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

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c. if I 〈◊〉 done this thing And as for a curse so for an 〈◊〉 as in Esai 65. 15. ye shall leave your name for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unto my chosen meaning for an oath of execration as in this place thy thigh to fall Hebr. thy thigh falling in Greeke thy thigh fallen in Chaldee thy thigh dissolved The thigh is used for the place or instrument of generation as in Gen. 46. 26. the soules that came out of Iakobs thigh Falling is often used for dying as in 1 Chron. 21. 14. there fell of Israel which is expounded in 2 Sam. 24. 15. there dyed So the falling of the thigh may be understood of the dying and rotting of the thigh or wombe or properly of the falling downe of the wombe out of the place whereby it became unfit for generation belly to swell in Greeke thy belly burst so in vers 27. It is a tradition of the Iewes that the water which Moses made the Israelites to drinke with the powder of their golden calfe Exod. 32. 20. had like effect in such as were guilty of that sinne and could no be convicted by witnesses that their bellies swelled Sol. Iarchi on Exod. 32. and R. Monachem Vers. 22. shall enter or let it enter and the thigh that is thy thigh as the Greeke explaineth it Amen Amen in Greeke So be it So be it Amen is an Hebrew word but retained by the Apostles in Greeke 1 Cor. 14. 16. and so is now used in all languages By interpretation it signifieth Truth Verily or faithfulnesse as in Esai 65. 16. the God Amen is the God of Trueth and so Christ is called Amen which is expounded the faithfull and true witnesse Rev. 3. 14. And in speech unto men it is an earnest asseueration as Amen I say unto you Mat. 24. 47. which another Evangelist interpreteth in Greeke Alethoos that is Uerily or Of a truth Luke 12. 44. It is also interpreted in Greeke Nai that is Yea as in Mat. 23. 36. Amen I say unto you for which in Luk. 11. 51. is written Yea or Verily I say unto you wherefore both Hebrew and Greeke are ioyned together in Rev. 1. 7. yea Amen so in 2 Cor. 1. 20. And when it is added to the end of prayers or of curses as here in Devt 27. 15. it is an approbatiō confirmation with desire that the thing may so be which is explained by adding the word Lord unto it as in Ier. 11. 5. I answered and said Amen ô LORD and more fully in Ier. 28. 6. Amen the LORD doe so the LORD performe the words c. Wherefore in the prayers of the Church they used of old and so at this day to answer and say Amen 1 Cor. 14. 16. and sometime twice Amen Amen Neh. 8. 6. and in other constant affirmations it is also used as in 2 Cor. 1. 20. all the promises of God are in Christ yea and are in him Amen Thus the woman by her answer confirmed the oath and curse and tooke it upon her selfe if she were defiled or testified her faith in God that he would cleare her being not defield and therefore the word is doubled Vers. 23. write these curses all these words wherewith he adjured the woman in a booke or in a scroll The Hebrewes use to call all writings bookes whether they be large or briefe all bills bands letters or epistles and the like as in Deut. 24. 1. a booke that is a hill of diuorcement and in 2 Sam. 11. 14. David wrote a booke that is a letter an epistle to Ioah in Esai 39. 1. Merodach sent bookes that is letters as the Greeke translateth it epistles to Ezekias The manner of writing this is by the Hebrewes thus described He the Priest brought a roll of parchment vellan as the booke of the Law and wrote thereon in the holy tongue that is in Hebrew the womans name as in the bill of divorce and all the words wherewith he adjured her letter by letter word by word but he writeth not Amen Amen Maimony in Sotah chap. 3. sect 8. They have moreover divers observations without which they say the writing was vnlawfull as that it must not be written by night but by day as her drinking and oblation was in the day time nor written backward or confusedly but in order nor written before she had taken the oath upon her for it is said in vers 21. he shall adjure her and then in vers 23. the Priest shall write Nor written on paper or any thing saue parchment nor written by a common Israelite or a young Priest but by a Priest that ministreth nor written with such inke or any such thing as leaueth a marke or impression upon the parchment but with such as may be all wiped or scraped off into the water and other like rites Ibidem chap. 4. sect 7 8 9. blot them out or wipe out scrape them into the water that no word letter or marke of the writing should remaine on the booke if there remaine on the scroll any mark● of the writing which may bee knowen it is unlawfull untill hee haue wiped it out well and thorowly Maim in Sotah chap. 4. sect 10. It signified that all the words of the curse should enter into her that if shee were guiltie her name might be blotted out of Israel with infamie by the iudgement of God the swift witnesse against adulterers Mal. 3. 5. if she were guiltlesse the curses written against her were blotted out and should not appeare to her reproch So this word is used in the defacing of sinne through the mercie of God as in Esai 43. 25. I I am he that bl●tteth out thy transgressions for mine owne sake and will not remember thy sinnes Vers. 24. to bitternesses in Chaldee to cursing meaning that they shall bee evill and bitter in their effect unto her Vers. 25. wave the Meat-offering that is move it to and fro see the notes on Exod. 19. 24. The Hebrewes write that the Priest tooke the ministring vessell wherein the Meat-offering was and put it upon her hands and the priest put his hand under hers and waved it Maim in S●tah chap. 3. sect 15. upon the ●ltar he brought the Meat-offering to the south-west ●orne of the altar like the other Meat-offerings of particular persons and tooke an handfull thereof and burned it on the altar and the residue was eaten by the priests Maim in Sotah chap. 3. sect 15. Of this they further say If the Meat-offering be polluted before it bee put into a ministring vessell it is to bee redeemed as all other Meat-offrings that are polluted before they be sanctified by a ministring vessell and he is to bring another Meat-offring If it be polluted after it is sanctified in a ministring vessell then it is b●●nt And so if shee say I am defiled before the handfull be taken of it or if she say I will not drinke or if her husband will not have her drinke or if
