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A48431 The works of the Reverend and learned John Lightfoot D. D., late Master of Katherine Hall in Cambridge such as were, and such as never before were printed : in two volumes : with the authors life and large and useful tables to each volume : also three maps : one of the temple drawn by the author himself, the others of Jervsalem and the Holy Land drawn according to the author's chorography, with a description collected out of his writings.; Works. 1684 Lightfoot, John, 1602-1675.; G. B. (George Bright), d. 1696.; Strype, John, 1643-1737. 1684 (1684) Wing L2051; ESTC R16617 4,059,437 2,607

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as they would make him Chap. 31. Then Elihu the Pen-man undertakes to moderate but inclining to the same misprision with the others the Lord himself convinceth them all of the uprightness of Job which no arguments of Job could do and this not only by an oracle from Heaven but also by Jobs revived prosperity wherein every thing that he had lost was restored double to him but only his children which though they died yet were not lost His years were doubled for he lived an hundred and forty years after his trouble and so was seventy years old when his trouble came and died two hundred and ten years old the longest liver born since Terah CHAP. II. to Ver. 11. Years of the Promise 341 ISRAELS afflictions increase upon them the cruel King of Egypt commanding Years of the Promise 342 all the Male children to be slain Miriam was born not far from Years of the Promise 343 this time she was able to stand and watch Moses when he was cast into the Years of the Promise 344 river her name signifieth Bitterness and Rebellion both and it is not to be Years of the Promise 345 doubted but holy Amram when he gave her name had regard to that sad Years of the Promise 346 cause and effect of which they had so great cause to be sensible Miriam Years of the Promise 347 was a Prophetess Exod. 15. 20. Micah 6. 4. World 2431 Years of the Promise 348 AARON born a Saint of the Lord Psal. 106. 16. His name soundeth Years of the Promise 349 both of sorrow and joy as the tenor of Psal. 88. 89. made in these afflictions Years of the Promise 350 doth World 2433 Years of the Promise 351 Moses 1 MOSES born supernaturally his mother being exceeding old at his Years of the Promise 352 Moses 2 birth she was his fathers own Aunt the daughter of Levi so is Moses Years of the Promise 353 Moses 3 a Levite both by father and mother He is preserved in an ark like a Years of the Promise 354 Moses 4 second Noah his mother is paid for nursing her own child he is adopted Years of the Promise 355 Moses 5 by Pharaohs daughter for her own son and so the King is his nursing Father Years of the Promise 356 Moses 6 and the Queen his nursing Mother And in this doth Moses typifie Years of the Promise 357 Moses 7 Christ that his true Father is unknown to the Egyptians and he Years of the Promise 358 Moses 8 reputed the son of Pharaoh as the true Father of Christ unknown to Years of the Promise 359 Moses 9 the Jews and he reputed the son of Joseph Years of the Promise 360 Moses 10 Moses was educated and learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians Years of the Promise 361 Moses 11 Years of the Promise 362 Moses 12 Acts 7. 22. Stephen speaketh this from necessary consequence not having Years of the Promise 363 Moses 13 express Text for it for it could no otherwise be conceived of the adopted Years of the Promise 364 Moses 14 Years of the Promise 365 Moses 15 son of a King and of a King of Egypt which Nation was exceedingly Years of the Promise 366 Moses 16 given to learning and study JOB is yet alive and probably out-liveth Years of the Promise 367 Moses 17 Moses In the reading of his Book it may be advantagious to the Years of the Promise 368 Moses 18 Years of the Promise 369 Moses 19 Reader to observe how in very many places it toucheth upon the history Years of the Promise 370 Moses 20 Years of the Promise 371 Moses 21 that is contained in the Book of Genesis though that Book was not then Years of the Promise 372 Moses 22 written The creation is handled Chap. 38. The first Adam mentioned Years of the Promise 373 Moses 23 Chap. 15. 7. The fall of Angels and Man Chap. 4. 20. 5. 2. The miserable Years of the Promise 374 Moses 24 Years of the Promise 375 Moses 25 case of Cain that was hedged in that he could not die Chap. 3. 21. Years of the Promise 376 Moses 26 The old world and the flood Chap. 22. 6. The builders of Babel Chap. 3. Years of the Promise 377 Moses 27 Years of the Promise 378 Moses 28 15. 5. 13. The fire of Sedom Chap. 20. 23 26. and divers such references Years of the Promise 379 Moses 29 may be observed which are closely touched in the Book which Years of the Promise 380 Moses 30 Years of the Promise 381 Moses 31 they came to know partly by tradition partly by living so near the Hebrews Years of the Promise 382 Moses 32 and the places where these things were done and partly by revelation Years of the Promise 383 Moses 33 as Chap. 4. 12. 38. 1 Years of the Promise 384 Moses 34 Years of the Promise 385 Moses 35 The Pen-man of the Book before and after the speeches of Job and his Years of the Promise 386 Moses 36 friends often useth the name Jehovah but in all the speeches never but Years of the Promise 387 Moses 37 once and that is in Chap. 12. 10. speaking there of Gods giving the Creature Years of the Promise 388 Moses 38 Years of the Promise 389 Moses 39 his being CHAP. II. from Ver. 11. to the end World 2473 Years of the Promise 390 Moses 40 MOses by faith at forty years old Acts 7. 23. refuseth the Courts Years of the Promise 391 Moses 41 visiteth his brethren slayeth an Egyptian fleeth into Midian Years of the Promise 392 Moses 42 Years of the Promise 393 Moses 43 Heb. 11. 24 25 26. By faith Moses refuseth to be called the son of Pharaohs Years of the Promise 394 Moses 44 daughter chusing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God then Years of the Promise 395 Moses 45 Years of the Promise 396 Moses 46 to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season Esteeming the reproach of Christ Years of the Promise 397 Moses 47 greater riches then the treasures of Egypt for he had respect unto the recompence Years of the Promise 398 Moses 48 Years of the Promise 399 Moses 49 of the reward In Midian he marrieth Zipporah and hath a son by Years of the Promise 400 Moses 50 her whom he calleth Gershom which signifieth a desolate stranger because Years of the Promise 401 Moses 51 of his remote residence from his own people in a forain land Years of the Promise 402 Moses 52 Years of the Promise 403 Moses 53 Israel is not yet throughly humbled under their affliction and therefore Years of the Promise 404 Moses 54 it is but just they should continue under it they refused the deliverer Years of the Promise 405 Moses 55 Years of the Promise 406 Moses 56 when he offered himself unto them with Who made thee a Prince Years of the Promise 407 Moses 57 and a Ruler over us And therefore they are but answered according to Years of the
with it see the notes at Numb 12. 5. The Priests could not make any man clean but only pronounce him clean 6. He that was Leprous all over and no place free was to be pronounced clean for it appeared that all the poyson was come forth and the danger of infecting others was past but he that had any part that was not scabby over he was unclean he that appears before God in any of his own righteousness like the proud Pharisee he hath his answer in that Parable but that humble confession of a poor sinner that shews him Leprous all over like that of the Publican obtains the best answer 7. The Leper that was cleansed had not his disease healed but the danger of the infection being over he was restored to the society of men again so that he was not so much clean unto himself as unto the Congregation CHAP. XVI THE solemn and mysterious Feast of Reconciliation instituted to be on the tenth day of the month Tisri the day that Moses had come down from the Mount with tydings of reconciliation betwixt God and the People as was said be-before And as the solemnity and carriage of the work of this day was a figure of good things to come in Christ so the very time it self had some respect that way for if Christ were not born and came into the World a Reconciler on that very day yet was he born and baptized nine and twenty years after in that very month CHAP. XVII XVIII XIX XX. XXI XXII XXIII XXIV XXV DIvers Laws are given concerning Offerings Marriages Festivals the Priests and other things and the main end of them all Piety Sanctity Charity and in them a distinction of Israel from other people CHAP. XXVI XXVII SAD denunciation of judgment upon disobedience and the valuation of persons in reference to redemption of vows Hosea speaketh in allusion to the rates and values mentioned here when he saith I bought her to me for fifteen shekels of silver and for an homer of barly and half an homer of barly Hos. 3. 2. The fifteen shekels was the value of a man above sixty years old Lev. 27. 7. The homer of barly which valued fifty shekels ver 16. was the value of a man from twenty years old to sixty ver 3. And half an homer which valued five and twenty shekels was for one from five years old to twenty twenty shekels ver 5. And from a month old to five years five shekels ver 6. World 2515 Moses 82 Redemption from Egypt 2 The Book of NUMBERS CHAP. I. ON the first day of the second month the Lord provided for the pitching of their camp as on the first day of the first month they had begun to erect the Tabernacle First the people are numbred from twenty years old and upwards and their sum amounteth to 603550. men of all which number only two men enter the land The Levites are not reckoned in this sum nor with this reckoning and accordingly they fall not under the same curse with the others of not entring into his rest Not a man impotent through old age in Israel CHAP. II. THeir Camp is pitched and the Sanctuary set just in the middle of it for Religion is the heart of a State The Levites pitch next unto it in a quadrangular body round about it at a certain distance The whole body of the army pitcheth at an other distance about them in the same form and 2000 cubits distance from the Tabernacle every side of the square carried its several colours Judah a Lion Ephraim a Bullock Reuben a Man Dan an Eagle Compare the description of Christ dwelling in the middest of the Christian Church Rev. 4. 4. The Ark the strength of the Lord Pitcheth before Ephraim and Benjamin and Manasseh Psal. 80. 2. CHAP. III. IV. THE Levites taken for the first-born of Israel and so interessed in every family among them The first-born had been Priests till the consecration of the Levites now that function must be confined to that Tribe The Levites ingaged to their service from nine and twenty years old compleat or thirty currant till fifty Our Saviours age at his entrance into his Ministry Luke 3. 23. answereth to this type CHAP. V. VI. A Law concerning uncleanness and offences that the Camp might continue in purity and unity chastity and unchastity tried miraculously The Law concerning Nazarites the only votaries of the people The Congregation to be blessed by the Priests in the name of the Trinity CHAP. VII VIII THE Princes offer to the Sanctuary and more ordinances are given about it That they offered not till they were ordered into their standards is plain by the order and method of their offering The Levites to be five years probationers at the Sanctuary before they take their office Chap. 8. 24. compared with Chap. 4. 23. CHAP. IX from Ver. 15. to the end And CHAP. X. to Ver. 11. BEfore the reading of the fifteenth Verse the Reader is to suppose a Passover to be kept the fourteenth day of this second month although the keeping of it be not expresly mentioned but only hinted for on the fourteenth day of the first month which was the proper day for the Passover some men because they were unclean could not observe it and upon their acquainting Moses with their case he presently gives them a warrant to keep it the fourteenth day of the next month which they did no doubt accordingly although it be not in plain terms related For the occurrences mentioned in the Book hitherto came to pass in the first thirteen days of the month save only the offering of the Princes which indeed began before the fourteenth day but continued World 2515 Moses 82 Redemption from Egypt 2 beyond it notwithstanding the Holy Ghost would conclude the story of their offering all together and on the fourteenth day those that had been unclean at the proper time of the Passover kept the Passover by a new ordinance so that the order of the story of this new Passover is most genuine and proper here but Moses could not relate the thing but he must relate the occasion namely because some could not keep it at the right time therefore he giveth the story of the right time here which as we shewed before lieth properly between the tenth and eleventh Chapters of Leviticus From the fifteenth Verse of this Chapter to the eleventh Verse of the tenth Chapter there is mention of two special things namely the dwelling of the cloud upon the Tabernacle and the making of the silver Trumpets which however they were indeed somewhat afore this time for the Cloud descended and the Trumpets were made before the fourteenth day of this month yet are they brought in here as relating to the removal of the Army which is mentioned in Chap. 10. vers 11. for then the Cloud was taken up and the Trumpets were sounded EXODUS XVIII BEtween the tenth and eleventh Verses of the tenth of Numbers as
if they scape that Army Why eat this year what groweth of it self and what may be found up and down on the Trees and the ground But what must they do the next year Which was a year of release and rest as every seventh year was and they might not till the ground Why Providebit Deus God will also then provide for them of what grows of it self again and then the third year sow and reap and return to your old peace and prosperity ESAY XXXVIII 2 KING XX. to ver 12. 2 CHRON. XXXII ver 24. HEZEKIAHS sickness of the Plague seemeth to have been in the very time while the Assyrian Army lay about Jerusalem for though the destruction of that Army by the Angel be related before the Story of his sickness yet that his sickness was while that Army was alive may be conjectured upon these two collections First It is past all doubt that his sickness was this very same year that the Assyrian Army was destroyed by the Angel for if he reigned nine and twenty years as 2 King 18. 2. and that stroke of the Angel upon that Army was in his fourteenth year as vers 13. of that Chapter and he lived fifteen years after his sickness as 2 King 20. 6. then it makes that matter past controverting Secondly The Lord in his sickness doth not only promise him recovery from his disease but also that he will deliver him and that City out of the hand of the King of Assyria which shews there was then danger to him and Jerusalem from that King And this may be conceived one cause that made Hezekiah to weep so bitterly when the message of death was denounced unto him because he was to leave Jerusalem and Judea under the pressure and danger of the Assyrian Tyrant and must not see the delivery of it Therefore though the whole story of Sennacherib be laid together as was fit yet can I not but in my thoughts insert this story of Hezekiahs sickness before the destruction of his Army as no doubt it came to pass before Sennacheribs death and yet is that storyed before it for the concluding of his History all at once To Hezekiah alone is it given to know the term of his life and the Sun in the Firmament knoweth not his going down that Hezekiah may know his 2 KING XX. from vers 12. to vers 20. ESAY XXXIX all 2 CHRON. XXXII vers 25 26. MErodach or Berodach-Baladan the King of Babel visiteth Hezekiah by his Embassadors to congratulate his recovery and to inquire after the miracle of the Sun turning back The Lord left Hezekiah to try what was in his heart and it shewed folly The Lord foretels by the Prophet the captivity into Babel which City and Kingdom is now small and under the power of the Assyrian before it rise to be the golden head For observe in 2 Chron. 33. 11. that Babel is in the hand of the King of Assyria The Captains of the host of the King of Assyria carried Manasseth unto Babel It might very well be that Eser-haddon who succeeded Sennacherib in the Assyrian Monarchy took offence at Merodach-Baladan for his intimacy and familiarity with Hezekiah and thereupon set upon Babel and took it out of his hands Babel had been tributary to the Crown of Assyria hitherto the Assyrian having built it for some of his servants that traded upon Euphrates in Ships and made it a fair City but now Eser-haddon subdued it and defaced it Esay 23. 13. 2 CHRON. XXXII from vers 27. to end 2 KINGS XX. vers 20 21. Division 267 Hezekiah 15 HEZEKIAH liveth these fifteen years in safety and prosperity Division 268 Hezekiah 16 having humbled himself before the Lord for his pride to the Embassadors Division 269 Hezekiah 17 of Babel The degrees of the Suns reversing and the fifteen Division 270 Hezekiah 18 years of Hezekiahs life prolonging may call to our minds the fifteen Division 271 Hezekiah 19 Psalms of degrees viz. from Psalm 120 and forward There were Hezekiahs Division 272 Hezekiah 20 songs that were sung to the stringed instruments in the House of Division 273 Hezekiah 21 the Lord Esay 38. 21. whether these were picked out by him for that Division 274 Hezekiah 22 purpose be it left to censure The Jews hold they were called Psalms Division 275 Hezekiah 23 of degrees because they were sung upon the fifteen stairs that rose into Division 276 Hezekiah 24 the Courts of the Temple Who so in reading those Psalms shall have Division 277 Hezekiah 25 his thoughts upon the danger of Jerusalem by Sennacherib and her delivery and the sickness of Hezekiah and his recovery shall find that they fit those occasions in many places very well But I assert nothing but leave it to examination Division 278 Hezekiah 26 1 CHRON. IV. from vers 34. to the end Division 279 Hezekiah 27 IN the time of Hezekiah some of the Simeonites subdue the Meunims Division 280 Hezekiah 28 and the Amalekites It is most likely it was not in the former fourteen years of Hezekiah when the Assyrian Army was all abroad and none durst peep out but in his last fifteen years when that Army was destroyed and gone World 3310 Division 281 Hezekiah 29 Hezekiah dieth ESAY XXIII ESAY XL XLI c. to the end of the Book THE prophesying of Esay is concluded by the Title of his Book in the times of Hezekiah though the Hebrews of old have held that he lived and died in the days of Manasseh and was sawn asunder by him The Epistle to the Hebrews may seem to speak to that Heb. 11. 37. therefore according to the Chronology of the title of the Book in the first verse of it these Chapters that are set after the Story of Hezekiahs fourteenth year or after the Story of the destruction of the Assyrians and Hezekiahs recovery are all to be allotted to the fifteen years of his prolonged life since there is no direction to lay all of them or any of them in any time else c. The three and twentieth Chapter also falleth under the same time even towards the latter end of Hezekiahs reign when the King of Assyria had now taken Babel This is apparent by ver 13. spoken of a little before for there the Lord threatneth Tyrus by the example of Babel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that City had been founded by the Assyrian * * * For Ships and for men of the Desert thereupon Babel is called The desert of the Sea Esay 21. 1. for his Ships and Ship-men to traffick upon Euphrates as Tyrus was built on the Sea for the like purpose but now the Assyrian had brought that to ruine and so should the case of Tyrus be by the Babilonians Nebuchad-nezzar destroyed Tyrus Ezek. 29. 18. Now the reason why this Chapter that fell so late in Hezekiahs time is yet laid in that place where it is is this because the Prophesies against those Countries
which was a comfortable word for Baruch in Egypt in the threatnings of Egypt the 46 Chapter which was also delivered in this fourth of Jehoiakim is laid next that all the threatnings against Egypt though at several times delivered yet might come together and that the accomplishment of this Prophesie delivered in Jehoiakims time and fulfilled upon Pharaoh Nechos Army might be a confirmation that Israel in Egypt must expect the like truth of the Prophesies against it delivered to them there of misery to come upon it by Nebuchadnezzar Of the same date with the 46 Chapter we may well suppose the 48 49 Chapters to be also because the second verse of Chapter 46. doth use a comprehensive expression The Word of the Lord against the Gentiles as concluding all these Sermons and Prophesies against these several Nations under one date and head only Chap. 47. and vers 34. of Chap. 49. are of several specified dates of which when we come to them JEREMY XXXVI from vers 9. to end World 3403 Divvision 374 Years of Captivity 2 Iehoiakim 5 IN the fifth year of Jehoiakim in the ninth month Jehoiakim cuts in pieces and burns Jeremies Prophesie a wickedness not to be paralleld Let the Reader weigh whether Baruchs reading the Book in the fourth year of Jehoiakim on the Fast day vers 6. and his reading it now in the fifth year of Jehoiakim at an extraordinary Fast in the ninth month be above the space of two months asunder It is very well worth the pondering I cannot but conclude affirmatively and I believe upon very good ground and this observed and concluded doth help to count the seventy years captivity the more exactly if it do not also teach us to begin the year from the time of the first captivity from its antient date in Tisri till Redemption altered the date and brought it to Abib which I believe Captivity hath now altered again The preceding Chapter and this and divers forward are Historical and therefore they are laid together after those that are more fully Prophetical we shall observe the like in the Book of Daniel ere it be long Divvision 375 Years of Captivity 3 Iehoiakim 6 There is no particular occurrence mentioned this sixth year of Jehoiakim 2 KING XXIV the latter end of vers 1. and vers 2 3 4. JEHOIAKIM rebelleth against the King of Babel for which he is miserably invaded and Judah spoiled and this misery continueth all his time DANIEL I. from vers 18. to end World 3405 Divvision 376 Years of Captivity 4 Iehoiakim 7 DANIEL and his three fellows are presented to the King and higly approved of JEREMY XXXV THE Story and matter of Jeremies setting wine before the Division 377 Years of Capt. 5 Iosiah 8 Rechabites c. is said to be in the days of Jehoiakim but in Division 378 Years of Capt. 6 Iosiah 9 what year is not mentioned only this may be collected out of the Division 379 Years of Capt. 7 Iosiah 10 Text that it was after Jehoiakims rebelling against Nebuchad-nezzar for they say in vers 1. that they fled to Jerusalem for fear of the Army of the Chaldeans and the Army of the Syrians which are the Army mentioned to have come against him upon his rebelling 2 King 24. 2. This Story therefore fell out in these latter years of Jehoiakim Now it is laid so far in the Book as after divers Prophesies dated by the times of Zedekiah partly because it is Historical and so is set after Prophetical things and partly because this Story of the Rechabites doth set off the impiety of the Jews mentioned in the preceding Chapter the more for there he sheweth how false the people were to their Covenant with God in recalling their freed servants and here how faithful the Rechabites were to an ingagement of their father 2 KING XXIV vers 5 6 7. 2 CHRON. XXXVI vers 6 7 8. World 3409 Division 380 Years of Capt. 8 Iosiah 11 JEHOIAKIM captived slain and buried with the burial of an Ass. JER LII vers 28. NEBUCHAD-NEZZAR captiveth three thousand and twenty three Jews This is to be understood of the captivity of Jehoiakim it is called the seventh year of Nebuchadnezzar because his siege against Jerusalem began in his seventh and he took the City in the beginning of his eight and partly to distinguish this from the captivity of Jehoiakin which was in his eight when he carried away many thousands 2 King 24. 12 14 16. 2 KING XXIV vers 8. 9. 2 CHRON. XXXVI vers 9. JEHOIACHIN the son of Jehoiakim reigneth three months He is called also Jeconiah and Coniah the name Jeho or Jahu a contraction of Jehovah being sometime set before his name and sometime after and the first syllable of his name sometime cut off and he called Coniah That his three months are to be taken in in Jehoiakims last year there is evidence sufficient in 2 King 25. 2 8. where the eleventh year of Zedekiah and the nineteenth of Nebuchad-nezzar are coincident or fall in together And in 2 Chron. 36. 10. where it is said that when the year was expired the King of Babel captived him thither There is one main doubt and scruple ariseth in comparing his Story in the Book of Kings and Chronicles together for the Book of Chronicles saith he was eight years old when he began to reign and the Book of Kings saith he was eighteen Now in expressions that are so different propriety is not to be expected in both but the one to be taken properly and that is that he was eighteen years old when he began to reign and the other that he was the Son of the eighth year or fell in the lot of the eighth year after any Captivity of Judah had begun for the beginning of his reign was in the eighth year of Nebuchad-nezzar 2 King 24. 12. and in the eighth year of the seventy of captivity And so the Holy Ghost dealeth here as he doth about Ahaziah 2 King 8. 26. and 2 Chron. 22. 2. compared together as was observed there JEREMY XXII from vers 24. to the end JEHOIACHIN or Jeconiah is no sooner upon the Throne but Jeremy denounceth his captivity and the failing of Solomons house in him And this doth but as it were take at that Prophesiy which he uttered before against Jehoiakim his father Chap. 36. 30. He shall have none to sit upon the throne of David When the ending of Solomons House is to be denounced he calleth the Earth Earth Earth to hear the word of the Lord that the earthly Kingdom was now to decay and therefore a Kingdom of another nature was to be looked after JEREMY XXIII all THIS King and Kingdom is described in this Chapter and when he had denounced the failing of Solomons house and the ruine of the earthly Kingdom of the house of David in the Chapter before he now telleth of the everlasting King and Kingdom of David vers 5. 6. and denounceth woe against those cursed
