in Nahum 1.1 That we have in our last translation The Lord layd this Burden upon him Secondly the circumstances of the persons I. The Author from whom the Lord. The burden of the Word of the Lord. There is no difficulty in the words but for the emergent questions hence One that this booke is canonicall and from the Lord I refer the Reader to the commentary Another that prophecying or divining is not naturall I referre to Cornel à lapide Canones in min. proph Can. 21. And to a much larger discourse of it in Gabr. Pennot Propug hum libert lib. 10. cap. 7 8.11 II. The Object To whom To Israel the Jewes returned from the captivity principally Judah and Benjamin with such of the ten Tribes as were dispersed among them to which ten Tribes the name of Israel did properly and solely belong after the schisme made by Ieroboam and till the captivity but after that the names of Israel and Iudah were used alike and chiefly if not solely for the two other Tribes of Iudea and Benjamin An observation that will give
table of the Lord is contemptible or as the Geneva Not to bee regarded As if it were no matter what brought and layd upon it The table of the Lord So hee calls The Altar because the sacrifice is as it were a feast to the Lord and for the Priests And so the Altar is expressely called Ezek. 41.22 The Altar was three Cubits and hee said unto mee This is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Table that is before the Lord And no doubt The Lords Table may also bee called an Altar in that harmelesse sense in which the fathers used it before Transubstantiation was hatched or thought of Ioh. Alsted Paratitla Theol. in verbo Propositionis mensa observes that the Greekes use both names but not or the same table They have two tables one upon which the Bread and Wine stands before the consecration which they call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Table and another to which the elements are carried from thence where they are also consecrated and that they call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The holy Seate and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Altar But the fruitlesse Logomachy in this point which hath beene already hath beene but too much The table is put for the Altar a metaphor being like a Table the Lord being feasted at his Altar The Metaphor is cleare Esay 6 5.11 Yee are they that prepare a table for that troope 1 That make an Altar and sacrifice to good fortune as Mr. Selden interprets it in his learned booke De dis Syris Syntag. 1. cap. 1. pag. 4. Such is that of the Apostle when hee calleth the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Ara which wee have not a fit english word for but wee usually though unfitly call the Altar of Divells The Table of Devills 1 Cor. 10.21 Ye say The Table is contemptible The Lxx. here have the same word againe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But t is in the Hebr as ours have rendred it Contemptible Either 1. They saw the Sacrificing to be despised sleighted through such long dis-use by reason of the 70 yeares Captivity they had not recovered the fervour of former time to be so frequently before the Lord or 2. They look't scornefully on the meane building and ornaments of the Temple for it did not answer the glory of the former house So Tarnovius or 3. Because the Iewes were newly returned and were yet but poore and could not bring such rich oblations therefore the Priests grew cold and carelesse in attending on the altar or 4. Because they saw what was brought consumed with fire they thought any thing good enough for the fire good enough to be burnt The truth is The low and cheape opinion of Gods worship hath ever made a greater waste upon religion than an over-high and there is lesse danger though there be danger in superstition then in profanenesse Hence it was that the piety of ancient Christian times was so much in their reverent demeanour in Gods house though otherwise their devotion had much faeculentie and drosse ad mixt Among the many Canons to this purpose of other Churches and our owne every where obvious I cannot but here insert that every devout one which fell into my observation at the time of the collecting of these notes which Sir Hen. Spelman hath imparted to the world out of Bennet Colledge manuscript Non de bere ad ecclesiam c. We ordaine That men come not to the Church for any other cause then to praise God and to doe him service But Contendings a Pleadings and matters of arbitrement Tumults and Vaine talkings and all other like actions let them by no meanes be suffered in that holy place For there where Gods Name is called upon and Sacrifice offered unto God and where no doubt the Angels are frequent it is dangerous to doe or say any such thing as agrees not to that holy place For if the Lord cast those out of the Temple which bought or sold such victimes as were to be offered to himselfe ● how much more offended will he cast out them who pollute that place set apart for divine worship with vaine leasings mirthes and such like to●●● The place is Inter Capitula incertae editionis Cap. 10. In Concil Pam. brit pag. 591. Where you shall finde it both after the Latine and the Saxon Copy A devout Canon of that ancient but well nigh most corrupt age since Christ if it were made as Sr. H. Spelm. seemes to guesse by his placing it about An. Dom. 1050. And indeed all ages of the Church have beene tender in this point but ours But what a diseased mind is it to finde fault with the serving of God with comlinesse and honor and that it will not bee indured that wee should bee splendid at our owne tables and sordid at Gods as Bellarmin also complained even in that overdoting and superstitious Church Bellarm. in Gemitu Columbae of some prelats that they would provide rich wines for their owne tables and cared not what Tap-lash was served at Gods An instance that wee may easilyer complaine of then have remedied at least in our Country parish Churches This profanenesse is argued to be 1. against Gods Law 2. against the rule of common honesty and comelinesse vers 8. Verse 8 First against Gods law And if yee offer the blind for sacrifice or to sacrifice Is it not evill And if yee offer the lame and sicke is it not evill thus also the Lxx. and the Chald and Tremell reade it by an interrogation But Vatablus with the Tigurine on which hee noted as Cornel. a lap proem in min. proph pag. 6. affirmes which I have not seene but onely those notes of his which being taken from his mouth by Bertinus who succeeded him in his professor-ship at Paris were set out together with the Vulgar and Pagnin's version by Rob. Stephens An 1556. which I note here onely by the way and once for all and Pagn and Montan the French the English of Geneva and Iohn Tarnov who here and usually followes Luther they reade it affirmatively When ye offer the blind c. It is not evill The autorised Engl. before our last and Piscat supply it when yee offer the blind yee say it is not evill That is It is well enough though it be blind or lame It is not evill in your opinion who rather then you would lose any gaine say Melius est Il quam nil It is Lucas Osianders rime upon this place not mine better that which is ill and bad then nothing at all But the sense is much clearer in the interrogative Is it not evill That is It is evill And so it is the first argument against their profanenesse See the particulars explicated in the commentary The second is that it is Secondly Against the rule of cōmon honesty and comlines Offer it now unto thy governor or as the Geneva to thy Prince will hee bee pleased with it or as the Genev.