ANNOTATIONS VPON THE FIVE BOOKES OF MOSES THE BOOKE OF THE PSALMES AND THE SONG OF SONGS OR CANTICLES VVHEREIN THE HEBREW WORDS and sentences are compared with and explained by the ancient Greeke and Chaldee versions and other Records and Monuments of the Hebrewes But chiefly by conference with the holy Scriptures MOSES his words lawes and ordinances the Sacrifices and other Legall ceremonies heretofore commanded by God to the Church of ISRAEL are explained With an Advertisement touching some objections made against the sinceritie of the Hebrew Text and allegation of the Rabbines in these ANNOTATIONS As also Tables directing unto such principall things as are observed in the Annotations upon each severall Booke BY HENRY AINSWORTH LVKE 24. 44. All things must be fulfilled which are written in the Law of MOSES and in the Prophets and in the Psalmes LONDON ¶ Printed for John Bellamie and are to be sold at his shop in Cornehill at the Signe of the three Golden Lions neere the ROYALL EXCHANGE 1627. ANNOTATIONS VPON THE FIRST BOOKE OF MOSES CALLED GENESIS VVHEREIN THE HEBREVV VVORDS and sentences are compared with and explained by the Greeke and Chaldee versions but chiefly by conferring with the holy Scriptures BY HENRY AINSWORTH DEVT. 33. 4. Moses commanded us a Law the inheritance of the Church of Iakob MALACH 4. 4. Remember the Law of Moses my servant which I commanded him in Horeb for all Israel with the Statutes and Iudgements LONDON ¶ Printed by Miles Flesher for John Bellamie and are to be sold at his shop neere the ROYALL EXCHANGE 1626. A Preface concerning Moses writings and these Annotations upon them MOSES the man of GOD and first writer of holy Scripture was an Hebrew borne in Egypt about 2432. yeeres after the creation of the World and before our Saviour Christs comming into the flesh 1496. yeeres He was the sonne a 1 Chron. 6● 2. 3. 2. 1. 1. 34. of Amram the sonne of Kohath the sonne of Levi the sonne of Iakob the sonne of Isaak the sonne of Abraham our father in the seventh generation as Enoch was the b Iude v. 14. seventh from Adam When he was borne hee had a c Act. 7. 20. 21. 22. Exod. 2. divine beauty upon him he was marveilously saved from death being drawne out of the water and thereof had his name hee was nourished by K. Pharaohs daughter for her owne sonne learned in all the wisedome of the Egyptians and was mighty in words and in deedes Forty yeeres he lived in Pharaohs court which d Act. 7. 23. Heb. 11. 24. 25. 26. then he left choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God then to injoy the pleasures of sinne for a season esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches then the treasures of Egypt Forty yeeres e Act. 7. 29. 30. Exod. 3. hee was a stranger and sheepheard in the land of Madian from whence God called him to feed Iakob his people and Israel his inheritance Which thing he also did with all f Numb 12. 7. fidelity forty yeeres being g Act. 7. 38. in the Church in the wildernesse with the Angel which spake to him in the mount Sinai and with our fathers where he received the lively oracles to give unto us and hee h Deut. 33. 4. commanded us a law which is the Inheritance of the Church of Iakob Of all the Prophets that arose in Israel there was none like unto Moses whom the Lord knew i Deut 34. 10. face to face and dying 120. yeeres old but his naturall strength not k Deut. 34. 5. 6. abated he was buried of God no man knowing of his sepulchre unto this day He wrote the law in five books containing a briefe l Gen. 1. c. history of things past a m Exod. 24. 5. 8. c. covenant between God and his Church then present and n De●● 〈◊〉 15. c. Iohn 5. 46. and 1. 17. a prophesie of further grace to come which now is exhibited by Iesus Christ. In his first booke he wrote the o Gen 2. 4. and 5. 1. c. generations of the heavens and the earth and of mankinde which we therefore of the Greeke word call Genesis that is Generation In the second he set downe the Departure of Israel out of Egypt with the Covenant which God plighted with them the same yeere that they went out which booke thereupon is named Exodus In the third hee describeth the sacrifices and service of God under the Leviticall priesthood called accordingly Leviticus In the fourth he reckoned the Numbers of the tribes and of their journeyes from Egypt to Canaan with the order wherein God setled that Common-wealth of Israel whiles they were travelling towards their Rest which booke is therefore called Numbers In the fift he wrote a repetition of the Law and covenant which God had given unto Israel and the confirmation of the same whereof it is named according to the Greeke Deuteronomie In the propounding of all these things Moses hath p Exod. 34. 30. 35. 2 Cor. 〈◊〉 a veile drawne over his bright and glorious face for in the histories are implied q Gal. 4. 24. Allegories and in the lawes are r Heb. 9. 9. and 10. 1. Col. z. 17. types shadowes of good things that were to come the body wherof is of Christ. In Genesis which history endeth with the going down of Israel into Egypt we have the Image of a naturall man fallen from God into the bondage of sinne In Exodus is the type of our regeneration and state renewed by Iesus Christ. In Leviticus the shadow of our mortification whiles we are made sacrifices unto God In Numbers the figure of our spirituall war-fare whereunto we are mustered and armed to fight the good fight of faith In Deuteronomie the doctrine of our sanctification and preparation to enter into our heavenly Canaan after Moses death by the conduct of Iesus the sonne of God The things which Moses wrote were not his owne but the s 2 Chro. 34. 14. Law of the Lord by his hand to him t Psal. 103. 7. Dan. 9. 11. Mal. 4. 4. the Prophets after bare witnesse Our Saviour also approveth of Moses and of u Luk 24. 25. 44. all that he spake and wrote what x Mark 7. 9. he said was the commandement y Mat● 15. 3. of God and what God spake z Mark 12. 26. unto him the same is spoken a Mat. 22. 31. unto us him therefore we are willed to heare which who so doth not will not be perswaded though one rose from the dead Luk. 16. 29. 31. But because his writings were the b 2 Cor. 3. 14. Old Testament under which the New was veiled and which many reading even to this day have a c verse 15. veile laid upon their hart so that they cannot fasten their eyes upon the end of that which is abolished therefore