of it was nineteen or twenty years ago to shew and to record the truth of those things which that wretched King Jehoiakim would not believe but burnt the Book in the fire And these are the subject of the other Copy that Baruch wrote when the first was burnt EZEKIEL XXXIII THIS twentieth year of Nebuchad-nezzar and of the first Captivity was the twelfth year of Ezekiels Captivity with Jeconiah And on the tenth month of this year and on the fifth day of that month Ezekiel hath intelligence that Jerusalem was fired vers 21. Temple and all It is almost a year and an half since the thing was done and yet intelligence comes but now The evening before these tidings came to him his mouth is opened again to Prophesie to his own people which he had not done since the day that Nebuchad-nezzar first laid siege to Jerusalem three years ago whereof one year and a half was taken up in that siege and one year and somewhat above an half since the City was taken Compare Chap. 24. vers 1. 26 27. In this space of time though Ezekiel were dumb to Israel yet was he not to other Nations for he Prophesieth many sad things against other Countries as is apparent by the Chapters taken up before EZEKIEL XXXII IN the same year viz. the twelfth of Ezekiels and Jechonias Captivity he hath a Prophesie against Egypt in the last month of the year on the first day of the month and another on the fifteenth day of the same month vers 27. Now the dislocation of this Chapter is easily seen for the three and thirtieth Chapter that followeth it is dated in the tenth month of this twelfth year and this in the twelfth month But the reason of this transposition is almost as easily seen namely because there are divers Prophesies against Egypt and other Countries before and this is also brought thither to them that it may lye with them EZEKIEL XXXIV XXXV XXXVI XXXVII XXXVIII XXXIX Captivity 21 ALL these Chapters of Ezekiel fall not under any expressed or determinate Captivity 22 date the fortieth Chapter does under the date of the five and twentieth year of Jechoniahs captivity therefore we are to conceive at large of the time of these Chapters that they were delivered between the twelfth year of that Captivity by which the three and thirtieth Chapter is dated and the five and twentieth by which the fortieth JEREMY LII vers 30. World 3424 Captivity 23 IN the three and twentieth year of Nebuchad-nezzar or the three and twentieth of the first Captivity for these run parallel Nebuzaradan Captain of the Guard carried away captive of the Jews seven hundred and forty five persons it may be this was in revenge of the base usage of Gedaliah and the Chaldeans that were with him And here is the last blow of the Jews given by the Babylonian and now is Judea and Jerusalem in full and compleat Captivity PSAL. CXXXVII AND here it may not be impertinent to take in the 137 Psalm which describeth the posture and sorrow and soorn of these captived ones as they sate in Babel 1 CHRON. II III IV V VI VII VIII IX Captivity 24 NOR may it be unproper in this place to read and view again these Captivity 25 Chapters of the first of Chronicles It is true indeed that they and Captivity 26 their Texts broken in pieces might be laid to be read in other places as was Captivity 27 said before as those Genealogies and Stories that are recited else-where in Captivity 28 Scripture to be laid with those places where they are mentioned and those Captivity 29 that are not mentioned again in Scripture to be laid with the Stories of such Captivity 30 times as the best evidence or probability will tell when they came to pass or Captivity 31 were in being Those Texts that tell of Plantations of Cities or Countries Captivity 32 to be laid in that place in the Book of Joshua that relateth the dividing of the Land as was done there Those that draw long Pedegrees to conclude in some famous man as the Pedegree of Korah to Samuel Chap. 6. these to be brought in at the Story of that famous man Thus might these Genealogies and Chapters be taken up But since Chap. 9. 1. telleth that these Genealogies were written in the Book of the Kings of Israel and Judah that were captived and since divers places in these Chapters speak of the Captivity and of these latter times and since the reading of these Chapters after the Story of Jerusalems Captivity is as it were a short review of the planting and setling and growing of that Nation in that Country out of which the Story of the Captivity hath told the Reader they were now removed it may be very methodical and proper upon these considerations and very profitable to take in these Chapters and to read them here again EZEK XL XLI XLII XLIII XLIV XLV XLVI XLVII XLVIII World 3434 Captivity 33 THIS thirty third year of the first Captivity and of Nebuchad-nezzar Captivity 34 was the five and twentieth of the Captivity of Jechoniah and Ezekiel And now the Lord sheweth the Prophet a new Temple bigger then all the old Jerusalem and a new Jerusalem bigger then all the Land of Canaan by these very dimensions shewing that these things cannot literally but must spiritually be understood EZEKIEL XXIX from vers 17. to the end And XXX to vers 20. World 3436 Captivity 35 THIS seven and twentieth year of his Captivity Ezekiel hath another Prophesie against Egypt and this is the last we have of this Prophet and it is laid here though it should have been last in the Book that all the Prophesies against Egypt might come together Nebuchad-nezzar had lately taken Tyrus and it had cost him very dear and this year he taketh Egypt as the pay of his Souldiers for that service And now is Babylon intire Monarch of all the World and Nebuchad-nezzar become the golden head Egypt the only Kingdom that opposed him being subdued DANIEL II III IV. World 3437 Captivity 36 NEBUCHAD-NEZZAR now come to his height hath a dream of the four Monarchies of the tree cut down c. grows proud and will be worshipped for a God The three Princes of Judah live in the fire they were now at the least 40 years old and therefore improperly but commonly called the three children This year is called the second year of the Kingdom of Nebuchad-nezzar Dan. 2. 1. not of his first being King but of his intire Monarchy when Egypt the only potent Prince and Nation that stood against him was now subdued So the first year of Cyrus is to be understood Ezr. 1. 1. not the first year of his being King but the first year of his universal Monarchy as the very next verse explaineth it The Lord God hath given me all the Kingdoms of the Earth Some part of this year is Nebuchad-nezzar mad Captivity 37 Nebuchad-nezzar mad Captivity 38
in Heaven which all along speaks according to the platform of the Temple at Hierusalem Here is a Sea of Glass mingled with Fire and Harpers harping by it c. singing the song of Moses which as it calls to mind Moses and the peoples singing upon the read Sea shore upon their delivery from Egypt Exod. 15. so doth it plainly allude to the musick at the Temple by the laver or Sea and which standing near the Altar was as a Sea of Glass mingled with Fire Moses and Israel sing after the destruction of Egypt for their deliverance was by her destruction but those here that have got victory over the Beast sing before he is destroyed for they are delivered from him and prevail against him though he stand in his strength and his destruction be not yet come The Gospel grew and Sanguis Martyrum was semen Ecclesiae do Satan and Antichrist what they can After this song The Temple of the Tabernacle of the Testimony in Heaven was opened ver 5. All the whole building upon Mount Moriah was called the Temple the Courts and Cloisters and Chambers c. but the very house it self The Holy and Holy of Holies was only and properly The Temple of the Tabernacle of Testimony And the song mentioned before ver 2. is represented as being in the Court near the Altar and laver but now the very House it self is opened Parallel to what is spoken Chap. 11. 19. The Temple of God was opened in Heaven and there was seen in his Temple the Ark of his Covenant The Lord in pouring out vengeance upon Antichrist will manifest his judgments as ver 4. and open his Counsels and Covenant for while the enemy raged and raved and destroyed those that would not worship him and when even all the world in a manner did worship him the Lords judgme●ts were hid and his Covenant with his people as it were out of sight or as if no such thing had been but when this vengeance shall come then all will be plain The seven Angels that pour out the seven Vials are charactered in the garb of Priests coming out of the Temple in white linen and girded over the breasts as the Priests were One of the living creatures gives the Vials into their hands the very same sense and carriage with that Ezek. 10. 7. REVEL CHAP. XVI WERE the Stage where the things of this Book were to be acted and the time of their acting of as little compass as was that of the things of Daniel one might with more probability allot the several things mentioned to their several times as the things in him may be done But since the scene here is as large as all the World where the Gospel was to come and the time as long as time shall be 1600 years past already and how much behind none knoweth to undertake to apply every thing in this Book to its particular time place and occasion is to run a hazardous undertaking In some places indeed the things are so plain that they speak themselves but in many so obscure that he that will venture to bring them to particular application doth it more upon his own venture then upon any good textual warrant And amongst those obscurities these Vials are not the least Take them in a general interpretation as I believe they are intended and their meaning is easie to be understood but to come to allot them severally to this or that time or place is but to do that that when ye have done all you can will come to no surer bottom to rest upon then your own conceit and supposal The matter of them is expressed as to the most part by allusion to the plagues of Egypt as boils blood darkness and so it clears the thing intended namely in general to shew how the mystical Egypt Chap. 11. 8. after all her oppression and persecution of the Israel of God should at last come to receive her just reward as old Egypt had done and that God would follow her with plagues till he had destroyed her They are somewhat like the plagues of the seven Trumpets some of which as we observed did in general speak the state of the World till the rising of Antichrist and these Vials may be understood as the general description of his plagues and ruine We observed in Chap. 6. and that upon good Scripture ground that the six Seals did all but speak one effect namely the destruction of the Jewish Nation but brought to pass by several judgments and the like interpretation may be made here The first Vial brings a noisom Boyl upon the worshippers of the Beast this was the sixth plague of Egypt but here the first for that plague in Egypt came home to Jannes and Jambers the Magicians that they could not stand before Moses Exod. 9. 11. And that both this and all the rest might be shewed to reach home even to the veriest deceivers and ringleaders of mischief in Antichristian Egypt this is justly set in the first rank The second and third here refer to the one plague of Blood in Egypt and these exceed that For there all the Rivers and Ponds were indeed turned into Blood but the Egyptians digged for Water about the River to drink Exod. 7. 24. and found it and it was not turned into Blood The question and answer of Aben Ezra is pertinent It is said there was blood throughout all the Land of Egypt And the Magicians did so with their inchantments Now how could the Magicians turn water into blood when there was no water left but all was blood And he answers Aaron only turned the waters that were above ground into blood not those that were under ground but here Sea and Rivers and Fountains and all are become Blood still to shew how throughly the plagues should come home At these plagues there is mention of the Angel of the waters ver 5. which since all the Angels here are charactered in the garb of Priests as hath been said may also be understood as alluding to that Priest whose office it was to have care of the Waters and to look that there should be Water enough and fitting for the people to drink that came up to the three Festivals Among the offices of the Priests at the Temple this was one Maym. in Kele Mikdash per. 7. and Nicodemus whom the Talmud speaks of was of this office Aboth R. Nathan per. 6. The fourth Vial poured into the Sun brings scorching heat this seems to allude to Joshua's or Deborah's day when the Stars from Heaven fought the Sun standing still so long did not only give light to Israel but probably heat and faintness to the Canaanites and Psal. 121. 6. seems to refer thither The Sun shall not smite thee by day As in the fourth they are plagued by the Sun so in the fifth by want of it The seat of the Beast darkned as Pharaohs Throne and Kingdom was and this darkness bringing horror and pains
finished there shall be the general resurrection And accordingly they construe the words before us to this sence The rest of the dead lived not until the thousand years were finished And then lived An opinion as like the opinion of the Jews as one egg is like another They think Christ shall reign among them on earth a thousand years pompous reign So do these They think that at the beginning of his reign the holy Prophets and Patriarchs shall be raised from death and reign with him So these They think that at the end of his thousand years reign there shall be the general resurrection and world of Eternity so do these So that the Millenary doth Judaize and he knows it not he is fallen into the Jews opinion and is not aware of it This book of Revelations is exceeding full of expressions that allude to the Jewish customs and opinions I say again is exceeding full but it were ridiculous to think that such passages are to be construed in the same literal sense that the Jews took them in Only those common and well known things as being familiar to the Nation are used to signifie or illustrate some spiritual sence or matter Expressions are used in this place that are agreeable in sound to the opinion of the Jews but not agreeable in sence but signifying something else They conceit a personal pompous reign of Christ on earth a thousand years in all earthly state and gallantry These words speak of a reign of Christ a thousand years but they mean his reign and ruling by his Word and Spirit and of his subduing and bringing the Nations into subjection and obedience but by the Ministry of the Gospel They speak of those that had been martyred reigning with him but the meaning only is to intimate that the children of his kingdom must suffer persecution and that they shall lose nothing by their persecution but as the Apostle speaks If they suffer with him they shall also reign with him Let us read the verse before I saw the souls of them that were beheaded for the witness of Jesus and for the Word of God And which had not worshiped the beast neither his image neither had received his his mark upon their foreheads or in their hands and they lived and reigned with Christ a thousand years But the rest of the dead lived not again till the thousand years were finished And did they live then That is not imaginable the time of reviving being then past and over For at the end of the thousand years Satan is let loose again brings in Popery and Mahumetism and the World grows as Heathenish as it had been before Satans binding and imprisoning So that they had lost the opportunity of reviving which was in the thousand years The word Until signifies doubly either concluding or else excluding you may see my meaning by these examples The Master in the Parable gives Talents to his servants and bids them Occupy till I come Here the word until concludes that he would come again This iniquity shall not be purged from you till you dye Es. XXII 14. Here the word till excludes them from ever having their iniquity purged The word until in the text is of this latter construction and means that they let slip and embraced not the opportunity of reviving all the thousand years when was the time of reviving and so they lived not again at all And if we well observe the Histories both of the Heathen and of the Church we shall find that all along this time that the Gospel was dispersing through the World there were multitudes of Heathens that would not forsake their Heathenism and multitudes in the Church in a little time fell to superstition and worshiping of Images and so even turned to Heathenism also Therefore God suffers Satan to be let loose again to go about in the world again with his delusions he brings in Popery in the West and Mahumetism in the East and so the whole World is returned to blindness and darkness again because when the light shone they would none of the light They would not embrace the offer of reviving when the time and opportunity of reviving was therefore they lived not again till those thousand years were finished and then the time of living again was over So that in the words before us we observe three things I. That the raising of the Gentiles from the Death of Sin is called the first Resurrection II. That in that time of raising some lost the opportunity and would not be raised III. That they losing the opportunity of rising and living missed always of rising and living I. As to the first thing named That the raising of the Gentiles from the death of sin is called the first Resurrection It gives us occasion to consider how a mans getting out of the state of sin into the state of grace is a Resurrection or a rising from the dead And with all to compare this first and last resurrection together and to see what connexion there is between them I. To Sadduces and Atheists that deny the resurrection at the last day because they can see no reason for it I should propose this question Whether there hath not been a raising of dead souls from the death of sin Abraham once an Idolater was not his soul dead then Yet afterwards he was the great Father of the faithful Was there not then a Resurrection of that dead soul Manasseh the King an Idolater a Conjurer a Sacrificer of his Sons to Molech was not this man dead in trespasses and sins and yet this man afterwards was a Penitent a Convert a Promoter of piety and the true worship of God Was not here a Resurrection of a dead Soul Is God less able to raise a dead body out of the grave than to raise a dead soul out of its sins Nay is not this as great a work of God as that will be Christ that can make such vile souls that they may be like unto his most glorious soul cannot he make these vile bodies that may be like his most glorious body according to the mighty working whereby he is able to subdue all things to himself II. But let us look upon this first resurrection a little and blessed and holy is he that hath part in it over such an one shall the second death have no power In some things it is not parallel or like to the second resurrection in more it is First The Second Resurrection shall be of all bodies this First is not of all souls And if we come to seek for the reason of the difference where shall we find it Cannot the same power that shall raise all bodies also raise all souls The reason of the difference lies not in the difference of that power Were it not as much for the glory of God to raise all souls as to raise all bodies The reason of the difference lyes not there neither For God chooseth freely the
that what he undertook was a great Work that it was Magnum mentis opus nec de Codice paranda Attonitae And now he betakes himself in good earnest to these obstruse and perplexing Studies He defrauds himself of his rest and ease withdraws from his Friends and abstracts himself from the World and all Secular intanglements and early and late pursues his wise and worthy End His Motto seems to have been for we find it written in one of his Note Books under his Name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 denoting his resolution to rise up early and sit up late in the pursuit after knowledge Our Author had not the helps of Tutors to instruct him in these Studies he had not the time of Students in the Universities who need take no care for their dayly bread He had not the advantage of Books and learned Society which those Men have who live in Cities nor had he the advantages of Wealth or Dignities to provide himself of helps nor interest in great Persons who might have encouraged his Studies and yet when he appeared in the World he gave the greatest proofs of his abilities He drew after him the Eyes of the Learned part of the Kingdom and exceeded far the expectation of all Men. What would not our Author have done if he had had the advantages which he wanted Had he been assisted by States and Kingdoms encouraged with a supply of all Foreign helps excited by some great Rewards placed in a better Light directed in his first attempts and Studies by the wisest Guids and Masters which the Age could afford He was not only a Man of great Learning and exemplary Diligence but of great Modesty and Humility and Gratitude and Candor He did not swell with pride upon the account of his Learning or his Labours He was far removed from any great opinion and conceit of himself or a low and mean one of his neighbour Those who knew him will confess this Indeed he was so far from thinking highly of himself and his own performances that some Men have thought him extream and something faulty and that he did not value himself as he ought to have done There did not perhaps live in the World a Man of more profound humility than our Author was A Man ready to hear others speak willing to be put in mind of any thing that was a mistake or slip full of the sense of another Mans worth and without a just sense of his own The most grateful and modest Man and of the greatest Candor and Humanity and sweetness of Temper our Author was He died at Ely Decemb. 6. 1675. To the great loss of the whole Kingdom and particularly of the Inhabitants of Munden to whom he was a Father a diligent Pastor and a bountiful Friend Among them he spent the greatest part of his time for many years He was not at ease when he was absent from his Flock It was not the Fleece he regarded but the Sheep They had also a great regard for their Shepheard they gladly heard his Voice and did not go astray in his time Thus I have given some short account of this excellent Man and of his useful Life in the World He lived to great purpose died much lamented and hath left us who survive an excellent Example God grant that we may closely and vigorously follow every thing that in our Author or any others was Virtuous and Exemplary we shall in due time reap if we faint not An APPENDIX or COLLECTION of some more Memorials of the Life of the Excellent Dr. John Lightfoot most of them taken from Original Letters or MSS. of his own I. Concerning the Occasion Reason and Method of his undertakings in Harmonizing the NEW TESTAMENT THE Original cause of those Books of Harmony that this excellent Man published at several times was an ardent Love of the Holy Scriptures which put him upon an earnest search into them that if possible he might at length arrive to a true and sure understanding of them This account he gives of himself * Ep. before his Hor. Hebr. upon 1 Cor. It was neither arrogance nor rashness that made me employ my self in these obscurities but a studious mind breathing after the knowledge of the Scriptures and something restless when in difficult places it knew not where to fix And that he might read the Scriptures with the better advantage this was his constant course in his private use of them to take the Bible before him and to read it according to the proper Order of its Times and Stories always carefully observing where the method of it is direct and where transposed and how and where to place those transpositions This as he somewhere tells us he proposed to himself and practised many years together By which he gathered no little help for the apprehending the right sense of those Holy Pages This encouraged him not only to proceed still in that method himself but seriously to recommend it unto others And for the helping and furthering all pious Students of Holy Scriptures he resolved to communicate this his Course by publishing an Harmony for the use of all And now he bends all his Study and Thoughts to do this fully and exactly so as it might answer the Religious and good ends he intended it for Vast and long pains it cost him for the Course of his Studies was employed in elaborating to use his own most true expression the Harmony of the four Evangelists And both Nature and Providence assisted him in this noble intended Work For he was naturally of a stronge and hail constituion and his lot fell to be seated in a private Country Living free from noise and secular business and importunate Visits Here in his beloved Study built by himself in the midst of a Garden he plods hard at it night and day and for divers years allowed himself but some few hours in the night for sleep And the Scheme he drew out and propounded to himself for the method of this great and useful work was I. * Vid. Ep. to the Harmony publish 1644. To lay the Texts in that Order that the nature and progress of the Story doth require II. To give his reasons for his so disposing them III. To give some account of the difficulties of the Language in the Original as he should meet with them IV. To clear and open the sense all along The way that he took in prosecuting these two last was to examine Translations in divers Languages to alledge the various Expositions and Opinions of Commentators both Antient and Modern and also of others who spake to such and such places occasionally and then lastly to pass his own conjecture of the probability or improbability of them Which seemed to be the same course that the Learned Doctor Pocock afterwards took in his late admirable Commentary upon Micah and Malachi To all this he designed a large Preface which should contain Prolegomena of divers things fit