they are written 2 Chro. 32. 32. and that which the Prophet averreth All these my hand hath made Esa. 66. 1. is turned into a question hath not my hand made all these Act. 7. 49. Againe when God said to David shalt thou build me an house 2 Sam. 7. 5. he meant thou shalt not build 1 Chron. 17. 4. when Christ saith how shall Satans kingdome stand Mat. 12. 26. he meaneth it cannot stand Mark 3. 26. and thinke ye that I am come to give peace Luk. 12. 51. is as if hee had said thinke it not Matth. 10. 34. I will passe on to a few mo● observations When speech is of many where one is principall the scripture setteth it downe either as of one or of many indifferently As heare thou the word 1 King 22. 19. or heare ye the word 2 Chron. 18. 18. And they killed 2 King 25. 6. or the king of Babel killed Ier. 52. 10. David offered 2 Sam. 6. 17. or they offered 1 Chron. 16. 1. They made peace with David and served him 1 Chron. 19 19. or they made peace with Israel and served them 2 Sam. 10. 19. So Peter said unto Christ Mat. 15. 15. whereas another Evangelist saith his disciples asked him Mar. 7. 17. And couldest not thou Peter watch Mar. 14. 37. or could not ye my disciples watch Mat. 26. 40. By this we may gather the reason why Christ at other times spake to Peter singularly that which was intended also to the rest in Matth. 16. 17. 19. compared with Ioh. 20. 22. 23. which some not observing would restraine the keyes of the kingdome unto Peter onely But oft times there is a force in words whereby other persons or things are excluded as when Moses saith they shall be one flesh Gen. 2. 24. he meaneth they two not moc shall be one flesh Mat. 19. 5. and saying of God him thou shall serve Deut. 6. 13. he intendeth him onely Mat. 4. 10. It was not lawfull to eat the Shew bread but for the Priests Mar. 2. 26. that is but for the Priests onely Mat. 12. 4. and the fig tree had nothing but leaues Mark 11. 13. that is nothing but leaves onely Mat. 21. 19. Accordingly Paul saith a man is not justified by the workes of the law but by the faith of Iesus Christ Gal. 2. 16. whereby is meant by faith onely In expounding the Oracles of God we are taught to take absolute and indefinite speeches in the largest sense unlesse there be some speciall reason of restraint As when he said to Moses See and make thou them according to their patterne Exod. 25. 40. the meaning is See thou make all things according to the patterne Heb. 8. 5. And in saying Cursed be he that confirmeth not the words of this law Deut. 27. 26. it extendeth thus farre Cursed be every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the booke of the law Gal. 3. 10. When he promiseth Christ to put his enemies for his footstoole Psal. 110. 1. he meaneth all his enemies 1 Cor. 15. 15. 25. So other such precepts and promises are in like manner to be understood But sometime generall words are used which scripture and reason teacheth to restraine as all Israel went up with David to Baalah 1 Chron. 13. 6. meaning all the people that were with him as another Prophet explaineth it 2 Sam. 6. 2. So Christ healed all that were sicke Mat. 8. 16. that is all the sicke that were brought unto him or as another Evangelist saith Many that were sicke Mark 1 34. Thus all is used for very many Mat. 21. 26. Luk. 21. 17. Phil. 2. 21. Gen. 41. 57. none for very few Ier. 8. 6. 1 Cor. 2. 8. nothing for very little Ioh. 18. 20. Act. 27. 33. Or with other speciall restraint as of his fulnesse have wee all received Ioh. 1. 16. that is all we which beleeve and the like It is not the least help in opening the scriptures to observe words speeches that differ in sound but accord in sense set down the same thing in sundry termes one of w ch do often give light unto another As the word of the Lord came 2 Sam. 24. 11. or the Lord spake 1 Chro. 21. 9. There fell 1 Chro. 21. 14. or there died 2 Sam. 24. 15. To sit on his throne 1 King 3. 6. or to reigne in his stead 2 Chro. 1. 8. They fast not Mat. 9. 14. or they eat and drinke Luk. 5. 33. The time of tentation Luk. 8. 13. or of affliction and persecution Mark 4. 17. To enter into life Mat. 18. 9. or into Gods kingdome Mar. 9. 47. To take away the key of knowledge Luk. 11. 52. or to shut up the kingdome of heaven Matth. 23. 13. Thus they that are in one place called Hypocrites Matth. 24. 51. are in another called infidels Luk. 12. 46. and they that walke not according to any law Mark 7. 5. are said to transgresse the same Mat. 17. 2. And the Wicked one Mat. 13. 19. the Devill Luk. 8. 12. and Satan Mark 4. 15. are all one By comparing the holy writers thus even mysteries in words and phrases are manifested and difficulties may be cleared As in 2 Sam. 7. 23. halecu Aelohim that is God they went this soundeth to a paynim as if there were many Gods but the same thing written by another Prophet halac Aelohim God he went 1 Chro. 17. 21. refuteth the plurality of Gods though closely teaching the trinity of persons in the Godhead So when David saith for thy words sake 2 Sam. 7. 21. or as another recordeth his speech for thy servants sake 1 Chron. 17. 19. these two compared shew that David meant for thy Christs sake for Christ is both the word Ioh. 1. 1. and the Servant of God Mat. 12. 18. 21. When Davids sons are called by one Prophet Cohanim that word which we English Princes or Priests 2 Sam. 8. 18. and by another are named the First or Chiefe at the kings hand 1 Chron. 18. 17. we may hereby learn the office of Christ our Cohen both Prince and Priest who now sitteth at the right hand of the throne of the Majestie of God in the heavens Heb. 8. 1. So for other materiall things in Israel which we are not acquainted with scriptures compared doe explaine them As when Solomon put three pound of gold to one shield 1 King 10. 17. and another Prophet saith three hundred shekels of gold went to one shield 2 Chro. 9. 16. we may certainely gather that the Maneh or Pound in Israel was a hundred shekels When K. Achaz made his sonne to passe through the fire 2 King 16. 3. if any know not what this meaneth another scripture telleth us he hurnt his sons in the fire 2 Chron. 28. 3. So the Debir or Oracle in Solomons temple 1 King 6. 23. is shewed to be the Holy of holies or most holy place in that house 2 Chron. 3. 10. When Christ teacheth us to
The Restauration GOD promiseth that Christ the Womans seed shall bruise the Serpents head The man calleth his wife Eve God layeth chastisements on them both clotheth them and drives them out of Paradise Chap. 3 The government of the old World ADAM begetting two sonnes Kain the first borne is wicked Abel faithfull Kain killeth Abel and is cursed yet liveth and increaseth in the world Seth is given in Abels sted and of Seth Enos Chap. 4 SETH progateth the faithfull seed Enoch prophesieth and God taketh him away that he dieth not Chap. 5 Seths seed and Kains are mixed so Giants are bred and sinne increased God repenteth that he made man threatneth to drown the world but Noe findes grace Chap. 6 NOE and his house with some of all creatures are saved in the Arke which God bade him make the world is all drowned Ch. 7 The government of the world aset the Flood NOE with his familie come out of the Arke are blessed to fill the world againe Chap. 