they either describe them or shew their situation or distance from such or such places II. They give us abundance of names of Cities Mountains and other places in that Land Which names are neither to be found in the Scripture nor Josephus nor in the Heathen or Christian Records that speak of the places of that Country but in these Judaick Writers only But yet carry a fair probability and rational Evidence that there were such names and places III. They relate many choice eminent and remarkable stories occurring in such and such places which are not to be found in any Records but their own and of singular illustration both of the situation and of the story of the Land and Nation Now the taking notice of passages of this nature had been his course for many years together as he had occasion to read the Talmudical Writers So that he had gathered a great stock of these Rarities as he styles them for the use of his Chorographical Work even to the bulk of a great Volume In so much that what he saith of his Book of the Temple That it cost him as much pains to give that description of it as to travail thither is as much or more true of this The unhappy chance that hindred the publishing this elaborate piece of his which he had brought to pretty good perfection was the Edition of Doctor Fullers Pisgah Sight Great pity it was that so good a Book should have done so much harm For that Book handling the same matters and preventing his stopped his Resolution of letting his labours in that subject see the light Though he went a way altogether different from Doctor Fuller and so both might have shewn their faces together in the World and the younger Sister if we may make comparisons might have proved the fairer of the two But that Book is lost utterly save that many of his Notions are preserved in his Chorographical pieces put before his Horae And for the last thing whereof that Preface was to consist namely to give some Historical account of the affairs of the Jews that is done in part in his Commentary upon the Acts of the Apostles published Anno 1645. and in his Parergon Concerning the Fall of Jerusalem at the End of the Harmony Anno 1655. But alas these are but light touches of their story rather than any compleat and full account thereof But such as they are we must be glad of and contented in the want of the rest Indeed the Jews History from the beginning of the Gospel downwards for some Centuries would have been as excellent and useful as the subject would have been rare and unusual And a thing of that difficulty also that the modest Doctor propounds it to others rather than dares to undertake it himself For we find in one of his Epistles Dedicatory * To the Earl of Essex Anno 1645. He recommends it to some able pen to continue the story of the Jews where Josephus and Egesippus end theirs and where Jerusalem ended her days until these latter times out of the Jews own Talmud and Writings for the illustration of the Truth of those predictions of Scripture that foretel their doom and for the evidencing that justice that hath ever since haunted them for the murder of the Righteous One whom they crucified II. Concerning his Learning and Studies NAture had endued him with a strong and sound constitution of Body so that in his old age he was able closely to follow his Studies without finding any inconvenience by it and though he had not spared his Eyes in his younger years yet they still remained good for which he blesseth God in a Letter to the Learned Buxtroph Anno 1664. And divers years after that he acknowledgeth the same blessing of health in his Epistle to his last Book that he put forth which was not above a year or two before his death calling it Vivacitatem corporis animi atque oculorum The Vivacity of his Body Mind and Eyes This excellent temperament qualified him for Study Which he pursued hard all his days He had read much Which may be gathered from his Note Books wherein are short Notes from Book to Book and from Chapter to Chapter of the chief Contents of many Authors collected by his own Hand and both Fathers and Historians and especially the latter and such of them chiefly as might afford him light into the affairs of the Church in the earliest times of it And hereby he laid himself in a good stock of materials to make use of in his future Rabbinical Studies That abstruse and more recondite Learning he from his younger years greatly affected To those Studies * Ep. Ded. before the Hor. upon S. John he tells us himself he was most servently carried out ex innato mihi nescio quo genio by he could not tell what innate Genius and that there was nothing so sweet and delicate to him * ubi ante istis deliciis nihil mihi dulcius delicatiusque Indeed this Learned Man seemed to have a Genius that naturally affected the Study of such things as were beyond the sphere of ordinary and common Learning and delighted to tread in * Ep. before his Harm publish 1647. untrodden paths to use his own phrase and loved to lead rather than follow He was willing to spare no labour and to take up all things at the first Hand as he speaks somewhere And this appeared by the very Title that he gave some of his Books His Observations upon Genesis are called by him New and rarely heard of In his Handful of Gleanings he promiseth solution of difficulties scarcely given by any heretofore And in the second part of his Harmony published Anno 1647. he professeth to give Observations upon Text and Story not commonly obvious and more rare and unnoted And that Proposition before mentioned of a just History of the Jews bespake the high and more than ordinary flights of his Learned mind But especially his Harmony shewed this Wherein he reckons himself the first that ever essayed a Work of that nature in the English Language which he himself calls an untrodden path and a bold adventure But let us follow him to his beloved Rabbies or rather to the beloved Writings of the ill-beloved Authors Of whom he gave this character That the Doctrine of the Gospel had no more bitter enemies than they and yet the Text no more plain Interpreters The reason he bent himself to the Study of them was because he was fully convinced an insight into their Language and Customs was the best way to a safe and sure understanding of the New Testament which he thirstily gasped and breathed after the knowledge of And though the barbarous and difficult style and the great store of trifling wherewith they abound might and doth justly discourage many from reading them yet Dr. Lightfoot undervalued all hardships and discouragements for the compassing that great and noble end he aimed
year 1669. writ to him a long Letter desiring him to communicate the sum of his judgment concerning Morinus his Exercitations of the Jews in the second Book of his Exercitationes Biblicae Mr. James Calvert a Learned Man of York begs his advice about the right position of the Priests portion in the holy square of Ezekiel This Learned Man for the clearer understanding of divers passages in the Prophetical writings was inclined to think that that Vision of Ezekiel commonly understood mystically is rather literal and historical The only or main objection against this Hypothesis is the placing of the Priests Portion for if the Temple be either five or thirty miles distant from the City there can be no question but that the Vision is mystical they are his words but if there be an error in placing of the Priests portion and that the City and Sanctuary may meet together the greatest objection against the literal sense will be removed And thus concludes his Letter Sir I do not know your person but I have both read and heard so much of your excellent Learning and your candid and ingenuous nature that it emboldens me to write thus freely to you and to entreat you that as you have hitherto so you would still make this one great end of your rare Learning to illustrate the Scripture Text that instead of too many aerial and subtil speculations the Church of Christ may be fed with solid food I mean the simple and sincere meaning of the Holy Ghost be it History or Mystery It would be too long to tell of young Buxtorph upon whom the Magistrates of Basil conferred his Fathers Hebrew Professors place at seventeen years of age Maximo Parente spe major filius as Dr. Castel characters him John Henricus Ottho a Learned Man of Berne in Switzerland Frederick Miege a Noble Learned and Ingenious German D. Knory a very Learned Man of Silesia Theodore Haac and many other forrainers of divers Nations that came into England chiefly to see Dr. Lightfoot and to be directed in their Rabbinical Studies by him All whom he did with much humanity and affability receive and from him they departed with great satisfaction as by their Letters to him after their departure does appear VII His Correspondences HE held a Learned Correspondence especially with persons most eminent for that recondite Learning that he was so famed for and was dear unto and highly valued by them Namely The great Buxtorph while he lived and at home the Right Reverend Father in God Brian Lord Bishop of Chester deceased Dr. Pocok Hebrew Professor at Oxon Dr. Castel Arabick Professor at Cambridge Dr. Marshal the Reverend and Learned Rector of Lincoln College Oxon Mr. Samuel Clark sometime Keeper of the Famous Library of the University of Oxon Dr. Worthington sometime Master of Jesus College in Cambridge Mr. Bernard of S. Johns College Oxon all Men famous in their generation whose names we need only mention and among the laity he held a most intimate friendship and correspondence with Sir Tho. Brograve of Hertfordshire Baronet his Neighbour and Kinsman a Gentleman well seen in those abstruser Studies Nor did their Letters consist of vain strains of Complements nor were they stuffed with idle and unprofitable News of affairs in the State but they carried deep and Learned enquiries about difficulties of Scripture or doubts in their Oriental Studies they conferred about brave and high Designs for the better promoting of Truth and Religion and solid useful Learning One Conference I meet with between Dr. Castel who was the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Propounder and our Doctor The Resolver was upon this subject proposed by the former Whether when the ordinary Interpretation of any Hebrew words renders the sense hard and rough recourse may not be had to the Interpretation of those words according as they signifie in Syriac Chaldee or Arabic This question had been occasioned from Dr. Lightfoots excellent Interpretation of that difficult place Ezek. VIII 17. Upon which place he put a fair sense as it seems by Interpreting some word or words there according to some of those Languages Whereupon he tells him That he met often with many seeming contradictions and absurdities in our English though one of the best as well as in other Versions As Job III. 5. Let the shaddow of death stain it in the margent chalenge A Catacresis I remember not to be found elsewhere But 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word there used in the Arabic use is Excipere Colligere as the LXX not there alone best Chap. XV. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thou speaking to Job restrainest prayer Whereas Job was often in Prayer in Arabic in which Language many words with him occur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to Protract and Multiply as the Syriac and Arab there render it Thou art much in complaints Chap. XVIII 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aucupia Verborum again from the Arab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Contradicendi vices as the Arab and Chaldee both Chap. XVI 18. O Earth cover not thou my blood 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so that there should be no place to my cry Because blood is a Crying sin To pray his Cry should have no place I am a Davus to that sense Prov. XXIII 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As he thinks in his heart and yet his heart is not with thee seem very repugnant Whereupon he propounds this Question That meeting with a World of these seeming contradictions every day he ●r●●es his judgment Whether the Arab Chaldee Syrian may not sometime sit upon the Bench and pass their Vote concerning their old Mothers meaning All the News communicated between these Correspondents was about the further progress of Oriental Learning the discovery of more Books of that Nature c. which was the best and joyfullest news to them It may be it will not be amiss to communicate a Letter or two of this nature The one is of the aforesaid Dr. Castel written 1664. Sir Though I perish it comforts me not a little to see how Holy Writ flourishes I lately received an Armenian Psalter given me by Professor Golius come newly off the Press where they are Printing at Leyden the whole Bible in that Language The Old Testament is there Printing in the Turkish Language perfected by Levinus Warnerus The New Testament in Turkish done by Mr. Seaman is just now in the Press at Oxford of which I have some sheets by me as I have also of the old Gothic and Anglo-Saxon Gospels now Printed with a Glossary to them at Leyden Mr. Petreus hath Printed some parts of the Old Testament in Ethiopic and hath many more prepared both in that and the Coptic Language The Lithuanian of which I have a good part by me and the New England Bibles I need not name I have a specimen of a Turkish Dictionary Printed at Rome and of a Chaldee Dictionary in folio in the Hebrew Language composed by the Learned Coken
where he made an entrance into his Hebrew studies he resolves to come up to London to take the opportunity of the Divinity Library there thereby to furnish himself with a good stock of Reading and Learning proper to the holy Employment he had undertaken before he engaged himself further in it Here he lay for some years close and private and read over the Fathers and many other Books tending to the furthering his Divinity studies He preached then indeed but seldom or not at all his business now being something else But when some who had a mind to have themselves eased by his labour charged this upon him as a crime of idleness to clear himself of that imputation he published his first Book to let the World see he was not idle though he preached not He never cared to be accused of idleness and his own conscience cleared him of that as he tells us before that Book though he confessed that he was not so hasty as many be to intrude himself where there is no necessity But when he had taken the charge of Souls upon him in all the parts of the Ministerial Function he was very diligent A constant Preacher resorting to his Parish Church which stood a mile distant every Sunday Winter and Summer wet and dry unless abroad or hindred by sickness He failed not to visit the sick whensoever sent for compassionating their condition and administring wholsom counsils and comforts to them He was a great enemy to Schism and Faction and uncharitable separation from the Church and did use to press Communion both in his Sermons and ordinary discourses And it may not be amiss to mention the notable argument he used to manage in the behalf of holding Communion with the National Church which was our Lords Example This he often and convincingly urged in this case and particularly but some few months before his death in one of his ordinary Sermons he had these words Let me ask them meaning the neglecters of the Publick Worship do they think that our Saviour ever let Sabbath day pass in all his time while here but he was present at the Publick Service either in the Temple or in the Synagogue Look the Gospel through and see by the current of the story there whether ever he absented himself from the Publick Congregation on the Sabbath day Read that Luke IV. 16. To spare more He came to Nazareth where he had been brought up and as his custom was went into the Synagogue on the Sabbath day and stood up for to read It was his custom to go to the Synagogue to the Publick Service and Congregation on the Sabbath day and he never failed of it And he stood up for to read in his own Town-Synagogue as owning himself a member of that Congregation For it is not recorded that he read in any Synagogue beside It was his Custom to go to the Publick Congregation on the Sabbath day it is these Mens custom not to come there He never absented himself from the Publick Meeting these Men account it Religion to absent themselves ever Is our Publick Service more corrupt than theirs was then If it be let them shew it If it be not let them give a reason why they go so directly contrary to our Saviours own practice Generally his Sermons were very plain as preached to a Country Auditory and practical recommending above all things piety and a good life and if he chanced to fall upon controversial points in the course of his Sermons he would strive in few words to pass over the controversie and while he was upon it to render it as useful and serviceable to pious ends as he could His Sermons always carried a sweet and easie strain with them a Rhetorick peculiar to himself notably raising attention and making a quick impression upon the Affections Insomuch as he seldom failed of a great Auditory having scarce one in his Parish that absented from his Ministery And another qualification he had of a good Clergy-man and that was his Charity which was free and large His House was a continual Hospital none went away thence unrelieved which was so well known that he had a more than common charge at his Door For such was his compassionate Spirit that all sorts of comers pretending need partook of his liberality and he would frequently bring poor people within Doors to his fire to warm them as well as feed and cloth them Besides he used in the Winter seasons to find work for the poor of his Parish as spinning c. Whereby at once industry and labour might be encouraged and poverty succored And his secret charities are supposed considerable For he had 300 l. per annum and no charge nor visible expence and yet spent all Take him in his more private Capacity he was a truly pious and devout Christian towards God This was his friend Dr. Castels character of him I know no Man under Heaven whose Voicinity would make my life more patiently tolerated than to be near one who hath in him so much of Heaven as you have On the Lords days abroad as well as at home he always forbore eating or drinking till the Evening Service were over that he might be the more intent upon his Devotions and Meditations in private and the freer from dulness and drowsiness in publick a thing so unbecoming the Worship of God Whensoever he returned home from a journy it was his manner to pass through his House to his retirements without saluting or speaking to any body unless they came in his way till he had performed his private Devotions For his food whatsoever it was he was always very thankful to God never complaining of any thing at his Table but ever expressing a thankfulness for what ever was set before him besides his usual blessing before and after meals He was indeed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an universal Good Man which reconciled him a reverence wheresoever he came but for some particular Virtues he deserved Monstrari dicier Hic est To be taken notice of and admired I will instance only in his profound meekness and humility a Man so learned of such great abilities beyond most Men and yet so void of all conceit of himself so mean so little so nothing at all in his own Eyes that one would wonder to hear the expressions that he useth of himself In his Epistle to Christs College you have him in this strain Cum repeto quantum sine numero c. When I recollect what a number almost without number of learned eminent Men Christs College hath fostered and brought up I call my self Dunce and Blockhead to come from so learned a bosom and from among so learned a Society so unlearned so mean and obscure and still so to remain Oh! dull creature that I have been and am in and after so many and so great advantages and examples of Learning I rejoyce and triumph Dearest Nurse in the multitude of thy
forty or the eighteen years of Eglons afflicting were the last eighteen Ehud 27 years of Ehuds eighty for by this means Othniel and Ehud are made Ehud 28 to start up in the very end of these sums of years and get a victory and no Ehud 29 Ehud 30 more news of them whereas it is apparent not only by the years of the Ehud 31 men lately cited and by Chap. 2. 19. but also by other passages that the Ehud 32 Ehud 33 Judge was not only their deliverer in one fought battle or the like but Ehud 34 that he was their instructer and helped and strove to keep them to the fear Ehud 35 Ehud 36 of the Lord Chap. 2. 17. and when any of the Judges did not so they are Ehud 37 noted for it as Gideon about his Ephod Abimeleck about his brethren Ehud 38 Ehud 39 and Samson about his women so that in what time of these fourscore years Ehud 40 of Ehud to place the eighteen of Eglons afflicting it is not certain nor is it Ehud 41 very much material seeing it is certain that they fell out sometime within Ehud 42 Ehud 43 those fourscore years A good space of time may we allot for Israels falling Ehud 44 to Idolatry after Othniels death and for Gods giving them up to their enemies Ehud 45 Ehud 46 power upon their Idolatry but whensoever that affliction comes it Ehud 47 comes so home that a King of Moab is King of Israel and hath his very Ehud 48 Ehud 49 Court and Palace in the Land of Canaan in the City of Jericho That City Ehud 50 was inhabited by Israelites before Eglon and his Moabites Ammonites and Ehud 51 Ehud 52 Amalekites drove them out and yet had not Joshua's curse seized on them Ehud 53 for that had reference only to Rahabs kindred and family to prohibite Ehud 54 Ehud 55 them for ever going about to fortifie and build it for a Canaanitish Town Ehud 56 again and Hiel that went about that work in Ahabs time was of that Ehud 57 Ehud 58 stock and that light upon him accordingly as will be touched there The Ehud 59 oppressours of Israel at this time were the very same Nation that came Ehud 60 against Jehoshaphat 2 Chron. 20. Namely Moabites Ammonites and Meunims Ehud 61 Ehud 62 or Amalekites and Edomites that dwelt promiscuously among Ammon as see Ehud 63 the Notes when we came there and those that are here spoken of are generally Ehud 64 Ehud 65 fat men ver 29. as was Eglon himself extraordinarily Ehud was a Ehud 66 man of Benjamin and probably of Gibeah for he was of the same family in Ehud 67 Benjamin that King Saul was of afterwards and thus the honour of Benjamin Ehud 68 Ehud 69 was somewhat restored in him and as Judah in Othniel hath the first Ehud 70 honour of Judge-ship so Benjamin in Ehud had the second Eglon is destroyed Ehud 71 Ehud 72 with a two edged sword compare Rev. 1. 16. About the latter end Ehud 73 of Ehuds life we may indeed suppose some of the passages of the Book of Ehud 74 Ruth to have come to pass for that Book containeth the story of a very Ehud 75 Ehud 76 long time but the exact place in the Book of Judges where and the exact Ehud 77 time in Chronicle when to lay any particular of those occurrences is not Ehud 78 Ehud 79 to be found nor determined World 2690 Ehud 80 EHUD dieth The Book of RUTH TOwards the aiming and concluding upon the time of the story of the Book of Ruth these things may not unprofitably be taken into consideration 1. That Salmon who came with Joshua into the land married Rahab and of her begat Boaz who married Ruth Matth. 1. 5. 2. That from Salmons coming into the land to the birth of David were 366 years namely 17 of Joshua 299 of Judges 40 of Eli and 10 of Samuel and yet was this long space of time taken up by four men viz. Salmon before he begat Boaz of Rahab and Boaz before he begat Obed of Ruth and Obed before he begat Jesse and Jesse before he begat David so that you must allow to every one of them near upon a hundred years before he begat his son 3. That from their coming into Canaan to Ehuds death were 137 years 4. Now grant that Rahab lived sixty years in Israel before she had Boaz by Salmon and that Boaz lived an hundred years before he was married to Ruth both which are fair allowances yet will this his marriage with Ruth fall but three years after Ehuds death So that this Book of Ruth may be taken in between the third and fourth Chapters of the Book of Judges The Book of Ruth setteth out the great providence of God in bringing light out of darkness Ruth a mother of Christ out of the incest of Lot a special mark over 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the story of Lots eldest daughter lying with her father Gen. 19. 34. and a special mark in a great letter in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the story of Ruth going to Boaz his bed Ruth 4. 13. seem to relate one to the other and both together to point at this providence Boaz born of a Heathen woman and married to a Heathen woman but both these become Israelites and holy After the reading of the Book of Ruth the Reader and story return to the fourth of Judges JUDGES CHAP. IV. V. World 2691 Deborah 1 Deborah 2 DEBORAH and BARAKS forty years begin Israel after the death Deborah 3 of Ehud fall to their old Idolatry again and for that ere long fall under Deborah 4 Deborah 5 oppression Shamgar got one wonderful victory for them but wrought Deborah 6 not a perfect deliverance Deborab a woman of Ephraim ariseth after him and Deborah 7 Deborah 8 judgeth the people she being a Prophetess and by the spirit of Prophecy stirreth Deborah 9 up Barak of Nephtali to fight with Sisera whom he overcometh by an army Deborah 10 of Galileans but Sisera himself falleth by the hand of a Proselytess woman Deborah 11 Deborah 12 Then Deborah and Barak sang Here the man of Nephtali giveth goodly Deborah 13 words They tell the sad case of Israel in Shamgars and Jaels times before the Deborah 14 Deborah 15 victory was gotten over Sisera that men durst not go in the common ways nor Deborah 16 dwell in villages and unwalled Towns for fear of the enemy The rich and Deborah 17 Deborah 18 gallant men that used to ride on white Asses durst not ride in those times and Deborah 19 the rulers durst not sit in Judgment for fear of being surprised and people Deborah 20 Deborah 21 durst not go to the Town wells to draw water for fear of the enemies archers Deborah 22 but now all these may speak of the actings of God towards the forsaken villages Deborah 23 Deborah 24 and towards the forlorn places of Judicature in the gates for they
the Chronicles saith All Israel were eleven hundred thousand men and the Book of Samuel saith they were only eight hundred thousand men here are three hundred thousand difference and the Book of Samuel saith that the men of Judah were five hundred thousand but the Book of Chronicles saith they were only four hundred and seventy thousand Here is thirty thousand difference Now for the reconciling of this great and double diversity it is to be observed That there were four and twenty thousand Souldiers and Officers that attended David monthly so many every month these make in all two hundred eighty eight thousand 1 Chron. 27. These were as it were a standing Guard about the King every Month and ready for any sudden expedition There were besides these the Rulers of the Tribes and Officers under them and the Overseers and Rulers of the Kings imployments and Officers under them but the number of these was not put into the account of the Chronicles of David vers 24. so that here is the resolution of the scruple the whole number of men able to bear Arms in Israel were eleven hundred thousand and five hundred thousand in Judah but of these there were three hundred thousand of Israel and thirty thousand of Judah that were already listed and in the constant service and imployment of the King and these Joab gave not in the account because their number and list had been known long and because the King would not lay Taxes on his own servants Amongst all this number Levi and Benjamin were not reckoned For before Joab came home to sum them for he began furthest off first a plague began among the people and now the Lord began to cut off them that David had begun to make his pride and intended to make his profit The Lord proposeth to David three things among the rest whether three years famine should come upon the Land 2 Chron. 21. 12. which the Book of Samuel expresseth Shall seven years famine come vers 13. that is Shall three years famine come to make up those that have been already to be seven There had been already three years famine for the Gibeonites and this year of numbering the people was almost out and shall three years famine more come to make up seven And so we have a very good direction and guide about the order and times of the Stories that went last before concerning the three years famine and this joyned to it and this helpeth still to confirm that Series in which we have laid them or indeed rather in which they lye of themselves Where Abraham had his knife unsheathed to slay his Son but was stayed by command from Heaven In the very same place had the destroying Angel his sword drawn to slay Jerusalem but was restrained by the Lord the place was a threshing floor on Mount Moriah that belonged to Ornan or Araunah or Auranah for it is twice so written in the Text And by these several names one near another was he called A man that was descended of the Royal blood of the Jebusites and that now lived with and was the chief among other Jebusites that injoyed estates in and about Jerusalem under a Tribute This place David purchaseth in two several parcels and for two several sums The very floor and the Oxen and materials for sacrifice he bought for 50 shekels of silver 2 Sam. 24. 24. But the whole place of the Mount of the house which was a very large compass cost him six hundred shekels of gold 1 Chron. 21. 25. There David builds an Altar and sacrificeth and the Lord answereth him by fire from Heaven and from Heaven doth by this token point out the place where the Temple should be built I CHRON. XXII Vers. 1. 2 3 4 5. World 2989 David 40 DAVID prepareth for the building of the Temple He setteth Proselites or converted Gentiles a work to get stones for it This was a Type of the spiritual Temple to be built up by Gentiles under the Gospel The first Book of KINGS CHAP. I. all DAVID in his old age is struck with a cold dead palsie that no clothes can keep him warm whereupon his Phisicians perswade him to marry a young fresh Damzel which proveth to be Abishag of Shunem in the County of Issachar Adonijah upon the Kings age and decrepitness stands up for the Kingdom the Kings darling and like Elies Sons spoiled by his father for want of reproof his next child to Absalom by another woman and like Absalom in beauty and rebellion His aspiring to the Kingdom causeth David to anoint Solomon to put the matter out of question But here is a matter of some question about the time of Solomons anointing and about the order of this Chapter We find three times mention of Solomons being made King namely twice in the Book of Chronicles and once here see 1 Chron. 23. 1. 29. 22. Now the doubt lieth in this whether he were three times made King indeed and so all the three Texts that speak of it to be taken severally or whether only twice as 1 Chron. 29. 22. seemeth to settle and then this Story to be concurrent with one of those relations in the Chronicles That that must give light in this obscurity is this That this anointing of Solomon mentioned in this 1 King 1. upon this aspiring of Adonijah was the first time that ever David shewed who should raign after him see ver 20 27. and therefore it must needs be held concurrent or the same with that making Solomon King in 1 Chron. 23. 1. and the current of the Story will make it plain Only that scruple that lies yet in the way that being supposed is this That David at this first unction of Solomon should be in his chamber and upon his bed and exceedingly decrepit And yet at his second anointing should be in the midst of his Princes and Commanders and standing upon his feet 1 Chron. 28. 2. But this also will be removed if it be but considered that Davids present infirmity was not sickness but coldness and benummedness and old age he was heart whole and head whole but he was old and palsick and therefore though his most common and most commodious posture and composure was to be in his chamber and upon his couch yet upon such an occasion as to Crown Solomon again before all Israel he can come forth and stand upon his feet and make Orations and give advice for things to come I CHRON. XXII from vers 6. to the end And XXIII vers 1. THE juncture of the Story here lieth plain and easie David having caused Solomon to be anointed because of the ambition of Adonijah and that conspiracy being broken he first giveth him in charge the building of the House of the Lord as the first thing to be looked after And thus when David was old and full of days he made solomon King as is related in 1 King 1. and so the first verse
a man not to be certainly pointed out either who he was or when he lived and therefore that Chapter must necessarily be taken up where it lies because it is not possible to find out where else to lay it 5. The last Chapter is some part of it Batshebaes words to Solomon and some part of it Solomons words in her commendation and in commendation of all women like her And the former part which are her words might very well be laid in her Story and in Solomons minority namely after vers 25. of 2 Sam. 12. but yet it is very properly laid here where it is because the words of Solomon in commendation of such women as she were delivered when he delivered his other Doctrines and Proverbs and so the occasion that drew out those words is fitly joyned to the time of the words themselves Solomon is called Lemuel by his Mother as alluding or tuning to Shemuel or Samuel a Son of his mothers vows as Solomon is here averred by his mother to be of hers She giveth him many excellent Lessons in his tender years toward the making him a good man and a good King for which when he comes to mature years he highly commends and extols a good woman such a one as his mother was in an Acrostick or Alphabetical Oration The Song of SOLOMON or The CANTICLES AFTER the building of the Summer House in the Forrest of Lebanon Solomon pens the Book of the Canticles as appeareth by these passages in it Chap. 4. 8. Come with me from Lebanon my Spouse with me from Lebanon And Chap. 7. 4. Thy nose is as the tower of Lebanon c. Upon his bringing up Pharaohs Daughter to the house that he had prepared for her 1 King 9. 24. he seemeth to have made this Song For though the best and the most proper aim of it was at higher matters then an earthly marriage yet doth he make his marriage with Pharaohs Daughter a type of that sublime and spiritual marriage betwixt Christ and his Church Pharaohs Daughter was a Heathen and a stranger natively to the Church of Israel and withal she was a Black-moor as being an African as Cant. 1. 4 5. alludeth to it and so she was the kindlier type of what Solomon intended in all particulars CHAP. X. 2 CHRON. IX From beginning to vers 29. Solomon 31 THE Queen of Sheba cometh to hear the wisdom of Solomon and so Solomon 32 condemneth the Generation of the Jews that despised the wisdom of the Solomon 33 Father Matth. 12. 42. Solomon as is probable is yet flourishing in State Power Solomon 34 and Religion And is a Prince of admirable Peace at Salem a figure of the Solomon 35 King of Righteousness and the King of Peace CHAP. XI From beginning to vers 41. Solomon 36 IN his old age Solomon is drawn away by his Idolatrous Wives to forget Solomon 37 God The wisest and the happiest man like Adam undone by women Solomon 38 Hereupon his prosperity and his happiness began to change The Book of ECCLESIASTES AFTER his great fall Solomon recovereth again by repentance and writeth this Book of Ecclesiastes as his penitential dirge for that his folly He calleth himself in it Koheleth or the Gathering-Soul either recollecting it self or by admonition gathering others that go astray after vanity He sheweth in it that all things on this side Heaven are but vanity and he had found it so by sad experience and so the Kingdom promised to David which was to be everlasting must not be expected to be of this world as Joh. 18. 36. 1 KING XI Vers. 41 42 43. And 2 CHRON. IX Vers. 29 30 31. THE Book of Chronicles omitteth to mention the fall of Solomon as he had omitted the fall of David World 3029 Solomon 39 Solomon dieth having reigned forty years as his father David had done and Solomon 40 having had a great fall in his time as his father David had had yet like him is recovered pardoned and saved Kingdom of JUDAH 1 KINGS XII from beginning Division 1 to Vers. 25. World 3030 Rehoboam 1 Ieroboam 1 REHOBOAM through his folly and tyranny looseth the people by threatning them with a heavy yoke Christ seeketh to regain them by promissing a light one Matth. 11. 29 30. Shechem once the stage of blood Gen. 34. is now the scene of this unhappy division Rehoboam was now one and forty years old 2 Chron. 12. 13. yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 childish and simple 2 Chron. 13. 7. but of an haughty and oppressive spirit and so proveth himself a very fool Eccles. 2. 19. though he were the son of so wise a Father Kingdom of ISRAEL 2 CHRON. X. all And XI Division 1 to Verse 5. World 3030 Rehoboam 1 Ieroboam 1 JEROBOAM of Ephraim draweth ten Tribes from the house of David from the Temple that stood near it and from the promise of Christ that was affixed to it And this suddain rent of Solomons Kingdom did plainly teach that the King and Kingdom promised to David was not of this world but of another which King and Kingdom the revolting Tribes have now forsaken and by forsaking have lost Christ have lost Religion and have lost themselves And here is a kind of an Antichristian faction now risen in the world before Christs appearing The very foundation of this revolt of the Tribes was laid in the blood of Adoram Rehoboam seeketh to reduce the people with a strong hand whom with a gentle he would not retain PSAL. II. WITH the Story of the Apostacy of the ten Tribes read the second Psalm which was prophetically made by David Act. 4. 25. upon this revolt and rebellion and this is the first aim and intent of it though in a second and more full it hits upon the greater rebellion which this but typified and that is Judahs despising and crucifying the Lord of life being indeed exhibited as Israel despiseth him here being promised And as the Psalmist had touched in the first Psalm upon the fall of Adam who miscarried by walking in the counsel of the ungodly the Serpent and the seduced woman and had shewed a way how to withstand and escape such counsellings namely by meditation and delight in the Law of the Lord. So doth he in this Psalm touch upon the fall of the ten Tribes and how they miscarried by casting away the cords of obligation which God had tied them in to the throne of David and he giveth admonition to them to be wiser and adviseth both them and the generation that put the Lord to death and all ages to come To kiss the Son by a loving and submissive obedience as 1 Sam. 10. 1. and so to escape the wrath to come Matth. 3. when the Lords anger should be kindled and destroy the people that had been his destroyers 2 CHRON. XI From ver 5. to the end of the Chapter REhoboam fortifieth divers Cities Rehoboam 2 Ieroboam 2 Division 2 in Judah and Benjamin Rehoboam 3
after his absence from Jerusalem which how long it was is uncertain when he returneth thither again findeth things exceedingly out of order which he seeketh to reform He lived after this to the times of Darius the last King of Persia for he speaks of him Chap. 12. 22. and of Jaddua the High Priest who met Alexander the Great when he came to Jerusalem and to whom Alexander shewed so great respect as Josephus reporteth Antiq. Lib. 11. Caput ult Ezra liveth also near towards the times of Jaddua for he wrote the Book of Chronicles in the time of Johanan Jaddua's father Nehem. 12. 23. and so he lived well towards the expiration of the Persian Monarchy He was born at the least fifty years before Cyrus first and from thence to Darius his thirty second were forty nine years an hundred in all within one And after that he weareth out the time of one High Priest namely Joiada and writeth in the time of Johanan or Jonathan the next High Priest after him This consideration also helpeth to confirm that account of the times and Kings that we have given from Cyrus hither The Prophesie of MALACHI MALACHI the last of the Prophets of the Old Testament is held by some to have been Ezra but that matter is not much material and it is little certain And something uncertain are his his times if we should go about to be curious in determining of them but only this we may conclude of him that he lived in the times of corruption the beginning of which are mentioned by Nehemiah He prophesieth against the strange marriage mentioned there Nehem. 13. 23 28. Mal. 2. 11. And against the detention of Tithes mentioned there Neh. 13. 10 11. Mal. 3. 8. And against other prophannesses Neh. 13. 15. c. Mal. 1. 13. 2. 8. c. He concludeth with turning them to the study of Moses and the Old Testament and to the expectation of Elias Baptist the beginning of the new Because after his departure out of the world the spirit of Prophesie also departed and was a stranger among the Jews till the dawning of the Gospel The Apochrypha Books that were written in the time between wanted the dictating of that spirit for it was now departed And thus endeth the Old Testament in a prediction of the Baptist to come and in a threatning of a curse upon the unbelieving Jews FINIS THE HARMONY Chronicle and Order OF THE NEW TESTAMENT The Text of the Four EVANGELISTS Methodized The Story of the ACTS of the APOSTLES Analyzed The Order of the EPISTLES Manifested The Times of the REVELATION Observed All Illustrated with variety of OBSERVATIONS Upon the Chiefest Difficulties Textual and Talmudical For clearing of their Sense and Language With an Additional DISCOURSE CONCERNING The Fall of JERUSALEM AND THE Condition of the JEWS in that Land afterward By JOHN LIGHTFOOT D. D. LONDON Printed by W. R. for Thomas Parkhurst at the Bible and three Crowns in Cheapside near Mercers Chappel M DC LXXXII TO THE READER I Shall not trouble the Reader with any long Discourse to shew how the Scripture abounds with transposition of stories how the Holy Ghost doth eminently hereby shew the Majesty of his style and Divine Wisdom how this is equally used in both Testaments what need the student of Scripture hath carefully to observe those dislocations and what profit he may reap by reducing them to their proper time and order I Shall only in brief give account of what I have done in the ensuing Treatise which refers to that way of study of the New Testament Some years ago I published The Harmony Chronicle and Order of the Old Testament observing what transpositions may be observed there the reason of their dislocating and where in Chronical account is their proper time and place and accordingly manifesting the genuine Order of the Books Chapters Stories and Prophesies through the whole Book The New Testament being Written and Composed after the very same manner of texture requireth the like observation and having made the Assay upon the one I could not but do the like by the other I have therefore first observed the proper Time and Order of the Texts of the Evangelists and how all the four may be reduced into the current of one Story and thereby evidences taken out of them themselves I could willingly have published the Text it self in that Order for so I have transcribed it from end to end and so I offered it to the Press but found its passage difficult So that I have been forced to give directions for the so reading of it only by naming Chapters and verses It would have been both more easie and more pleasant to the Reader had the Text of the four been laid before him in several Columes but his examining and ordering it in his own Bible by the intimations given will cost more labour indeed but will better confirm memory and understanding The Acts of the Apostles do not much scruple the Reader with dislocations but the taking up of the times of the Stories is not of little difficulty and yet in some particulars of some necessity These are observed where most material according to what light and evidence may be had for them either in the Text it self there or elswhere Especially I have indeavoured to observe the times of the writing of The Epistles both those that fall in in those times that the Story of The Acts of the Apostles handleth and those that were written afterward For the fixing of some there is so plain ground from the Text that the time is determined certainly for others we are put to probability and conjecture yet such ground to build conjecture on that I hope there hath not been much roving from the mark I must stand at the Readers censure I was unwilling to have medled with The Revelation partly because I have no mind to be bold in things of that nature I see too much daring with that Book already and partly because I could not go along with the common stating of the times and matters there yet being necessitated by the nature of the task that I had undertaken I could not but deal with the Times and Order of things spoken of in that Book and that could not be done neither without some speaking to the things themselves which I have conjectured at referring all to better Iudgments by the best propriety of the Language and Dialect used I could observe where literally and where allusively to be understood Now because it would have been but a tedious task for the Reader only to study upon the meer dislocations and the ordering of them or only to be pondering how to lay all in their right current I have not only gone the way before him but have stewed his way all along with variety of observations as not obvious for such would have but added one tediousness to another so I hope not unprofitable nor without his delight I have not set