〈◊〉 GOD promiseth to drowne the world no more Sinne reviveth in Cham Noes son whose posteritie is cursed the blesse continueth to Sem and Iaphet Chap. 〈◊〉 Noes three sonnes Sem Cham and Iaphet doe multiply on the earth Chap. 〈◊〉 Their posterity are scattered by confusion of tongues at Babel Sem propagateth the faithfull seede which in Terah falleth 〈◊〉 God but is called to repentance Chap. 〈◊〉 ABRAM is called from Idolatry and commeth a pilgrim into the land of Canaan Chap. 〈◊〉 Abram parted from Lot is promised the land of Canaan and a plenteous seed Chap. 〈◊〉 He fighteth for Lot o●ercommeth foure Kings and is blessed of Melchisedek Chap. 〈◊〉 He being childlesse is promised an heire justified by faith and comforted by a vision and covenant of God Chap. 〈◊〉 He hath a son after the flesh Ismael of Agar his bondwoman Chap. 1● He hath a new name Abraham the covenant of circumcision and promise of Isask Sarai is named Sarah Chap. 1● Abraham enterraineth Angels hath the promise renewed and Sodoms destruction revealed for whom he maketh intercession Chap. 1● Sodom is burned Lot delivered begetteth of his daughters Moab and Ammon Chap. 19 Abrahams wife taken by Abimelec is restored unto him Chap. 20 ISAAK the promised seed is borne Agar and Ismael are cast out of Abrahams house Ab melec covenanteth with Abraham Chap. 21 Isaak is offred for a sacrifice by his father but saved from death by God Abraham is blessed and heareth of his kindreds increase Chap. 22 Abraham purchaseth in Canaan a burying place for Sarah Chap. 23 He provideth a wife for Isaak who marieth Rebekah Chap. 24 Abraham dyeth Isaak begetteth Esau and Iakob who strive in the wombe Iakob buyeth the birthright of Esau surnamed Edom. Chap 25 Isaaks wife taken by Abimelec is restored he covenanteth with Abimelec Chap 26 IAKOB by subtilty getteth the blessing from Esau and is threatned Chap. 27 Iakob fleeing from Esau is comforred by a vision of a Ladder at Bethel Chap. 28 He sorveth for a wife is beguiled marieth two and hath foure sonnes Chap. 29 He is increased with moe children is wronged by Laban but waxeth rich Chap. 30 He fleeth secretly is pursued by Laban but God delivereth him Chap. 31 He is met of Angells afraid of Esau wrastleth with God and is named Israel Chap. 32 Iakob and Esau meet and are friends Iakob put chaseth ground at Sechem Chap. 33 Iakobs daughter Dina is defiled his sonnes slay the Sech mites for it Chap. 34 Iakob burieth Deborah the Nurse Rachel his wife and Isaak his father Chap. 35 Esau dwelleth in Seir hath many Dukes and Kings of his posteitie Chap. 36 IOSEPH Iakobs sonne is hated for his dreames and sold by his brethen into Egypt Iakob mourneth for him and will not be comforted Chap. 37 Iudah Iakobs son begetteth of his daughter in law Pharez and Zarah Chap. 38 Ioseph in Egypt is tempted to adultery falsly accused and imprisoned Chap. 39 Ioseph in prison expoundeth the dreames of Pharaohs officers but is forgotten Chap. 40 Ioseph expoundeth Pharaohs dreames and is made ruler over all Egypt Chap. 41 Iakob sendeth his sons for corne into Egypt Ioseph handleth them roughly Chap. 42 Iakob constrainedly sendeth his sons againe and Ioseph feasteth them Chap. 43 Ioseph challengeth Benjamin for his cup Iudah supplicateth for his brother Chap. 44 Ioseph makes himselfe knowne to his brethren and sendeth for his Father Chap. 45 Iakob by Gods advice goeth with his houshold into Egypt in all seventy soules Ioseph meeteth them in Goshen and instructeth them what to say to Pharah Chap. 46 Ioseph nourisheth his father and brethren in time of famine bringeth the Egyptians into bondage and sweareth to bury his father in Canaan Chap. 47 Iosephs two sons are blessed and adopted of Iakob on his death bed Chap. 48 Iakob blesseth his twelve sons prophesieth of Christ and dyeth in Egypt Chap. 49 Ioseph burieth his father in Canaan and returneth forgiveth his brethren prophesieth of their departure from thence giveth charge concerning his bones and dyeth Chap. 50 The number of the Sections or Lectures in Genesis are twelve the Chapters fiftie the verses 1534. The midst is at Gen. 27. 40. Search the Scriptures Iohn 5. 39. To the Law and to the Testimonie Esay 8. 20. Whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our learning that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope Rom. 15. 4. THE FIRST BOOKE OF MOSES CALLED GENESIS CHAPTER I. 1 The Heavens and the Earth are created and the Light in the first day 6. In the second the firmament is spred and the waters divided 9. In the third the earth is made dry land and fruitfull the waters are gathered to be seas 14. The Sunne Moone and Stars are created for Lights the fourth day 20. Fish and Fowles are brought forth and blessed in the fifth 24. In the sixth Beasts are made out of the Earth 26. Man is created in the image of God 28. he is blessed and hath dominion of the world 29 Food is appointed for Man and beast 31. Gods workes are all good IN THE BEGINNING GOD created the Heavens and the earth And the earth was empty and voide and darkenesse was upon the face of the deepe and the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters And God sayd Let there bee light and there was light And God saw the light that it was good and God separated betweene the light and the darkenesse And God called the light Day and the darknesse he called Night and the evening was and the morning was the first day And God said Let there be an Out-spred firmament in the midst of the waters and let it separate betweene waters and waters And God made the Outspred-firmament and separated betweene the waters which were under the outspred-firmament and the waters which were above the outspred-firmament and it was so And God called the outspred-firmament Heavens and the evening was and