down of Idolatry and Heathenism in the Earth till the World was become Christian and then the Papacy arising doth Heathenize it again The destruction of which is set down vers 9. by fire from Heaven in allusion to Sodom or 2 King 1. 10 12. and it is set close to the end of the World the Devil and the Beast Rome imperial and the false Prophet Rome Papal are cast into fire and brimstone vers 10. where John speaks so as to shew his method which we have spoken of The Devil was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone where the Beast and the false Prophet are He had given the story of the beast and false Prophet the Devils agents and what became of them Chap. 19. vers 20. And now the story of the Devil himself for it was not possible to handle these two stories but apart and now he brings the confusion of all the three together and the confusion of all with them that bare their mark and whose names were not written in the Book of life REVEL CHAP. XXI THE Jerusalem from above described The phrase is used by Paul Gal. 4. 26. and it is used often by the Jews Zohar fol. 120. col 478. Rabbi Aba saith Luz is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jerusalem which is above which the holy blessed God gives for a possession where blessings are given by his hand in a pure Land but to an impure Land no blessings to be at all Compare Revel 21. 27 22. 15. Midras Till in Psal. 122. Jerusalem is built as a City that is compact together R. Jochanan saith The holy blessed God said I will not go into Jerusalem that is above until I have gone into Jerusalem that is below c. Ezekiels Jerusalem as we observed was of a double signification namely as promising the rebuilding of the City after the Captivity and foretelling of the spiritual Jerusalem the Church under the Gospel and that most especially At that John taketh at here and that is the Jerusalem that he describeth And from Isa. 65. 17 18. joyneth the creating new Heavens and a new Earth and so stateth the time of building this new Jerusalem namely at the coming in of the Gospel when all things are made new 2 Cor. 5. 17. A new People new Ordinances new Oeconomy and the old World of Israel dissolved Though the description of this new City be placed last in the Book yet the building of it was contemporary with the first things mentioned in it about the calling of the Gentiles When God pitched his Tabernacle amongst the●● as he had done in the midst of Israel Levit. 26. 11 12. That Tabernacle is pitched in the fourth and fifth Chapters of this Book And now all tears wiped away and no more sorrow death nor pain vers 4. which if taken litterally could refer to nothing but the happy estate in Heaven of which the glory of this Jerusalem may indeed be a figure but here as the other things are it is to be taken mystically or spiritually to mean the taking away the curse of the Law and the sting of death and sin c. No condemnation to be to those that are in Christ Jesus The passages in describing the City are all in the Prophets phrase Ezekiel and Isaiah as compare these The Bride the Lambs wife vers 9. Sing O barren Heathen that didst not bear c. Thy Maker is thine Husband thy Redeemer c. Isa. 54. 1 5. Vers. 10. He carried me away in the Spirit to a great and high mountain Compare Ezek. 40. 2. That great City holy Jerusalem c. This refers to great dimensions of Ezekiels Jerusalem as also to the squareness the three gates of a side c. The glory of it described from thence and from Isa. 58. 8. 60. 2 3. 54. 11 12 c. The wall of it twelve thousand furlongs square or fifteen hundred miles upon every quarter East West North and South three thousand miles about and fifteen hundred miles high Wall of salvation Isa 26. 1. 60. 14. The foundations of the walls garnished with twelve precious stones see Isa. 54. 11. as the stones in the Ephod or holy Breastplate three upon every side as these were three and three in a row The first foundation stone here is the Jaspar the stone of Benjamin for Pauls sake the great agent about this building of the Church of the Gentiles The Jerus Talmud in Peah fol. 15. col 3. saith expresly that the Jaspar was Benjamins stone for it saith Benjamins Jaspar was once lost out of the Ephod and they said Who is there that hath another as good as it Some said Damah the son of Nethina hath one c. And I saw no Temple therein c. vers 22. here this Jerusalem differs from Ezekiels that had a Temple this none and it is observable there that the platform of the Temple is much of the measures and fashion that the second Temple was of but the City of a compass larger then all the Land which helpeth to clear what was said before of the double significancy of those things they promised them an earthly Temple which was built by Zerobabel but foretold a heavenly Jerusalem which is described here REVEL CHAP. XXII FROM Ezekiel Chap. 47. and from several passages of Scripture besides John doth still magnifie the glory happiness and holiness of the new Jerusalem Lively waters of clear Doctrine teaching Christ and life by him flowing through it continually Ezek. 7. 1 9. Cant. 4. 15. The Tree of Life lost to Adam and Paradise shut up against him to keep him from it here restored Then a curse here There shall be curse no more vers 3. See Zech. 14. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Anathema non erit amplius c. He concludeth These sayings are faithful and true so he had said before at the marriage of the Lamb Chap. 19. 9. and again at his beginning of the story of the new Jerusalem Chap. 21. 5. referring to the several Prophesies that had been of these things and now all those sayings and Prophesies were come home in truth and faithfulness He is commanded not to seal his Book as Daniel was Dan. 12. 4. because the time of these things was instantly beginning and Christs coming to reveal his glory in avengement upon the Jewish Nation and casting them off and to take in the Gentiles in their stead was now at the door within three and an half or thereabout to come if we have conjectured the writing of this Book to its proper year There are two years more of Nero and one of confusion in the Roman Empire in the Wars of Otho Vitellius and Vespasian and the next year after Jerusalem falls And thus if this Book of the Revelation were written last of the Books of the New Testament as by the consent of all it was then may we say Now was the whole will of God revealed and committed to writing and from
Aaron and dwelling in the hill Country of Juda it were senseless to seek for his house in any other place then Hebron This place had been excellently renowned in ancient time Here was the promise given of Isaac here was the institution of Circumcision here Abraham had his first land and David his first Crown and here lay interred the three couples Abraham and Sarah Isaac and Rebecca Jacob and Leah and as antiquity hath held Adam and Eve Now there are many reasons given by Expositors of Maries hasting hither after the Message of the Angel As either to know the truth of what was told her about Elizabeth or to congratulate and rejoyce with her or to minister to her in her great belliedness or that the Baptist in Elizabeths womb might be sanctified by the presence of Christ in hers c. But I cannot but conceive this to be the very reason indeed That she might there conceive the Messias where so many types figures and things relating to him had gone before namely in Hebron For First This suited singularly with the Harmony and Consent which God useth in his works that the promise should begin to take place by the conception of Messias even among those Patriarchs to whom the promise was first given Secondly A kind of necessity seemeth to lie upon it that this Shiloh of the Tribe of Judah and the seed of David should be conceived in a City of Juda and of David as he was to be born in another City that belonged to them both Thirdly The Evangelists so punctually describing this City seemeth rather to refer to Christ then John who being of the Priests might indifferently have been born in any of the Tribes whatsoever Only the Holy Ghost giveth us to observe this which may not be passed That John that should bring in Baptism in stead of Circumcision was born in that very place where Circumcision was first ordained in the City Hebron It is generally held indeed that the Virgin conceived in Nazaret and in the very instant of the Angels talking with her but whether there be not as much probability for this opinion as for that I refer to the equal and judicious Reader Ver. 40. And saluted Elizabeth This seemeth to have been at some distance and a wall or floor between as consider seriously on ver 42. 44. Ver. 41. The babe leaped 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This word is used by the LXX for Jacobs and Esaus stirring in the womb Gen. 25. 22. And the leaping of the mountains at the giving of the Law Elizabeth in ver 44. addeth The babe leaped 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Not that he knew what he did when he leaped any more then they but that either this was the first time or this time was extraordinary The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth outward gesticulation or exultation as well as inward joy yea though there be no inward joy at all as Psalm 65. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the little hills shall be girded with exultation And so is it to be understood here The babe in my womb leaped with extraordinary gesticulation or exultation and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to signifie the manner of the thing done and not the cause of the doing Ver. 45. And blessed is she that believed Elizabeth in this clause seemeth to have an eye to her own husbands unbelief and the punishment that befel him for the same He a Man a Priest aged learned eminent and the message to him of more appearing possibility and Mary a Woman mean unlearned and of a private condition and the tidings to her most incredible both to nature and reason and yet she believed and he did not Ver. 48. He hath regarded the low estate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used by the LXX 2 Sam. 9. 8. and Psal. 25. 16. and importeth a look of pity and compassion and not of observation of desert as the Papists would have it here For some of them render this clause thus He hath looked on mine humility with approbation and others give this gloss upon it Because of her humility she deserved to be exalted and by it she was primely disposed to conceive and bear the only begotten Son of God But first the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it is said before in the LXX who must best help us to interpret it signifieth a look of another nature Secondly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth not the vertue of humility or the lowliness of mind but the state of a low and poor condition and so is it rendred here by the Syrian Arabick Spanish French Deodates Italian Dutch and all Latines that are not wedded to the vulgar And so is it used by the LXX Gen. 16. 11. 41. 52. 1 Sam. 1. 11. and so again by the New Testament Act. 8. 33. compared with the Original in Isa. 53. 8. And so prophane and heathen Authors distinguish betwixt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the former understanding as we do here and by the latter the vertue of humility Thirdly The same word in a manner or one of the same root in ver 52. is opposed to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and inevitably beareth the sense we follow Fourthly If the Virgin spake in the sense the Romanists would have her He hath looked upon my lowliness to give it its desert she would prove to be intolerably proud in the valuing of her humility All generations shall call me blessed As Gen. 30. 13. Not only thou oh Cosin Elizabeth and the Jewish Nation that expect the Messias but even all the world and all successions of ages among the Heathen shall come to the knowledge and confession of Christ and account me blessed in the favour that I have received Ver. 51. He hath scattered the proud c. If the Virgin aim these words and those of the same tenour that follow at any particular persons as some conceive she doth and meaneth the Devils or the Pharisees or the Jews it might as well be conceived that she hath respect to the four tyrannous and persecuting Monarchies in the Book of Daniel which were now destroyed as much as to any thing else But since the very same words in a manner are to be found in the song of Hannah 1 Sam. 2. they warrant us to interpret them not so restrictively as to any one particular example but of the general and ordinary dealing of God in the world with the wicked SECTION III. S. MATTHEW CHAP. I THE a a a a a a Gen. 5. 1. Book b b b b b b It might be understood The Book of the History as generation is taken Gen. 2. 4. and 37. 2. and so it might be the title not of this Chapter only but of the whole book But since the Evangelists intention is to set down Christs alliance to the Royal line by his Father Joseph the phrase must be understood accordingly and so the Chaldee useth the very
and those Northern Climates there was so great a peace that in some places there Money and Jewels were hung up by the high way and there was neither Theif nor Enemy to take them away Such times became the coming of Shiloh the Peaceable one Isa. 6. 9. And such a beginning was befitting the Gospel of Peace Augustus having brought the Empire under this quiet obedience like a politick Prince will have it all taxed and brought into the Subsidy Book that he might know the extent of his command of his strength and of his revenues And thus we see and may observe Rome come to its intire and absolute Monarchy but at this time and the state and power that should persecute Christ in his Members to the end of the world beginning and born as it were at the very same time when Christ himself Augustus as c c c c c c Annal. lib. 1 Tacitus recordeth of him did cause an account to be taken of all the Empire and himself had a Book and Record of it written out with his own hand Opes publice continebantur quantum civium sociorumque in armis quot classes regna Provinciae tributa aut vectigalia necessitates ac largitiones quae cuncta sua manu perscripserat Augustus which contained the publick revenue the number of Citizens or confederates in the Armies what Shipping Kingdoms Provinces Tributes or Subsidies and relief money and beneficences Dion also in the life of Augustus and much also about this time mentioneth a tax laid by him upon those that dwelt in Italy whose estates were not less then five thousand Sesterces and poorer then these he taxed not Ver. 2. This taxing was first made when Cyrenius was Governour of Syria The Tax is dated by the time of Cyrenius his Governing of Syria First Because Judea was annexed to Syria as a member of it and in naming the one the other is included Secondly Hereby the loss and want of the Scepter and Law-giver in the Tribe of Judah is the better seen for the subjection of the Jews by this is shewed to be in the third degree They subject to Herod Herod to Cyrenius and Cyrenius to Augustus Thirdly From Syria had Israel had their greatest afflictions that ever they had in their own Land as by Gog and Magog Ezek. 38. or the house of the North Dan. 11. And Luke deriving the taxing of the Jews from Syria calleth those things to mind and layeth as it were the last verse of Dan. 11. and the first of Dan. 12. together The taxing is said first to be made in his time As first Denying that ever there was such an universal taxation in the Empire before for the Empire was never in that case of universal quietness to be taxed before And secondly Importing the taxes of that Country that followed after Augustus at this very time laying the platform subjection and submission of the Empire for succeeding posterities And here let it be said again in exact propriety beginneth the Roman Monarchy and is far from being any of the four mentioned Dan. 2. or 7. Josephus c mentioneth Cyrenius his coming into Syria after Archelaus his death To do d Antiq. lib. 18. cap. 1. justice and to assess and tax every mans goods and he came into Judea which was now annexed to Syria and did so there Now Archelaus reigned after Herod Matth. 2. and reigned till Christ was about ten years old for ten years he reigned as saith the same d d d d d d Antiq. lib. 17. cap. 15. Josephus and therefore either Cyrenius came twice into Syria to lay taxations as Funccius concludeth or else Josephus faileth here as he doth not seldom elsewhere in Chronology Ver. 3. And all went to be taxed This taxing was first by Kingdoms and Countries then by Cities and Towns and then by poll First Kingdoms and Provinces were divided one from another Secondly Cities and Towns in every Kingdom and Province were also particularized and notice given that every one should repair to the place to which by stock and descent they did belong Thirdly The people being thus convened in their several Cities their names were taken and inrolled and so the Greek word here used doth signifie in the nearest propriety Then did they make profession of Subjection to the Roman Empire either by some set form of words or at least by payment of some certain sum of money which was laid upon every poll And now first are the Jews entring under the yoke of that subjection which they never cast off again but it pressed them into a final desolation even to this day Secondly They had voluntarily brought this misery upon themselves in calling in the Romans in their civil wars Thirdly No spark of their former freedom and authority is left among them for their King and Law-giver is clean gone Fourthly They are now to be inrolled and registred for vassals to all succeeding generations Fifthly They must now leave their own occasions and many of them their own houses to attend their own bondage and misery And thus It is in the words of our Rabbins if thou see a generation that hath many afflictions then look for the Redeemer from Isa. 59. 17 18. Jer. 30. 6 7 c. D. Kimch in Isa. 59. Ver. 4. And Ioseph also went up from Galilee c. Whether it were for the fear of Herod that had a murderous spite at the stock of David or for the more commodiousness for his trade or for whatsoever else it was that Joseph a Bethlehemite became a resident in Galilee surely it was the wondrous disposal of the Lord that a decree from Rome should bring him now from Galilee to Bethlehem that the Prophesie of Christs being born in that place might take effect Ver. 7. She brought forth his first born This is to be understood according to the propriety and Phrase of the Law agreeable to which it speaketh Now the Law speaking of the first-born regardeth not whether any were born after or no but only that none was born before As Hur is called the first-born of Ephrata 1 Chron. 2. 5. and yet no mention of any child that she had after So Christ is here called the first-born not as though she had any children besides but to shew that in him was fulfilled what was typified by the first-born under the Law who was as King Priest and Prophet in the Family and holy to the Lord. And so likewise in that speech of Matthew chap. 1. 25. He knew her not till she had brought forth her first-born it implieth not that he knew her after for the word till inforceth no such thing as see the Geneva notes upon the place but the Evangelists intention is to clear the birth and generation of Christ from any carnal mixture of Joseph and Mary before he was born And here it is not unseasonable to look a little narrowly into the time of our Saviours birth namely the time of the
skipping from Text to Text in the reading of the Prophets was for nothing else but to fetch in another place that spake in parallel or in clearing of the Text that they were in reading And so since we find Christ conforming in many other things to the custom of their Synagogues why may we not hold that he did the like in this which was a thing of profitable use He reading therefore upon this clause 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And to those that are bound opening opening for so the word is doubled and signifieth the largest and freest opening that may be why may we not conceive that he used the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 skipping to another Text in the same Prophet as it was ordinary for learned Readers in the Synagogues to do by which he might clear the sense of this doubled and remarkable word to its full extent The words that are here taken in are found in Esay 58. 6. one Syllable only changed in the Septuagint from the words used by the Evangelist Now by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or bruised ones is to be understood bruised by calamity and misery in difference from broken hearted which was used before And so the very sense of the place in Esay and the use of the world in Deut. 28. 33. do make it apparent without more evidence Christ therefore setteth at liberty those that are bruised with outward calamities not only by delivering his people out of their troubles but by the sweet comforts of the Gospel inlarging their hearts though their persons be in straits Vers. 19. To preach the acceptable year of the Lord. This expression alludeth to the proclaiming of the year of Jubilee that welcome year to poor wretches that were in debt decay and servitude There have been some in ancient time that from this passage have concluded that Christ preached but one year from the beginning of his Ministery to his death which is a matter so apparently confuted in the Gospels that it is needless to stand about it If the allusion to the Jubilee year in the expression aim at any particular year Christs preaching it referreth to the year of his death which was not only a year of Jubilee in a spiritual sense because then there was redemption and restoring to a lost estate and out of servitude by his death but also it was a year of Jubilee in the literal and proper sense indeed The Jews have so jumbled the Jubilees in their writings and constructions and made them so fast and loose and it may be purposely to evade the clear answer of the Antitype to the Type in the death of Christ on a Jubilee year that they have left it at a careless and indifferent cast whether there were any Jubilees after a while or no. Assoon as the Tribes of Ruben Gad and Manasseth were captived say they the Jubilee ceased Siphri in Lev. 15. And Israel numbred seventeen Jubilees from their coming into the land to their going out and the year that they went out when the Temple was first destroyed was the going out of a seventh year of rest and it was the thirty sixth year of the Jubilee For the first Temple stood four hundred and ten years and when it was destroyed this counting ceased The second Temple stood four hundred and twenty years and on the seventh year from its building Ezra came up and from that year they began to count again and made the thirteenth year of the second Temple a year of rest and counted seven rests and hallowed the fiftieth year although there was no Jubilee under the second Temple The destruction of the second Temple was in the going out of a seventh year and it was the fifteenth year of the ninth Jubilee Maym. in Shemittah per. 10. Erachin per. 2. But God having appointed so full and sweet a resemblance of Christs redemption in this Type as a greater is scarcely to be found he did so carry on the chain and bracelet of Jubilees as I may so call them from the time that their accounting for did first begin that many of them were also made remarkable with some singular event beside their releasements and the last of them fell with the year of the death of the Redeemer as is accutely observed by the most learned Mr. Broughton who also produceth this confession of old Zohar or R. Simeon ben Jochai upon this matter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Divine Majesty will be to Israel in a Jubilee Freedom Redemption and sinisher of Sabbath But we need not to straiten this acceptable year of the Lord to that particular year of Christs death though that most eminently hath its share in the sense of it but it may also be understood of that time that was now begun of Messias his appearing and the publishing of the Gospel which preaching of the Gospel was so full and clear an answer and Antitype to the proclaiming of that year with the sound of the Trumpet that every one cannot but see it Zohar hath this application of that rite It is appointed saith he to blow the Trumpet at the Jubilee Now as at the blowing of the Trumpet at the Jubilee all servants went free 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So at the last redemption at the blowing of a Trumpet all Israel shall be gathered from the four sides of the world c. Zohar in Lev. 25. fol. 53. Vers. 20. And closing the Book he gave it to the Minister The Minister or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here mentioned was the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Angelus Ecclesiae of whom we have spoken before When they had done reading the Angelus Ecclesiae laid up the Book in its place again Maym. ubi supr Christs sitting down in the Pulpit when he had done reading whereas he should have come away to his seat in the Church did cause all the Synagogue to eye him and to expect what he would speak unto them It was the custom for the Teacher to sit as Mark 5. 1. Luke 5. 3. and so in their Divinity Schools 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Doctor sate aloft and all his Scholars round about him in a circle that all might see him and hear his words c. At the first the Master sate and his Scholars stood but before the second Temple was destroyed it came into use that every Master taught his Scholars they also setting Id. in Talm. Torah per. 4. Which custom came up from the death of Gamaliel the old Pauls Master whereupon it was ordinarily said From the death of Rabban Gamaliel the old the glory of the Law ceased Jucasin fol. 53. Vers. 21. This day is this Scripture fulfilled in your ears c. Christ doth openly profess himself to be that person there foretold of by the Prophet and at large explaining the Text which he had read which explanation the Evangelist hath not recorded he declares himself who he was so evidently and graciously that even his own Townsmen who knew
9. I believe that he shall overcome death This Israel saw by necessary conclusion that if Christ should fall under death he did no more than men had done before His Resurrection they saw in Aarons Rod Manna Scapegoate Sparrow c. 10. I believe to be saved by laying hold upon his merits Laying their right hand upon the head of every beast that they brought to be offered up taught them that their sins were to be imputed to another and the laying hold on the horns of the Altar being sanctuary or refuge from vengeance taught them that anothers merits were to be imputed to them yet that all offenders were not saved by the Altar Exod. 21. 12. 1 King 2. 29. the fault not being in the Altar but in the offender it is easie to see what that signified unto them Thus far each holy Israelite was a Christian in this point of doctrine by earnest study finding these points under the vail of Moses The ignorant were taught this by the learned every Sabbath day having the Scriptures read and expounded unto them From these ground works of Moses and the Prophets Commentaries thereupon concerning the Messias came the schools of the Jews to be so well versed in that point that their Scholars do mention his very name Jesus the time of his birth in Tisri the space of his preaching three years and an half the year of his death the year of Jubile and divers such particulars to be found in their Authors though they knew him not when he came amongst them SECTION XXVIII The Covenant made with Israel They not sworn by it to the ten Commandments Exod. 24. WHEN Israel cannot indure to hear the ten Commandments given it was ready to conclude that they could much less keep them Therefore God giveth Moses privately fifty seven precepts besides namely Ceremonial and Judicial to all which the people are the next morning after the giving of the ten Commandments sworn and entred into Covenant and these made them a Ceremonial and singular people About which these things are observable 1. That they entred into Covenant to a written Law Chap. 24. 4. And Moses wrote all the words of the Lord c. Against traditions 2. That here was a book written forty days before the writing of the two Tables Against them that hold that the first letters that were seen in the world were the writing of God in those Tables And we have seen before also two pieces of writing before this of Moses viz. the eighty eighth and eighty ninth Psalms And of equal Antiquity with them or not much less was the penning of the book of Job most probably written by Eli●u one of the Speakers in it as may be conjectured from Chap. 32. 15 16 17. and some other probability 3. That this first Covenant was made with water and blood and figurative language For the twelve pillars that represented the people are called the people Exod. 24. 4. 8. As the words in the second Covenant this my Body are to be understood in such another sense 4. That the ten Commandments were not written in the book of that Covenant but only those 57. precepts mentioned before For 1. The Lord giveth the other precepts because the people could not receive the ten for could they have received and observed those as they ought they must never have had any parcel of a Law more as if Adam had kept the Moral Law he had never needed to have heard of the promise and so if we could but receive the same Law as we should we had never needed the Gospel Now it is most unlike that since God gave them those other commands because they could not receive the ten that he would mingle the ten and them together in the Covenant 2. It is not imaginable that God would ever cause a people to swear to the performance of a Law which they could not indure so much as to hear 3. The ten Commandments needed not to be read by Moses to the people seeing they had all heard them from the mouth of the Lord but the day before 4. Had they been written and laid up in this book what necessity had there been of their writing and laying up in the Tables of stone 5. Had Moses read the ten Commandments in the beginning of his book why should he repeat some of them again at the latter end as Exod. 23. 12. Let such ruminate upon this which hold and maintain that the Sabbath as it standeth in the fourth Commandment is only the Jewish Sabbath and consequently Ceremonial And let those good men that have stood for the day of the Lord against the other consider whether they have not lost ground in granting that the fourth Commandment instituted the Jewish Sabbath For First The Jews were not sworn to the Decalogue at all and so not the Sabbath as it standeth there but only to the fifty seven precepts written in Moses his book and to the Sabbath as it was there Exod. 23. 12. Secondly The end of the Ceremonial Sabbath of the Jews was in remembrance of their delivery out of Aegypt Deut. 5. 15. but the moral Sabbath of the two Tables is in commemoration of Gods resting from the works of Creation Exod. 20. 10 11. SECTION XXIX The punishment of Israel for the golden Galf. Exod. 32. ISRAEL cannot be so long without Moses as Moses can be without meat The fire still burneth on the top of mount Sinai out of which they had so lately received the Law and yet so suddainly do they break the greatest Commandment of that Law to extreamity of Aegyptian Jewels they make an Aegyptian Idol because thinking Moses had been lost they intended to return for Aegypt Griveous was the sin for which they must look for grievous punishment which lighted upon them in divers kinds First the Cloud of Glory their Divine conductor departeth from the Camp which was now become prophane and unclean Secondly the Tables Moses breaketh before their face as shewing them most unworthy of the Covenant Thirdly the Building of the Tabernacle the evidence that God would dwell among them is adjourned and put off for now they had made themselves unworthy Fourthly for this sin God gave them to worship all the host of Heaven Acts 7. 42. Fiftly Moses bruised the Calf to Powder and straweth it upon the waters and maketh the People drink Here spiritual fornication cometh under the same tryal that carnal did Numb 5. 24. These that were guilty of this Idolatry the water thus drunk made their belly to swell and to give a visible sign and token of their guilt then setteth Moses the Levites to slay every one whose bellies they found thus swelled which thing they did with that zeal and sincerity that they spared neither Father nor Brother of their own if they found him guilty In this slaughter there fell about three thousand these were ring-leaders and chief agents in this abomination and therefore made thus exemplary
as a long linnen swaddle which went many times about them over their paps and downward partly to keep them warm and partly to strengthen their backs in the hard service to which they were sometime put the High-priest and ordinary Priests had of these alike 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Coat of the Ephod This garb the ordinary Priests had not but only the High-priest and it was called the Coat of the Ephod because the Ephod did gird it to him it had no sleeves as his checkered Coat had but it was made of two main pieces the one whereof hung before him and the other behind him the Collar of this Ephod was like the Collar of an Habergion whole and to be put over his head and from the Collar downward the pieces were parted and his Arms came out between them At the lower end of either of these pieces were thirty six little golden Bells with Clappers and Pomgranats of needlework between every Bell seventy two Bells in all This Coat was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as both h h h Ioseph Ant. lib 3. cap 8. Josephus and i i i Philo de Vita Mosio l. 3. p. apud me 519. Philo relate and so render the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of which as Maymonides saith it was all made which Philo renders also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the colour of the Air or sky colour 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Ephod The breadth of this was the breadth of his back from shoulder to shoulder and it hung behind him from his armholes to his feet from it there came two pieces under his armholes and met together and clasped over his paps and this was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the curious Girdle of the Ephod because both it and the Ephod were curiously wrought of fine twist and Gold It had two shoulder pieces also which went over the Priests shoulders and were fastned to the Ephod behind and to the Girdle before and so the Ephod hung low behind like a Womans Vail and came but short before like some Workmens Aprons hanging over their shoulders and coming down but to their Breasts Upon these shoulder pieces were two Beryl stones set in Gold in which the names of the Twelve Tribes were ingraven six in one stone on the one shoulder and six in the other so equally divided for the Letters that there were 25 Letters in either stone and Josephs name was written Jehoseph to make the equality and so he is called and written Psal. 81. 6. Upon these shoulder-pieces there were two bosses of Gold near to these stones into which two Gold Chains which tyed the Brest-plate to the Ephod were so fastned that Brest-plate and Ephod might not be parted and who so willingly parted them was to be whipt 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Brest-plate This was a rich piece of Cloth of Gold an hand-bredth square double set with twelve Precious Stones in four rowes three in a row these are called Urim and Thummim Exod. 28. 30. which are eminently mentioned in Scripture and famous for the inquiring by Urim and Thummim and Gods answering by them the manner of which we have discoursed elsewhere k k k Maym. ubi supr per. 16. In the second Temple they made a Brest-plate and Urim and Thummim that is set the Stones in the Brest-plate but never inquired by them because the Spirit of Prophesie was then departed 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Miter So it is almost Englished in Philoes Greek when speaking of the High-priests garb he saith among other things l l l Philo in lib. de profugis pag. apud me 364. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that in the service he never went without the Miter m m m Ioseph Ant. ubi sup This was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A bonnet saith Josephus without a Crown which went not over all his head but only a little above the middle of it sitting upon his head as it were a Crown It was made of linnen and was a long kind of swaddles of a large bredth which he wrapt oft about his head and complicated it in and out That the wrapping or warping of it up about his head was after the manner of the Turkish Tullibants only it wanted a crown but was open on the top sitting on his brows after the manner of a Garland 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The golden plate Exod. 28. 36. this was fastned on the front of the Miter and in it was ingraven Holiness to the Lord n n n Maym. ubi up per. 10. And between the Miter and the Plate he put and wore his Phylacteries Thus was the High-priest drest exceeding rich and exceeding gorgeous and his office eminent and high in dignity but the choicest eminency of it was in what it typified and resembled the great High-priest that was to come the explication and application of which Type and Antitype is so abundantly set forth in the Scripture especially in the Epistle to the Hebrews that it is needless to insist upon it Let us only for conclusion take the testimony of one that was either a stranger or an enemy to the Gospel and yet in this point and matter speaketh exceeding consonant and concurrent to it and that is Philo the Jew whom we mentioned before who speaking divers things concerning the High-priest concludes thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 o o o Philo ubi supra We say that the High-priest meaneth not a Man but the Word of God who was free from all sin both voluntary and unvoluntary And if any one desire to see how allegorically he applieth the several parcels of the High-priests Garments to the several parts of the World Air Earth Water Fire c. he may have him at large discoursing it according to his accustomed fluency in his third book de Vita Mosis pag. apud me 519 520 521. where after he hath spent a great deal of time and words and fancy to little profit he at last comes on with this Golden Saying worthy a Thousand Volumes of such stuff as he had produced before 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p p p Id. p. 521. It was necessary that he setting up a Priest to the father of the world should use his most absolutely perfect Son for a Mediator or Advocate both for the obtaining of pardon of sin and supply of abundant good An High-priest once installed was High-priest for his life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 q q q Ioseph Ant lib. 15. cap. 3 For none was deposed from this honour when he had once obtained it that is not by any legal deposition but Money and Power at the last broke this priviledge and the High-priests were frequently thrust in and thrust out by these according as the one or the other prevailed as the Gemara on the Treatise Joma maketh mention and Josephus in divers places giveth example The High-priest in some things was nothing differenced
manifest my self thus openly to the view of all Some there be that have hardly censured of me for idleness and sloth as they make it because it seems I intrude not every moment into the supply of other mens Ministries since it hath not yet pleased God to prefer and promote me to a Charge of mine own I know well the saying of the Apostle Rom. 1. 14. belongs to all Ministers To Greeks and Barbarians The Syrian to that verse adds a word which may well serve for a Comment mehha●obh leakrez I am a debtor or I ought to Preach to the wise and foolish they are all debtors and as the Syrian adds leakrez they are debtors to Preach And whoso is necessarily called and refuseth is as bad as the false Prophets were that would run before they were sent nay he may seem rather worse that when he is sent will not go From this censure how far I am free my Conscience tells me though I must confess that I am not so hasty as many be to intrude my self where is no necessity This hath among some purchased me the skar of slothfulness to vindicate which I have here ventured as Children do to shoot another arrow to find one that is lost so have I hazarded my Credit one way to save it another I know mine own weakness and that this my pains to Scholars may seem but idle yet had I rather undergo any censure than the blot of the other Idleness the begetter of all Evil and of Unthankfulness the hinderer of all Good This is the cause that brings me to a Book and my Book to you That by the one I may testifie to the World that I love not to be Idle and by the other witness to you that I love not to be Unthankful Accept I beseech you of so small a Present and so troublesom a Thankfulness and what I want in Tongue and Effect I will answer in Desire and Affection suing always to the Throne of Grace for the present prosperity of your Self and your Noble Lady and the future Felicity of you both hereafter From my Study at Hornsey near LONDON March 5. 1629. Yours devoted in all Service JOHN LIGHTFOOT TO THE READER Courteous Reader for such a one I wish or none I May well say of writing Books as the wise Greek did of marriage For a young man it is too soon and with an old man his time is out Yet have I ventured in youth to become publick as if I were afraid that men would not take notice of my weakness and unlearnedness soon enough If I fall far short of a Scholar as I know I do my youth might have some plea but that mine attempt can have no excuse but thy Charity To that I rather submit my self than to thy Censure I have here brought home with me some gleanings of my more serious studies which I offer to thee not so much for thy Instruction as for thy harmless Recreation I bear in mind with me the saying of Rabbi Josihar Jehudah in Pirke Abhoth He that learns of young Men is like a man that eats unripe Grapes or that drinks Wine out of the Wine-press but he that learneth of the Ancient is like a Man that eateth ripe Grapes and drinketh Wine that is old For fear thy Teeth should be set on edge I have brought some Variety I have not kept any Method for then I should not answer my Title of Miscellanies I have upon some things been more Copious than other and as Rab. Salomon observes of Ruth I have sometime but stood to Glean and sometime sitten down I hope thou wilt not censure me for Judaizing though I cite them for it is but as the Musician in Plutarch did setting a Discord first that you may better judge of the Consort and seeing Error you may the more embrace the Truth If this my Youthful attempt shall provoke any one that is Young to Emulation in the Holy Tongues I shall think I have gained Adjourn thy severe Censure till either future Silence or some second Attempt either lose all or make some Satisfaction For the present Quisquis haec legit ubi pariter certus est pergat mecum ubi pariter haesitat quaerat mecum ubi errorem suum cognoscit redeat ad me ubi meum revocet me Aug. de Trinit Lib. 1. Cap. 3. Thine ready and willing but unable I. Lightfoot OF KNOWLEDGE OF GOD. CHAP. I. OMNE tempus te puta perdidisse c. saith one All time is lost that is not spent in thinking of God To be full of thoughts of him is a lawful and holy prodigality And to spend time in such meditations a gainful lavishing For this end were the Scriptures given to lead us to meditate of God by meditating in them day and night Psal. 1. 2. Herein those fail that never think of God at all and those also that think not of him aright The Prophet makes this the mark of wicked men that God is not in all their thoughts That like the Jews they murder Zechariah the remembrance of God even between the Temple and the Altar Commendable in some sort was the devotion of the Philosopher that in so many years spoke more with the Gods than with Men. Had his Religion been towards the true God what could have been asked of him more I would Christians hearts were so retired towards their Creator that so he that made the heart might have it The Heathens thought there was a God but knew not what to think of him They prayed and sacrificed and kept a stir to something but they might well have marked their Churches Altars and Prayer with the Athenian Altar Motto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the unknown God Act. 17. Plato attained to the thought of one only God the Persians thought he could not be comprehended in a Temple and Numas thought he could not be represented by an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Clem. Alex. Strom. 1. p. 131. image and for this saith Clem. Alex. he was helped by Moses yet came all these far short of the knowledge of God Nature when she had brought them thus far was come to a non ultra and could go no further Happy then are we if we could but right prize our happiness to whom the day spring from an high hath risen and the Son of Righteousness with healing in his wings upon whom the noon-tide of the Gospel shineth and the knowledge of God in its strength Even so O Lord let it be still told in Gath and published in the streets of Ascalon to the rancour and sorrow of the uncircumcised that God is known in Britain and his Name is great in England CHAP. II. Of the Names of GOD used by Jews and Gentiles NO Nation so barbarous saith Tully that hath not some tincture of knowledge that there is a Deity And yet many nay most People of the World fall short of the right apprehension of God through
from the Phaenicians And Euphorus thinks that Cadmus was he that conveyed them Chaerilus in Eusebius makes Phaenicians and Jews all one For he nameth Jews in Xerxes army and names their Tongue the Phaenician his words be these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In English thus A wondrous people marcht behind along Their Dialect was the Phaenician Tongue On hill of Solymae they dwelt thereby A spacious lake not far remote doth lie These Phaenicians if you will call them so or Jews were the first that had Letters But the Jews were not Phaenicians indeed nor their Tongue the same yet for bordering of their Countries the Poet makes them all one The Phaenician is not now to be had unless the * * * The Syrian translating of the word Phaenicia in the New Testament seems to confirm this for true Punick or Carthaginian and Phaenick or Phaenician were all one which most like they were And then some few lines of the Tongue are to be found in Plautus his Paenulus which as Paraeus saith can little or nothing be made of Eusebius speaks of Sancuniathou that wrote the Phaenician History in the same Tongue but more of the Language he saith not But to the matter That Letters were so long in use before the giving of the Law I am induced to believe upon these reasons First Josephus is of this mind that Letters were before the Flood And the Scripture cites Enochs Prophesie which whether it were written by him or not is uncertain yet if there were any such thing those many places which we find of it in Tertullian Clemens and others do argue that so much could not punctually be kept by word of mouth A second reason to move me to think of Letters before the giving of the Law is to think of Josephs accounts in Egypt which seem almost impossible without writing Thirdly But omitting that I cannot see how all Arts and Sciences in the World should then flourish as considering their infancy they did without the groundwork of all Learning Letters Fourthly Again for the Jews upon the writing of the Law to be put to spelling as they that had never seen letters before and not to be able to read it had been a Law upon the Law adding to the hardness of it Fifthly Nor can I think that when Moses saith blot me out of thy book that he taketh the Metaphor from his own books which it is probable he had not yet written but from other books which were then abounding in the world Sixthly The Egyptian Chronicles of so many thousand years in Diodorus and Laertius I know are ridiculous yet their carefulness of keeping Records I have ever believed The Greeks were boys to them as it is in Plato and Moses was Scholar to them or their learning Act. 7. Now I cannot think that this their exceeding Humane Learning was kept only in their brains and none in writing Nor do I think that if it were written that it was decyphered only in their obscure Hieroglyphicks but that some of it came to ordinary writing of familiar letters CHAP. XXX Of the Hebrew Tongue WHO so will go about to commend the Hebrew Tongue may justly receive the censure that he of Rome did who had made a long book in the praise of Hercules This labour is in vain for never any one dispraised Hercules Other commendations this Tongue needeth none than what it hath of it self namely for Sanctity it was the Tongue of God and for Antiquity it was the Tongue of Adam God the first founder and Adam the first speaker of it In this Tongue were laid up the Mysteries of the Old Testament It begun with the World and the Church and continued and increased in glory till the Captivity in Babel which was a Babel to this Tongue and brought to confusion this Language which at the first confusion had escaped without ruine At their return it was in some kind repaired but far from former perfection The Holy Scriptures viewed by Ezra a Scribe fit for the Kingdom of Heaven in whose treasure were things New and Old In the Maccabean times all went to ruine Language and Laws and all lost and since that time to this day the pure Hebrew hath lost her familiarity being only known by Scholars or at least not without teaching Our Saviours times spake the Syrian Kepha Golgotha Talitha and other words do witness In aftertimes the unwearied Masorites arose helpers to preserve the Bible Hebrew intire and Grammarians helpers to preserve the Idiome alive but for restoring it to the old familiarity neither of them could prevail For the Jews have at this day no abiding City no Common-wealth no proper Tongue but speak as the Countries wherein they live This whereof they were once most nice is gone and this groat they have lost As the man in Seneca that through sickness lost his memory and forgot his own Name so they for their sins have lost their Language and forgot their own Tongue Their Cain like wandring after the murther of their brother according to the flesh Christ Jesus hath lost them this precious mark of Gods favour and branded them with a worse mark Cauterio conspirationis antiquae as saith Saint Bernard in another case Before the confusion of Tongues all the world spake their Tongue and no other but since the confusion of the Jews they speak the Language of all the World and not their own And that it is not with them so only of late but hath been long Theodoret beareth witness in these words Other Nations saith he have their children speaking quickly in their own mother Tongue Howbeit there are no children of the Hebrews who naturally spake the Hebrew Tongue but the Language of the Country where they are born Afterward when they grow up they are taught the letters and learn to read the Holy Scripture in the Hebrew Tongue Thus Theod. in quaest on Gen. 59. 60. About this their training up of their Children and growth of Men in their own Tongue and Learning a Rabbin hath this saying in Pirke Auoth Perek 1. Ben He he saith At five years old for the Scripture at ten for Mishneh at thirteen * * * Or Philacterits c. for the Commandment at fifteen for the Talmud At eighteen for Mariage at twenty for Service at thirty for Strength at forty for Understanding at fifty for Counsel at sixty for Old age at seventy for Gray Hairs at eighty ‖ ‖ ‖ Or fortitude of mind or God for Profoundness at ninety for Meditation at one hundred he is as Dead and past and gone out of the World The Jews look for a pompous Kingdom when Messias the Son of David shall come whom they watch for every moment till he come as it is in the twelfth Article of their Creed in their Common Prayer Book He shall restore them as they hope a temporal Kingdom and of that mind till they were better taught were the Apostles Acts 1.