out of the ground every tree desirable for sight and good for meat and the tree of life in the midst of the garden the tree of the knowledge of good and evill And a river went-out of Eden to water the garden and from thence it was parted and was to foure heads The name of the one Pison the same is it that compasseth the whole land of Havilah where there is gold And the gold of that land is good there is Bdelium and the Beryll stone And the name of the second river ●i●on the same is it that compasseth the whole land of Cush And the name of the third river Hiddekel the same is it that goeth to the east of Assyria and the fourth river is Euphrates And Iehovah God tooke the man and put him in the garden of Eden to till it and to keepe it And Iehovah God commanded the man saying of every tree of the garden eating thou maist eat But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evill thou maist not eat of it for in the day thou eatest of it dying thou shalt dye And Iehovah God said It is not good the man should bee himselfe alone I will make for him an helpe as before him And Iehovah God had formed out of the ground every beast of the field and every fowle of the heavens and brought them unto Adam to see what hee would call them and whatsoever Adam called each living soule that was the name thereof And Adam called names to all cattell and to the fowle of the heavens and to every beast of the field but for Adam hee found not an helpe as before him And Iehovah God caused a deepe sleep to fall upon Adam and he slept and he tooke one of his ribs and closed-up the flesh in the stead therof And Iehovah God builded the rib which he had taken from Adam to a woman and hee brought her unto Adam And Adam said This now is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh she shall bee called Woman because she was taken out of Man Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother and he shall cleave to his wife and they shall be one flesh And they were both of them naked Adam and his wife and they were not ashamed-of-themselves Annotations FInished or al-done perfected host or army called in Hebrew Saba which meaneth an army standing in order or battle ray The Greeke here translateth it garnishing or furniture Hereby is meant all creatures in the earth and heavens which stand as an army servants to the Lord Psal. 119. 91. and by him commanded Esay 45. 12. The Angels are of this army 1 King 22. 19. and are called the multitude of the heavenly host Luke 2. 13. 15. and they were by likelihood created with the heavens in the first day because those morning starres and sonnes of God did sing and shout when God laid and fastned the foundations of the earth Iob 38. 4. 6. 7. The stars and furniture of the visible heavens are also Gods host Esay 34. 4. Deut. 4. 19. and the starres in their courses fought against Sisera Judg. 5. 20. The Israelites comming out of Aegypt are called the Lords hosts Exodus 12. 41. Hereupon he is often named the Lord of hosts or of Sabaoth and the Apostles in Greek sometime keep the Hebrew name Lord of Sabaoth Rom. 9. 29. Iam. 5. 4. sometime they translate it Lord God Almighty Revel 4. 8. from Esa. 6. 3. Vers. 2. seventh day The Hebrew shebang from which the German word sieben and English seven are derived hath the signification of fulnesse and is a perfect and complete number after which we begin again with the first day of the weeke Therefore seven is used for many or a full number Gen. 33. 3. Lev. 4. 6. 1 Sam. 2. 5. Ier. 15. 9. Prov. 26. 25. And many mysteries are throughout the Scripture set forth by the number of seven as in the feasts and sacrifices of Israel Deut. 16. 3. 8. 9. 15. Num. 28. 19. and 29. 12. 32. especially in the booke of the Revelation See also Gen. 21. 31. The Greeke interpreters translated the sixt day for the seventh left the heathens should thinke mistaking the phrase that God wrought upon the Sabbath rested or sabbathised that is kept sabbath for of this Hebrew shebath it is called the Sabbath or Rest day God rested or ceased from making moe creatures Exod. 20. 11. Heb. 4. 3. though as touching the preserving ordering governing of the world the Father worketh hitherto and Christ worketh Ioh. 5. 17. Gods Sabbath was also his rejoycing in his workes Psal. 104. 31. and this the Chaldee paraphrast observed here saying and God delighted the seventh day in his worke which hee had made and rested This resting is spoken of God after the manner of men and implieth not any wearinesse in him for the Creator of the ends of the earth fainteth not neither is weary Esa. 40. 28. worke generally put for workes as the Apostle expounds it in Heb. 4. 4. Vers. 3. And God blessed in Exod. 20. 11. it is sayd Therefore God blessed that is because he him-selfe rested in the seventh day therefore he blessed and sanctified it unto man whereupon the Apostle reasoneth hee that is entred into his rest hee also hath ceased from his owne workes as God did from his Heb. 4. 10. and he blessed the seventh day by giving it this singular priviledge to bee a day of rest and holinesse of delight and of feasting vnto the world Exod. 20. 10. 11. Nehem. 9. 14. Esai 58. 13. Levit. 23. 2. 3. Wherefore this day is not described by evening and morning as were the other sixe which consisted of light and darknesse but this is all day or light figuring out our perpetuall joyes Esa. 60. 20. Zach. 14. 6. 7. Revel 21. 25. And so the Hebrew Doctors understand it of the world to come for in Breshith rabbah they say The blessing of the Lord it maketh rich Prov. 10. 22. this is the Sabbath day as it is written And God blessed the seventh day Gen. 2. 3. he calleth the Sabbath the Blessing of the Lord because it is receiued from the Blessing that is on high therefore hee sayth it maketh rich because it is the abundant wealth of the world c And if we expound the seventh day of the seventh thousand of yeares which is the world to come the exposition is and he blessed because in the seventh thousand all soules shall be bound in the bundell of life for there shall be there the augmentation of the Holy Ghost wherein we shall delight our selves and so our Rabbines of blessed memory have sayd in their Commentarie God blessed the seventh day the holy God blessed the world to come which beginneth in the seventh thousand of yeares Compare the last note on Gen. 1. 31. sanctified or hallowed that is separated it from common use and worke unto his owne service alone that it might be a
salvation wherwith God clotheth his Church Esay 61 10. Vers. 22. is become as one to weet of us three the Father the Word and the Holy Spirit 1 Ioh. 5. 7 See before in Gen. 1. 26. Thus God upbraided Satans lying speech used in v. 5. and would leave an impression in Adams hart of his pride and folly in beleeving the Serpents deceitfull promises that so long as he lived an exile here on earth he might haue continuall motives of repentance and humiliation The Hebrew phrase is as one meaneth is made or become as one as this is Psal. 118. 23. the Evangelist translateth this is done Mat. 21. 42. lest he put An unperfect speech where we may understand by that which followeth he must be driven out lest he be put c. Such phrases are usuall as Gen. 38. 11. 42. 4. Mat. 25. 9. and eate and live or that he may eate and live And is often used for That and noteth the end and purpose of an act as here so in 2 Sam. 21. 3. 2 King 3. 11. Lam. 1. 19. Because the tree of life and the eating of it was at first a signe of eternall life to man if he had obeyed his creator as is noted on Gen. 2. 9. it might not now in the justice of God be so continued to man fallen into disobedience Neither was the new covenant betweene God and man of obedience againe by the workes of the Law unto life but of faith in Christ the womans seed unto forgivenesse of sinnes Gen. 3. 