answer in the very words of their vulgar Attendite ne justitiam vestram faciatis Take heed you do not make them your Justification CHAP. XLII An Emblem A Wall in Rome had this picture A man painted naked with a whip in one hand and four leaves of a book in the other and in every leaf a word written In the first Plango I mourn Is the second Dico I tell In the third volo I will and in the fourth facio I do Such a one in the true repentant He is naked because he would have his most secret sins laid open to God He is whipped because his sins do sting himself His book is his repentance His four words are his actions In the first he mourns in the second he confesses in the third he resolves and in the fourth he performs his resolution Plango I mourn there is sight of sin and sorrow Dico I tell there is contrition for sin and confession Volo I will there is amending resolution Facio I do there is performing satisfaction CHAP. XLIII Mahhanaiim Gen. 32. 2. AND Jacob went on his way and the Angels of God met him And Jacob said when he saw them This is the Host of the Lord and he called the name of the place Mahanaim The word is dual and tels of two Armies and no more what these two Armies were the Jews according to their usual vein do find strange expositions To omit them all this seems to me to be the truth and reason of the name There was one company with Jacob which afterwards he calls his army and there was another company of Angels which he calls the Army of God These are the two Armies that gave name to Mahanaim two Armies one heavenly and the other earthly and from this I take it Salomon compares the Church * to the company of Mahanaim for so the Church consisteth Cant. 6. 12. of two Armies one heavenly like these Angels which is the Church triumphant and the other travailing on earth like Jacobs Army which is the Church militant CHAP. XLIV The book of Psalms THE Psalms are divided into five books according to the five Books of Moses and if they be so divided there be seventy books in the Bible the unskilful may find where any one of these five books end by looking where a Psalm ends with Amen there also ends the book As at Psal. 41. 72. 89. 106. and from thence to the end These may even in their very beginnings be harmonized to the books of the Law Gensis The first book of Moses telleth how happiness was lost even by Adams walking in wicked counsel of the Serpent and the Woman Psal. 1. The first book of Psalms tells how happiness may be regained if a man do not walk in wicked counsel as of the Serpent and Woman the Divel and the Flesh. This allusion of the first book Arnobius makes Exodus The second book of Moses tells of groaning affliction in Egypt Psal. 42. The second book of Psalms begins in groaning affliction Psal. 42. 43. Leviticus The third book of Moses is of giving the Law Psal. 73. The third book of Psalms tells in the beginning how good God is for giving this Law This allusion Rab. Tanch makes very near Numbers The fourth book of Moses is about numbring Psal. 90. The fourth book begins with numbring of the best Arithmetick numbring Gods mercy Psal. 90. 1. and our own days vers 12. Deuteronomy The last book of Moses is a rehearsal of all Psal. 107. So is the last book of the Psalms from Psal. 107. to the end In the Jews division of the Scripture this piece of the Psalms and the books of the like nature are set last not because they be of the least dignity but because they be of least dependance with other books as some of them being no story at all and some stories and books of lesser bulk and so set in a form by themselves The Old Testament books the Jews acrostically do write thus in three letters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 every letter standing for a word and every word for a part of the Bible 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for Aorajetha or Torah the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for Nebhiim the Prophets 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for Cethubhim or books of Holy Writ this division is so old that our Saviour himself useth it in the last of Luke and vers 44. All things written in the Law of Moses and in the Prophets and the Psalms By the Psalms meaning that part of Cethubhim in which the Psalms are set first CHAP. XLV Of the Creation TWO ways we come to the knowledge of God by his Works and by his Word By his Works we come to know there is a God and by his Word we come to know what God is His Works teach us to spell his Word teacheth us to read The first are as it were his back parts by which we behold him a far off The latter shews him to us face to face The World is as a book consisting of three leaves and every leaf Printed with many Letters and every Letter a Lecture The leaves Heaven the Air and Earth with the Water The Letters in Heaven every Angel Star and Planet In the Air every Meteor and Soul In the Earth and Waters every Man Beast Plant Fish and Mineral all these set together spell to us that there is a God and the Apostle saith no less though in less space Rom. 1. 20. For the * * * In the Syrian translation it is the hid things of God invisible things of him that is his eternal Power and Godhead are seen by the creation of the World being considered in his Works And so David Psal. 19. 1. It is not for nothing that God hath set the Cabinet of the Universe open but it is because he hath given us Eyes to behold his Treasure Neither is it for nothing that he hath given us Eyes to behold his Treasure but because he hath given us Hearts to admire upon our beholding If we mark not the Works of God we are like Stones that have no Eyes wherewith to behold If we wonder not at the Works of God when we mark them we are like Beasts that have no Hearts wherewith to admire And if we praise not God for his Works when we admire them we are like Devils that have no Tongues wherewith to give thanks Remarkable is the story of the poor old man whom a Bishop found most bitterly weeping over an ugly Toad being asked the reason of his Tears his answer was I weep because that whereas God might have made me as ugly and filthy a creature as this Toad and hath not I have yet never in all my life been thankful to him for it If the works of the Creation would but lead us to this one Lecture our labour of observing them were well bestowed How much more
great Pandect of our Faith and Religion and to promote Truth and Goodness And now nothing remains but to beseech God to grant a good success to the Labours of this Reverend and Learned Man that Mens minds being more freed from ignorance and prejudice and instructed in a right understanding of the Word of God the blessed effects thereof may be Piety and Peace That Men may better know and practice their duty to God and their Neighbour to the Church in whose bosom they were born and to their Prince under whose happy and peaceable influence they dwell Low Leighton Jan. 3. 1683. IOHN STRYPE The Reader is desired to add this at the end of the Hebrew Exercitations upon the Evangelist S. John which by an oversight was omitted in its place PAge 545. line 37. After He burnt it and said c. add And let that he well considered in Siphra * Fol. 18. 1 where a Dispute is had upon those words Levit. VI. 27. If the blood of the sacrifice for sin be sprinkled upon a garment c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 When the discourse is of a garment I would understand it of nothing but a garment Whence is to be added 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The skin when it is pulled off The Text saith Upon whatsover the blood shall be sprinkled ye shall wash Perhaps therefore one may add the skin before it is pulled off The Text saith A garment As a garment that is capable of uncleanness so whatsoever is capable of uncleanness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Except the skin before it be pulled off They are the words of R. Juda. Mark the skin as yet cleaving to the beasts back and not flayed off is not capable of uncleanness HORAE Hebraicae Talmudicae HEBREW AND TALMUDIC EXERCITATIONS I. Upon the CHOROGRAPHY of the LAND of ISRAEL II. Upon the GOSPEL of St. MATTHEW By JOHN LIGHTFOOT D. D. and Master of Katharine-Hall or College in the University of CAMBRIDGE LONDON Printed by William Rawlins for Richard Chiswell at the Rose and Crown in St. Paul's Church-Yard MDCLXXXIV THE PREFACE AMONG all those who have either published their own Chorographical Tables of the Land Canaan or have corrected others you can hardly find any that have consulted with the Writers of the Talmud in this matter Whereas certainly their Consent is by no means in this case to be despised if indeed it be not rather especially to be regarded For besides that they above all other men do most curiously enquire of the affairs and of the places of that Land all the Doctors of the Mishnah and the Gemarists also of Hierusalem were inhabitants and dwellers there and not a few also of those of Babylon well viewed it Eye witnesses and who any Reader being Iudge could not but have beyond all others a most familiar knowledg of that Land dwelling in it and not only so but being such as thought themselves bound by a religious necessity to inquire after the Situation and Nature of the places in that Land and to trace them out with an exact search and curiosity Let Reason therefore determine whether they above all others are either justly or prudently cast aside in the business of Chorography Whether among all the means used for the correcting and polishing this the means that the Talmud affords should with any merit or equity be only refused Why the Jewish Chorography of the Jewish Country should not be admitted Certainly it is unjust out of prejudice to reject or out of ignorance not to entertain those things which either might yield us the Profit of the Chorography of that Land or stir up no unprofitable search into it If a man would engrave Maps of Palestine surely it is very fit that he should together with others consult those Authors as being the nearest witnesses inhabiters of the Country and such who most studiously and most religiously describe it And though you esteem them not worthy of credit because they are Jews yet certainly they are worthy of examination and may have leave to relate as they are Chorographers When in the reading of these Writers I collected all those things which I met with relating hitherto and compared them with the Maps and Tracts already published I plainly saw if my eyes deceived me not that very many things might be fetched and drawn out of these Authors which might correct the Maps very many things which might discover places unknown very many which might fix those that were uncertain very many which might illustrate those that were certain and infinite things which might some way or other hold out a light to Chorography And if any dextrous and happy Artist versed in the Talmudic writings and skilled in Chorography would undertake a task and work of this nature I should expect from such a hand a more polite and correct Map and a more full plain and certain description of the Lands of Israel than any the Christian World hath yet seen We are far from daring to enter upon such a thing Nor is our Hand sufficiently taught for so great a Work or indeed teachable That only which we have attempted in the following Century was this that by some instance we might a little demonstrate those things which we speak concerning the Writers of the Talmud and that some specimen might be set before our eyes whereby the Reader may judge of their study style use benefit in the thing propounded Nor did we think it the part of Modesty to burthen the Reader with too much of those things which perhaps are of dubious acceptation with him nor the part of prudence to expose and commit together at once all that we have to one wind and fortune From our Study May the XXII MDCLVIII We have quoted Josephus according to the distinction of Chapters in the Greek Edition of Frobenius Anno MDXLIV A Chorographical Century SEARCHING Out some more memorable places of the Land of Israel chiefly by the light of the Talmud CHAP. I. The Division of the land THE Jewish Writers divide the whole World into 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The land of Israel and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Without the land that is the Countries of the Heathen Both which phrases the Book of the Gospel owns The land of Israel Matth. II. 20. And it calls the Heathen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those that are without 1 Cor. V. 13. 1 Tim. III. 7. c. And sometimes the unbelieving Jewes themselves as Mark IV. II. They distinguish all the People of the World into 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Israelites and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Nations of the World The Book of the Gospel ownes that Phrase also Mat. VI. 32. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 After all these things do the Gentiles or Nations seek Which in Luke XII 30. is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Nations of the World Hence the word World is most commonly used for the Gentiles Joh. III. 16 17. 1 Joh. II. 2 c. Somewhere
Kingdom of Heaven to Repentance since they themselves to whom this is preached do acknowledge that thus the Kingdom of Heaven or the manifestation of the Messias is to be brought in For however the Gemarists who dispute of this were of a later age yet for the most part they do but speak the sense of their fathers III. The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Repentance as it does very well express the sense of true repentance so among the Jews it was necessary that it should be so expressed among whom repentance for the most part was thought to consist in the confession of the mouth only r r r r r r Maimon in Teshubah cap. 1 Whosoever out of error or presumption shall transgress the precepts of the Law whether they be those that command or those that forbid when he repents and returns from his sins he is bound to make confession Whosoever brings an offering for a sin committed either out of ignorance or presumption his sin is not expiated by the offering untill he makes an oral confession Or whosoever is guilty of death or of scourging by the Sanhedrin his sin is not taken away by his death or by his scourging if he do not repent and make confession And because the scape Goat is the expiation for all Israel therefore the High Priest makes confession over him for all Israel It is worthy observing that when John urgeth those that came to his Baptism to repent it is said that they were baptized Confessing their sins which was a sign of repentance highly requisite among the Jews and necessary for those that were then brought in to the profession of the Gospel that hereby they might openly profess that they renounced the Doctrine of Justification by the works of the Law It is worthy of observing also that John said not repent and believe the Gospel which our Saviour did Matth. IV. 17. And yet John preached the Gospel Mark I. 1 2. Joh. I. 7. for his office chiefly was to make Christ known who when he should come was to be the great Preacher of the Gospel Therefore the Baptist doth very properly urge repentance upon those that looked for the Messias and the Text of the Gospel used a very proper word to express true and lively repentance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand I. The Kingdom of Heaven in Matthew is the Kingdom of God for the most part in the other Evangelists Compare these places The Kingdom of Heaven is at hand Matth. IV. 17. The Kingdom of God is at hand Mark I. 15. The poor in Spirit theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven Matth. V. 3. Blessed are the poor for yours is the Kingdom of God Luke VI. 20. The least in the Kingdom of Heaven Chap. XI 11. The least in the Kingdom of God Luke VII 28. The mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven Chap. XIII 11. The mysteries of the Kingdom of God Luke VIII 10. Little children of such is the Kingdom of Heaven Chap. XIX 14. Little children of such is the Kingdom of God Mark X. 14. And so we have it elsewhere very often For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heaven is very usually in the Jewish dialect taken for God Dan. IV. 25. Matth. XXI 25. Luke XV. 21. Joh. III. 27. And in these and such like speeches scattered in the Talmudists 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Death by the hand of Heaven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The name of Heaven is profaned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Worship of Heaven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By the help of Heaven c. s s s s s s E●ias Levit. in ●●●●● For they called God by the name of Heaven because his habitation is in Heaven The story of the Jews is related groning out under their persecution these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O Heavens that is as the Gloss renders it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ah! Jehovah II. This manner of speech the Kingdom of Heaven is taken from Daniel Chap. VII 13 14. Where after the description of the four earthly and Tyrannical Monarchies that is the Babylonian Mede-Persian Grecian and Syro-grecian and the destruction of them at last the entrance and nature of the reign of Christ is described as it is universal over the whole World and eternal throughout all ages Under whom the Rule and Dominion and Authority of Kingdoms under the whole Heaven is given to the people of the Saints of the most High vers 27. that is Whereas before the Rule had been in the hands of Heathen Kings under the Reign of Christ there should be Christian Kings Unto which that of the Apostle hath respect 1 Cor. VI. 2. Know ye not that the Saints shall judge the World Truly I admire that the fulfilling of that Vision and Prophesie in Daniel should be lengthened out still into I know not what long and late expectation not to receive its completion before Rome and Antichrist shall fall since the books of the Gospel afford us a Commentary clearer than the Sun that that Kingdom of Heaven took its beginning immediately upon the preaching of the Gospel When both the Baptist and Christ published the approach of the Kingdom of Heaven from their very first preaching certainly for any to think that the fulfilling of those things in Daniel did not then begin for my part I think it is to grope in the dark either through wilfulness or ignorance III. The Kingdom of Heaven implies 1. The Exhibition and manifestation of the Messias Matth. XII 28. But if I by the finger of God cast out Devils the Kingdom of God is come upon you that is Hence is the manifestation of the Messias See Joh. III. 3. XII Chap. 13 c. 2. The Resurrection of Christ Death Hell Satan being conquered whence is a most evident manifestation that he is that eternal King c. See Matth. XXVI 29. Rom. I. 4. 3. His vengance upon the Jewish Nation his most implacable enemies this is another and most eminent manifestation of him See Matth. XVI 28. Chap. XIX 28. 4. His Dominion by the Scepter of the Gospel among the Gentiles Matth. XXI 43. In this place which is before us it points out the exhibition and revelation of the Messias IV. The Phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Kingdom of Heaven very frequently occurs in the Jewish Writers We will produce some places let the reader gather the sense of them t t t t t t Beracoth cap. 2. hal 2. R. Joshua ben Kercha saith In reciting the Phylacteries why is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hear O Israel Deut. VI. 4. c. recited before that passage 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And it shall come to pass if you shall harken Deut. XI 13. c. To wit that a man first take upon himself the Kingdom of Heaven and then the yoke of the Precept So the Jerusalem Mishnah hath it but the Babylonian thus That