15. 20. God therfore in driving the man from this tree would drive him from all confidence in him-selfe and his owne workes and so from abuse of this tree also which might turne to his further judgement that hee might seeke the life in heaven which is hid with Christ in God Col. 3. 1. 2. 3. who will give to such as by faith doe overcome the world to eate of the tree of life which is in the midst of the Paradise of God Rev. 2 7. V. 23. to till tillage hath the name in Hebrew of servile-worke for all even Kings are as servants to the field Eccles. 5. 8. And this hard labour was a continuall remembrance of sinne and doctrine of humiliation and repentance Wherefore God after in the Law freed every seventh or Sabbath yeare from this tillage in his land when they did all alike eat of that which grew of it owne accord Lev. 25. 4. 6. to remember their former ease lost by sinne but to bee restored spiritually by Christ when hee should preach the acceptable yeare of the Lord Esay 61. 2. 2 Cor. 6. 2. Vers. 24. drove out or expulsed not to return thither againe but that he might seeke admission into the heavenly paradise whereunto Christ giveth entrance Luke 23. 43. minding himselfe an exile and pilgrime here on earth 1 Pet. 2. 11. 2 Cor. 5. 1. 4. The Hebrewes say in Bresith ketanna on this place Adam was driven out of paradise in this world but in the world to come he shalnot be driven out The remembrance of this future mercy was kept afterward among the Gentiles for it is one of the Chaldean oracles Seeke paradise the glorious country of the soule Cherubins or Cherubs These were living creatures with wings as may bee ●athered by comparing Ezek. 1. 5. and 10. 1. 15. the figures of such were wrought in the Tabernacle Exod. 25. 18. and 26. 1. See the annotations there Moses here seemeth to meane Angels by this name for they have appeared sometime with wings flying Dan. 9. 21. and with sword 1 Chron. 21 16. and as fierie chariots 2 King 6. 17. as here they have the flame of a sword that is a flaming sword as the Greeke translateth it to keepe man out of paradise Of Angels see the notes on Gen. 16. 7. By these also God further might signifie the Angels or Ministers in his spirituall paradise the Church and the sharpe two edged sword of his Word wherewith they are armed against all the disobedient 2 Cor. 10. 4. 5. 6. But the twelve Angels at the twelve gates of that paradise direct from all quarters of the world to enter thereinto by the gates which are never shut such as are written in the lambs booke of life where the tree of life groweth and giveth fruit wherein they haue right that doe the commandements of God Rev. 21. 12. 25. 27. and 22. 2. 14. turned it selfe to weet every way for more terrour that man should not there attempt re-entrance Such spiritually is the use of the Law and doctrine therof which terrifieth the conscience and by the workes whereof no flesh can be justified Rom. 3. 20. but it serveth to drive men unto Christ that they may be made righteous by faith Gal. 3. 24. The ancient Iewes had an expectation of recovery of this losse by Christ though now they are ignorant of him for they write of seven things which the King Christ shall shew unto Israel two of which are the garden of Eden and the tree of life R. Elias ben Mosis in Sepher reshith choemah fol. 4. 12. Also expounding that in Song 1. 4. the King hath brought me into his chambers Our Doctors of blessed memory have sayd that these are the chambers of the garden of Eden And againe There are also that say of the tree of life that it was not created in vaine but the men of the resurrection that are raised from the dead shall eate thereof and live for ever R. Menachem on Gen. 3. And by the garden of Eden or Paradise it seemes they understood the kingdome of heaven for the Chaldee paraphrast on Song 4. 12. saith as the garden of Eden into which no man hath power to enter but the just whose soules are sent thither by the hands of Angels According to these speeches familiar in olde time among the Iewes the Holy Ghost also speaketh of carriage by Angels into Abrahams bosome Luke 16. 22. of being with Christ in paradise Luke 23. 43. and of eating of the tree of life which is in the midst of the paradise of God Rev. 2. 7. And that the Iewes understood not these things carnally appeareth by these words of theirs In the world to come there is no eating or drinking nor any other of the things which the bodies of the sonnes of Adam have neede of in this world as sitting and standing and sleepe and death and sorrow and mi●th and the like So our ancient wise men have sayd In the world to come there is no eating nor drinking nor use of mariage but the just doe sit with their crownes upon their heads and have the fruition of the glory of the Majestie of God Maimony in Misn. treat of Repentance ch 8. S. 2. CHAPT IIII. 1. The birth trade and religion of Kaine and Abel 8. Kaine killeth Abel 9. for it he is examined of God 11. and cursed 13. he despaireth 16. and departeth from Gods presence 17. Kaine buildeth the
which he condemned the world and became heyre of the justice which is by faith Heb. 11. 7. did or made it namely the Arke and all things appointed him of God Wherefore the Greeke so translateth Noe did or made all things and oftentimes a thing set downe thus generally is to bee understood of all and every particular the holy Ghost so expounding as in a like case Exod. 25. 40. looke and make them after their patterne that is looke thou make all things after the patterne Heb. 8. 5. So Deut. 27. 26. Cursed be he that confirmeth not the words of this law that is Cursed be every one that continueth not in all things written in the booke of the Law Gal. 3. 10. and sundry the like according to all so not onely the things themselves but the manner of doing them was according to the commandement of God Like praise was for the worke of the Tabernacle Exod. 39. 43. and 40. 