became our Redeemer as in the beginning of time he had been our Maker Compare this with ver 14. Ver. 1. Ver. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the beginning was the word The word was made flesh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Was with God Dwelt among us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. The word was God Was made flesh and we beheld c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was the word There is no great necessity for us to make any very curious enquiry whence our Evangelist should borrow this title when in the History of the Creation we find it so often repeated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And God said It is observ'd almost by all that have of late undertaken a Commentary upon this Evangelist that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word of the Lord doth very frequently occur amongst the Targumists which may something enlighten the matter now before us a a a a a a Exod. XIX 17. And Moses brought the people out of the Camp 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to meet the word of the Lord. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And the word of the Lord accepted the face of Job b b b b b b Job XLII 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And the word of the Lord shall laugh them to scorn c c c c c c Psal. II. 4. They believed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the name of his word d d d d d d Psal. CVI. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And my word spared them e e e e e e Ezek. XX. 57. To add no more Gen. XXVI 3. Instead of I will be with thee the Targum hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and my word shall be thine help So Gen. XXXIX 2. And the Lord was with Joseph Targ. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the word of the Lord was Joseph's helper And so all along that kind of phrase is most familiar amongst them Though this must be also confest that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth sometimes signifie nothing else but I Thou He and is frequently apply'd to men too So Job VII 8. Thine eyes are upon me Targ. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Again Job XXVII 3. My breath is in me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Targ. II Chron. XVI 3. There is a league between me and thee Targ. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chap. XXIII 16. He made a Covenant between him and between all the people and between the King Targ. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I observe that in Zach. VII 12. the Targumist renders 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by his spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by his word if at least that may in strictness be so render'd for by what hath been newly alledg'd it seems that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may be translated the Lord by himself or the Lord himself I observe further that the Greek Interpreters having mistaken the vowels of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Habbak III. 2. have render'd it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before his face shall go a word when it should have been 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the meaning of the Prophet there is before his face went the Pestilence VERS IV. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In him was life THE Evangelist proceeds from the Creation by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word to the redemption of the world by the same word He had declar'd how this word had given to all creatures their first being v. 3. All things were made by him And he now sheweth how he restor'd life to man when he lay dead in trespasses and sins Adam call'd his wives name Hevah Life Gen. III. 20. The Greek reads 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Adam called his wifes name life He call'd her life who had brought in death because he had now tasted a better life in the promise of the womans seed To which it is very probable our Evangelist had some reference in this place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And the life was the light of men Life through Christ was light arising in the darkness of mans fall and sin a light by which all believers were to walk St. John seems in this clause to oppose the life and light exhibited in the Gospel to that life and light which the Jews boasted of in their Law They expected life from the works of the Law and they knew no greater light than that of the Law which therefore they extoll with infinite boasts and praises which they give it Take one instance for all a a a a a a Bereshith rabba Sect. 3. God said let there be light R. Simeon saith light is written there five times according to the five parts of the Law i. e. the Pentateuch and God said let there be light according to the Book of Genesis wherein God busying himself made the world And there was light according to the Book of Exodus wherein the Israelites came out of darkness into light And God saw the light that it was good according to the Book of Leviticus which is filled with rites and ceremonies And God divided betwixt the light and the darkness according to the Book of Numbers which divided betwixt those that went out of Egypt and those that enter'd into the land And God called the light day according to the Book of Deuteronomy which is replenished with manifold traditions A Gloss this is upon light full of darkness indeed VERS V. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And the light shineth in darkness THIS light of promise and life by Christ shined in the darkness of all the cloudy types and shadows under the Law and obscurity of the Prophets And those dark things comprehended it not i. e. did not so cloud and suppress it but it would break out nor yet so comprehended it but that there was an absolute necessity there should a greater light appear I do so much the rather incline to such a Paraphrase upon this place because I observe the Evangelist here treateth of the ways and means by which Christ made himself known to the world before his great manifestation in the flesh First in the promise of life ver 4. Next by Types and Prophecies and lastly by John Baptist. VERS IX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Which lighteth every man that cometh into the world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. All the men that are in the world g g g g g g Hieros Sanhedr fol. 26. 3. Doth not the Sun rise 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon all that come into the world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All that come into the world are not able to make one fly h h h h h h Ibid. fol. 25. 4. In the beginning of the year 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All that come into the world present themselves before the Lord i i i i i i Rosh Hashanah cap. 1. hal 1. There are numberless examples of this kind The sense
other of the Patriarchs and further take notice how though they reckon up nine Children of Joseph 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Now the Sons of Joseph which were born to him in the Land of Egypt were nine Souls ver 27. yet they name but seven Josephus the Historian speaking of those threescore and ten persons that went down into Egypt I will reckon them up saith he that I may satisfie those who would pretend we took not our original from Mesopotamia but from Egypt It is strange therefore that the Interpreters would add those that were actually born in Egypt But it seems that when they would confound the true number they chose those upon the account of those words in Gen. L. which we mentioned As to these Children of Ephraim and others whose story is mentioned 1 Chron. VII 20. the Masters of Traditions tell some ridiculous tales of them viz. that having not counted right as to the years of their bondage in Egypt they went to invade the Land of Palestine before the appointed time and fell by the sword of the Gittites q q q q q q Targ. in Cant. 2. 7. But that they came to life again with those whom Ezekiel raised from the dead Chap. XXXVII r r r r r r Sanbedr fol. 92. 2. I have in my notes upon Luke III. offered my conjecture why the Interpreter should confound the number and put threescore and fifteen instead of threescore and ten as also why the Evangelist should follow that Version and that number and am of the same mind still In the mean time wondring at their retaining the true number Deut. X. 22. Where Nobilius in his Scholia tells us Josephus lib. 2. Antiquitatum c. Josephus in his second book of Antiquities writing of Jacob hath set the number I have quoted the passage already And St. Jerom in his questions upon Genesis witnesseth that the Septuagint so writ it Alii codices c. Other Copies have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 threescore and fifteen Souls If the Septuagint wrote so in this place when elsewhere they have threescore and fifteen I know no other reason can be rendred of it but that Moses is here introduced speaking to the people of Israel who very well knew the certain and true number but elsewhere where it is rendred by them threescore and fifteen he is writing an History for the whole world to whom the precise number was not so well known But one may suspect the same pen did not translate the Book of Deuteronomy that had translated the Books of Genesis and Exodus So Gaphterim in Gen. X. 14. by the Interpreter of that Book is rendred 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gaphthoriim or as it is in M. S. Alex. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Caphthoriin but in the Book of Deuteronomy Chap. II. 23. it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cappadocians VERS XVI 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Were carry'd over into Sychem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ever let a man teach his disciple concisely s s s s s s Gloss in Zevachin fol. 2. 1. or briefly So that a short way of speaking especially in a thing plain was not strange amongst the Jews which rule if Steven follow'd in this place he might do it more safely and unblameably in a story so well known I. It was very commonly and without any kind of doubt receiv'd amongst them that the bones of the Twelve Patriarchs as well as those of Jacob were carry'd out of Egypt into Canaan t t t t t t Hierosol Sotah fol. 17. 3. It is written I will go down with thee into Egypt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and even in going up I will make thee to go up Gen. XLVI 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What are we taught by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even in going up He saith I will make thee to go up and I will make all the other Tribes to go up too teaching thereby 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that every Tribe should carry up the bones of the Patriarch of his Tribe with it Take notice by the way that the Seventy render 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unto the end u u u u u u Gloss in Bava kama fol. 92. 1. The bones of all the Patriarchs were carry'd out of Egypt and buried in the land of Canaan as it is written And ye shall carry up my bones with you Gen. L. 25. w w w w w w See also Beresh rabba fol. 115. 3. Gloss in Maccoth 11. 2. R. Sol. in Exod. 13. 19. II. Thus far therefore Stephen speaks with the consent of that Nation viz. that the bones of the Patriarchs were conveighed out of Egypt into Canaan But what can we say as to their being bury'd in Sychem Doubtless he spake according to the common received opinion amongst them in this thing also though I cannot but say that a●● Jewish writers as far as I have met with are wholly silent in it Nay Josephus himself will have them buried in Hebron and that before the Israelites came out of Egypt x x x x x x Antiq. lib. 2. cap. 4. The Talmudists speak very much of Joseph's being bury'd in Sychem and amongst other things say this That they stole him from Sychem and restor'd him to sychem again y y y y y y Sotah fol. 13. 2. But as to the burying of the other Patriarchs there they have not one word Benjamin also in his Itinerary speaking of Sychem mentions the Sepulcher of Joseph and none but that And so do the Cippi Hebrai●i as the Learned Hottinger translates them From Sechem at the distance of a Sabbath-days journey lyes a village call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Belata where Joseph the just of blessed memory lyes buried I conceive the reason why the Jews are so silent in this matter may be because they fear it would be a reproach to themselves and too great an honour for the Samaritans that the Patriarchs bones should lye amongst them As to Joseph's being buried there there could be no denial of that because the Scripture speaks it in express terms that he was buried in Sichem but it is very grievous for them to acknowledg that all the other heads of the Nation and Tribes should lye there where the apostacy of the Ten Tribes first began and after their expulsion the odious Nation of the Samaritans were seated and for this very reason one might argue that Stephen would never have mention'd such a thing if it could have been contradicted by them The Masters of the Traditions indeed do tacitly yield that the eleven Patriarchs were not buried in Hebron when they admit but four couples there viz. Adam and Eve Abraham and Sarah Isaac and Rebecca Jacob and Leah a a a a a a Sotah fol. 13. 1. And if so where were they buried If we do but consider how the great charge and care of publick affairs was committed to
the gift of God as well as Pardon It is he that pours out the spirit of grace and supplication Zech. XII 10. Him God hath exalted to be a Prince and a Saviour for to give repentance to Israel and forgiveness of sins Act. V. 31. Therefore that man takes the interest of God and Christ out of their hands that presumes he shall give himself Repentance and that when he pleaseth Can such a man give himself life when God will not give it health when God will not give it And can he give himself Repentance when God will not give it They in the Apostle James that say To day or to morrow we will go into such or such a City c. are justly confuted by the uncertainty of their life that can so little maintain it that cannot tell how long or little it shall be maintained So those that promise to themselves repentance the next year or the other besides that they cannot promise to themselves to live to such a time and if they do can they any more give themselves repentance then than they can now Or can they presume God will give them repentance then any more than now I remember that passage of the Apostle 2 Tim. II. 15. If peradventure God will give them repentance If the Apostle put it to a Peradventure whether God will give them repentance I dare say it is past all peradventure they cannot give it themselves It is God that gives repentance as well as he gives pardon For he and he only is the giver of all grace and repentance is the gift of sanctifying grace as pardon is of justifying 2. He that hath set conditions upon which to give repentance a rule whereby to come to repentance as well as he hath set repentance the rule whereby to come to pardon And his rule is Take Gods time as well as take Gods way His way is to attend upon his word that calls for repentance to cast away every thing that may hinder repentance So his time is Betake to repentance when God calls for repentance And that is this day this very hour every day every hour We hear of to day and while it is called to day in the claiming of mans duty but we never hear of to morrow or the next day much less of the next month or next year or I know not how long to come How ever this man in the Text neglected Gods time all his life and yet sped well enough at his later end because God would make him a singular example of Gods mercy and Christ's Purchase and triumph yet canst thou find no reason in the world to expect the like mercy if thou neglectest Gods time unless thou canst think of Gods setting thy name in the Bible for a monument to all posterity as he did this mans The Rule of our duty that we go by and not by Providence especially miraculous and extraordinary Now the rule of our duty teacheth that we delay not any time but to it to day while it is called to day And as our Saviour's lesson is about not taking care for to morrow in respect of food and clothing so we may say We are not to put off the care till to morrow in respect of repentance and amendment Object But do you think that Death-bed repentance never speeds well There have been many that have not betaken themselves to repentance nay nor never thought of repenting till death hath been ready to seize on them and yet then have shewed great tokens of repentance and have made a very hopeful end Answer We must distinguish the rule of our duty and the rule of judging others The rule of our duty is plain and legible the rule of our judging others is not so plain if so be we have any rule at all besides the rule of Charity which not seldom is mistaken It is not for us in such cases to be so wise as either to limit God or to be too confident of our own determinations or too ready to judge The words of our Saviour may hint unto us a good caution in this case Joh. XXI 22. What is that to thee follow thou me Be not inquisitive after other mens occasions but mind thine own And this may be very pertinent counsel Venture not Salvation upon such late Repentance and venture not to have the question determined in your case but keep to the stated and fixed Rule A SERMON PREACHED upon ACTS XXIII 8. For the Sadducees say that there is no Resurrection neither Angel nor Spirit But the Pharisees confess both TWO Parties mentioned in the Text that are oft mentioned and oft mentioned together in several other places in the New Testament viz. The Pharisees and Sadducees Simeon and Levi. Brethren in evil though at enmity among themselves Samsons Foxes looking with their faces several ways but their tails meeting together in heresie and mischiaf Their Doctrine different in many particulars but both corrupt leaven and equally to be taken heed of Mat. XVI 12. Their manners different and their hearts envious one against another yet both agreeing to be vexatious to Christ and both proving alike a generation of Vipers Matth. III. 7. Parties that differed not only about this Article of Religion viz. The resurrection and the World to come but that differed even about the whole Frame of Religion For the Pharisees would have their Religion to be built upon Traditions and the Sadducees would admit of no Tradition at all The Pharisees admitted all the Books of the old Testament to be read in the Synagogue the Sadducees the Books of Moses only The Sadducees sound in this particular that they would not admit of Traditions as the Pharisees did But as unsound again in that they would not acknowledge the Resurrection The Pharisees sound in that particular in that they acknowledged the Resurrection which the Sadducees did not But as unsound again in that they so denoted upon Traditions as they did Both erring from the truth and not a little and both maintaining opinions directly contrary to the way of Salvation and directly contrary to one another It is a saying of the Jewish writers and is very true That after the death of the later Prophets Zechary and Malachi the Spirit of Prophesie departed from Israel and went up So that there was no Prophet thenceforward among them no Vision no Revelation no Oracle by Urim and Thummim at the least for four hundred years till the rising of the Gospel Ah! poor nation how art thou not stript of thy great jewel and priviledge the Spirit of Prophesie and Revelation What will now become of thee when thy Prophts are gone and such divine Guids and Teachers are no more Time was when thou mightest in thy doubting have recourse to them and they could resolve thee in thy fear have recourse to their prayers and they would prevail for thee in thy desire to know the mind of God and they would inform thee But now what
them was the greater matter whether of them the greater work Was not the Resurrection Not indeed in regard of the Power that effected both but in regard of the effect or concernment of man 1. By his Resurrection he had destroyed him and that that had destroyed the Creation viz. Sin and Satan and did set up a better world a world of Grace and Eternal Life 2. Had it not been better that Man as he now was sinful had never been created than Christ not to have risen again to save and give him life As it was said of Judas It were better if he had never been born so it were better for sinful men if they had never been born than that Christ should not have been born from the dead to restore and revive them Observe that the Resurrection of the Heathen from their dead condition took its rise and beginning from the Resurrection of Christ as Christ himself closely compares it from the example of Jonahs rising out of the Whales belly and converting Nineveh To that purpose is that prophesie Esai XXVI 19. Thy dead men shall live together with my dead body shall they arise awake and sing ye that dwell in dust The dead Heathen that had lain so long in the grave of sin and ignorance when Christs body rose had life put into them from that time and they rose to the life of grace For by his Resurrection he had conquered him that had kept them so long under death and bondage Now was it not most proper for the Church of the called Heathen to have a Sabbath that should commemorate the cause time and original of this great benefit accruing to them A SERMON PREACHED upon EXODUS XX. 12. Honour thy Father and thy Mother that thy days may be long in the Land which the Lord thy God giveth thee THIS is the First Commandment of the Second Table and it is the first with promise Eph. VI. 2. Why it is the first of the second Table the reason is easie because when the second Table teaches our duty towards our Neighbour it is proper to begin with the Neighbour nearest to us such is our Father and Mother and with the Neighbour to whom we owe most peculiar Duty as we do to those that are comprehended under this title of Father and Mother But why this is called the First Commandment with promise is not so easie to resolve The difficulties are in these two things I. Because that seems to be a promise in the Second Commandment Shewing mercy unto thousands c. II. And if it be to be understood the first of the Second Table that hath a promise annexed unto it that is harsh also because there is no other promise in the Second Table and the First Commandment with promise argues some other Commandments with promise to follow after Now to these difficulties I Answer First That in the Second Commandment is rather a description of God than a direct Promise A jealous God visiting the iniquity of the Fathers upon the Children c. and shewing mercy unto thousands of them that love me As much Gall is mingled there as Honey as dreadful threatnings as comfort and therefore not to be looked on as a clear promise but as an argument and motive to Obedience taken from both mercy and judgment Secondly It is true there is never a promise more in the Second Table that comes after this but there are abundance of promises after in the rest of the Law And so may this be understood it is the First Commandment with promise in the whole Law from the Law given at Sinai to all the Law that Moses gave them afterwards And the first promise in the Law given to Israel is the promise of long life That thy days may be long in the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee So that here especially are four things to be spoken to I. The nature of the promise that it is a temporal promise concerning this life II. The matter of the promise Length of life in the Land which the Lord thy God giveth thee III. The suitableness of the Promise to the Command Honour thy Father and Mother that thy days may be long c. IV. The extent of the Promise to all that keep the Commandment Which four heads will lead us to the consideration of several Questions The first leads us to this Observation That the Promises given to Israel in the Law are I. most generally and most apparently promises temporal or of things concerning this life First look upon this Promise which is first in the Law and whereas it may be construed two ways yet both ways it speaks at first voice or appearance an earthly promise There may be an Emphasis put either upon Thy days shall be long or upon Thy days long in the land Honour thy Father and thy Mother that thy days may be long that thou mayst have long life Or Honour thy Father and thy Mother c. That thou mayst have long possession of the Land which the Lord thy God giveth thee and mayst not be cast out of it as the Canaanites were before thee Now take it either way what speaks it else but a temporal promise and that that refers to this life and to our subsistence in this world And so look upon those promises that are in Levit. XXVI and Deut. XXVIII and you find them all referring to temporal and bodily things And hereupon it may be observed that you hardly find mention of any spiritual promises especially not of eternal in all Moses Law No mention of Eternal Life joys of Heaven Salvation or Everlasting glory none but of things of this life Hence it was that the Sadducees denyed the Resurrection and the world to come because they only owned the five Books of Moses and in all his Books they found not mention of any such thing And therefore when our Saviour is to answer a Cavil of theirs against the Resurrection Mark XII 18 c. observe what he saith vers 26. Have you not read in the Book of Moses c. For he must prove the thing out of Moses to them or they would take it for no proof And observe also how he proves it by an obscure collection or deduction viz. because God says I am the God of Abraham the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob. Therefore they lived though they were dead Which he would never have done had there been plain and evident proof of it And which if there had been they could never have denyed it And that which we are speaking to that the promises of the Law are of temporal things is also asserted by that Heb. VIII 6. He is the Mediator of a better Covenant established upon better promises If the promises of the Law had been Heavenly promises there could not have been better promises Had they been of Grace and Glory there could not have been better promises but those of the Law were