16. CHAP. VII 1 God commandeth Noe and his house to enter into the Arke with beasts and fowles 7 Noe and they goe in 12 It raineth forty dayes and forty nights 17 the waters beare up the Arke 18 and drowne the earth 21 All that were on the dry land dyed 23 save Noe and those with him 24 The waters prevaile an hundred and fifty dayes ANd Iehovah said unto Noe Enter thou and all thy house into the Ark for thee have I seene just before mee in this generation Of every cleane beast thou shalt take to thee seven and seven the male and his female and of the beast which is not cleane two the male and his female Also of the fowle of the heavens seven and seven the male and the female to keepe alive seed upon the face of all the earth For seven dayes hence I will cause-it-to raine upon the earth forty dayes and forty nights and will blot-out every living substance that I have made from upon the face of the earth And Noe did according to all that Iehovah commanded him And Noe was sixe hundred yeeres old and the Flood was waters upon the earth And Noe went in and his sonnes and his wife and his sonnes wives with him into the Arke because of the waters of the Flood Of the cleane beast and of the beast which was not cleane and of the fowl and of every thing that creepeth upon the earth Two and two went in unto Noe into the Ark the male and the female even as God had commanded Noe. And it was at the seventh of the dayes that the waters of the Flood were upon the earth In the yeere the sixe hundred yeere of the life of Noe in the second moneth in the seventeenth day of the moneth in the same day all the fountaines of the great deepe were broken-up and the windowes of the heavens were opened And the raine was upon the earth forty dayes and forty nights In this selfe same day entred Noe and Sem and Cham and Iapheth the sonnes of Noe and the wife of Noe and the three wives of his sonnes with them into the Ark. They and every beast after his kind and all the cattell after their kind and every creeping-thing that creepeth upon the earth after his kind and every fowle after his kind every bird of every wing And they went in unto Noe into the Ark two and two of all flesh which had in it the spirit of life And they that went in went in male and female of all flesh even as God had commanded him and Iehovah shut him in And the Flood was forty dayes upon the earth and the waters increased and bare-up the arke and it was lift-up from the earth And the waters prevailed and were increased greatly upon the earth and the arke went upon the face of the waters And the waters prevailed most exceedingly upon the earth and all the high mountaines that are under all the heavens were covered Fifteene cubits upwards did the waters prevaile and the mountaines were covered And all flesh that moved upon the earth gave up the ghost of fowle and of cattell and of beast and of every creeping-thing that creepeth upon the earth and every man All which had the breath of the spirit of life in his nostrils of all which was in the dry land they died And every living substance was blotted out which was upon the face of the earth from man unto cattell unto the creeping thing and unto the fowle of the heavens and they were blotted out from the earth and Noe onely remained and they that were with him in the arke And the waters prevailed upon the earth a hundred and fifty dayes Annotations ENter thou that is Betake thy selfe unto my tuition and providence who will save thee and thine from the wrath that commeth upon the world 2 Pet. 2. 5. A like speech is made unto the godly in Esa. 26. 20. just before me that is syncerely just by faith and so heyre of the justice which is by faith Heb. 11. 7. for no flesh is just before God by the workes of the Law Rom. 3. 20. Noc is also named a preacher of justice 2 Pet. 2. 5. The just before God are opposed to hypocrites which justifie themselves before men Luke 16. 15. Rom. 2. 29. in this generation that is among the men of this age which are called the world of ungodly ones 2 Pet. 2. 5. See Gen. 6. 9. Vers. 2. of every cle●●e beast Of these there were after by Moses law two sorts some cleane for men to eate in common use such as were all that parted the 〈…〉 two and chewed the cudd Lev. 11. 3. c. all other were uncleane And some that were clean for sacrifice to God which were either beeves or sheepe or goats Lev. 1. 2. 10. So of fowles many were counted cleane for mans meat Lev. 11. 13. 21. c. but for sacrifice to the Lord onely tur●le doves and pigeons Lev. 1. 14. And all these sacrifices Abram offered Gen. 15. 9. and of every cleane beast and cleane fowle Noe offered a burnt offering after hee came out of the Arke Gen. 8. 20. wherefore by cleane beasts here such onely seeme to be meant as were sanctified of God for sacrifice which ordinances as appeareth were revealed of God to the Fathers from the beginning as divers others after written by Moses as clensing of mens persons and garments Gen. 35. 2. paying of tythes to the Priests Gen. 14. 20. offering of first fruits Gen. 4. 3. 4. and the like As for civill use all beasts seeme to be cleane to the sonnes of Noe for meat by that law in Gen. 9. 3. see the notes there By nature all Gods creatures are good Gen. 1. 31. and there is nothing uncleane of it selfe Rom. 14. 14. but onely by the institution of God to teach men holinesse and obedience Act. 10. 15. Lev. 11. 44. 45. and seven Hebr. seven seven that is by sevens or seven of each sort so after two two vers 9.
gentle-mercy or for the mercifull sparing that is the Lord being mercifull and sparing him as the Greeke translateth The word importeth gentlenesse and loving affection or commiseration as wherby men are spared from punishment So in Esa. 63. 9. in his love in his gentle mercy God redeemed his people Vers. 17. that he or then he said meaning the Lord I 〈…〉 h as appeareth v. 18. 24. who it seemeth was new come from Abraham to Sodom Genesis 18. 22. 33. thy soule that is thy life for so the Scripture usually speaketh as keepe his soule Iob 2. 6. that is spare his life to seeke the soule is to seeke ones life Exod. 4. 19. Mat. 2. 20. See also Gen. 2. 7. and 37. 21. looke not this commandement as the like in Gen. 2. 17. was given not to Lot alone but to his wife and children as the event sheweth vers 26. and forbiddeth all affectation of worldly things which draweth from ready obedience unto God Compare Luke 9. 62. Phil. 3. 13. 14. Mat. 24. 16. 17. 18. to the mount The mountaines are sometime spoken of as places of safety Mat. 24. 16. figuring Gods providence and protection Psalm 121. 1. and 125. 2. Esay 2. 2. Vers. 18. Lord or my Lords for the Hebrew Adonai by reason of the pawse is here doubtfull whether it be the title of God or of men For the Chaldee putteth for it Lords but the Greek Lord and the words following are directed to one though before he spake to them See Gen. 15. 2. and 18. 3. Vers. 19. cleave unto me the Greeke saith take hold on me Herein Lot shewed his weak faith not resting in Gods word wherefore the place which he chose for safety secured him not but for feare he left it ver 30. Vers. 20. to flee that is for me to flee as the Greek translateth See Gen. 6. 19. and 23. 8. Vers. 21. accept thy face or lift up thy face that is doe respect and so will gratifie thee and grant thy request in this thing Thus the Lord doth the desire of them that feare him Psal. 145. 19. This phrase of accepting the face is usuall for shewing of favour to any which sometime is spoken in the ill part and commonly called respect of persons and then it is denyed of God Deut. 10. 17. and forbidden to men Deut. 16. 19. The Greeke expresseth it by ethaúmasa to prosopon which here and in sundry other places meaneth an honourable regard and estimation of ones face or suit in which sense the Apostle useth it Iude v. 16. against such as would respect the face or gratifie men for profits sake The contrary whereto is to turne away the face of any which is to say one nay or deny their request 1 King 2. 16. 20. Vers. 22. any thing or the thing to weet now in hand Heb. a word he called that is every one or it was called See the notes on Gen. 16. 14. Zoar or Zogor in Greeke Sigor and else-where Sogor in the Latine Segor by interpretation Litle before it was called Bela Gen. 14. 2. Vers. 23. came forth ever or arose upon the earth This time of the morning was fittest to shew the light of grace arisen to Lot and how in prosperity affliction shall come upon the wicked and they not know the morning thereof as Esay 47. 11. For the rising of the Sun is a signe of favour from the Lord Mat. 5. 45. but unto Sodom it is the time of vengeance Hence Christ saith as it was in the dayes of Lot they did eate they dranke they bought they sold they pl●●●ed they builded but the day that Lot went out of Sodom it rained fire and brimstone from heaven and destroyed them all even thus shall it bee in the day when the son of man is revealed Luke 17. 28. 29. 30. Vers. 24. and upon Gomorra with two other cities not here expressed Admah and Seboim Deut. 29. 23. brimstone this added to fire increaseth it Esay 30. 33. and so is used in Scripture to signifie increase of torment for the wicked and the second death Rev. 14. 10. and 19. 20. and 20. 10. and 21. 8. And of these Cities it is said besides their temporall judgement that they suffer the vengeance of eternall fire Iude ver 7. and are made an ensample to those that after should live ungodly 2 Pet. 2. 6. So the Hebrew Doctors say The men of Sodom have no part or inheritance in the world to come as it is written The men of Sodom were wicked and sinners before the Lord exceedingly Gen. 13. 13 wicked in this world and sinners in the world to come Thalmud Bab. in Sanhedrin chapt Chelek This judgment of burning was answerable to Sodoms sin that burned in bruitish lust man towards man so Nadab and Abihu that transgressed with fire are burned with fire Lev. 10. 1. 2. Others sinning by shedding of blood have blood to drink Rev. 16. 6. Exod. 7. 20. 21. Vers. 25. overthrew this word noteth a sudden unevitable and perpetuall destruction whereupon the Prophet saith the Lord overthrew them and repented not Ier. 20. 16. and the Apostle saith he condemned them with an ouerthrow 2 Pet. 2. 6. and in Lam. 4. 6. Sodom was overthrowne even in a moment and no hands stayed on her and to the perpetuall desolation of these Cities there is allusion in Esay 13. 19. 20. Ier. 50. 40. Zoph 2. 9. yet the punishment of them that despise the Gospell shall bee greater then Sodoms Mat. 11. 24. that which grew or the bud of the ground so that in the plaine where these cities stood there grew no good thing after to this day but it became a dead and loathsome lake called the dead sea and sea of salt see Gen. 14. 3. Zoph 2. 9. Deut. 29. 23. So the Rabbines say Of the wickednesse of the five Cities even to this day the wast land that smoaketh is a testimony and plants bearing fruit that never come to ripenesse Wisd. 10. 7. Vers. 26. from behind him the Greeke translateth it unto the things behind which phrase is used in Luke 9. 62. Phil. 3. 14. This being done contrary to the commandement vers 17. and with a corrupt affection in her God did severely punish and she is a warning to all as Christ saith hee that is in the field let him not returne to the things behind remember Lots wife Luke 17. 31. 32. was a pillar or became a pillar or statue of salt and so she had part of the plagues of Sodom which was brimstone and salt that it became a sea of salt Deut. 29. 23. Gen. 14. 3. And this her statue or pillar stood for a memoriall to others that they may bee the better seasoned This salt pillar continued long Iosephus a Iewish historian after Christs life on earth writeth that he did see it Antiqu. 1. booke chapt 12. and so others since his time Vers. 27. had stood the Chaldee addeth stood in prayer see Gen. 18. 22.
19. He suffered trouble as an evill doer even unto bonds but the word of God is not bound 2 Tim. 2. 9. And in his sufferings he was a figure of Christ who was taken from prison and from judgement Esa. 53. 8. and in his humiliation his judgement was taken away Act. 8. 33. Vers. 21. gave him grace so the Greeke explaineth the Hebrew phrase gave his grace that is made him to bee gracious and favoured For if when men doe well they suffer for it and take it patiently this is acceptable with God 1. Pet. 2. 20. chief-keeper Hebrew Prince or master the Greek translateth it Chiefe gaolor Vers. 22. the doer that is by his word and appointment it was done So the Chaldee paraphrase in the Massorites Bible explaineth it adding by his word Thus Pilate is sayd to give the body of Christ unto Ioseph Marke 15. 45. when he commanded it to be given Matt. 27. 58. See also Exod. 7. 17. Verse 23. looked not c or saw not any thing the Greeke translateth knew not any thing by him The Chaldee saith saw not any fault understanding the Hebrew Meumah as Meum in Dan. 1. 4. for a fault or blemish And thus though many archers had shot at Ioseph his bow abode in strength and the armes of his hands were made firme by the hands of the Mighty God of Iakob Gen. 49. 23. 24. CHAP. XL. 1 The Butler and Baker of Pharaoh in prison 4 Ioseph hath charge of them 5 He interpreteth their dreames 20 which come to passe according to his interpretation the Butler being restored to his place and the Baker hanged 23 Yet the Butler forgetteth Ioseph ANd it was after these things that the Butler of the King of Egypt and the Baker sinned against their lord the King of Egypt And Pharaoh was wroth against two of his Eunuches against the chiefe of of the butlers and against the chiefe of the bakers And he commited them into ward in the house of the Provost Marshall into the tower house the place where Ioseph was bound And the Provost Marshall charged Ioseph with them and he ministred to them and they were some dayes in ward And they dreamed a dreame both of them each-man his dream in one night each-man according to the interpretation of his dreame the butler and the baker which belonged to the King of Egypt which were bound in the tower house And Ioseph came in unto them in the morning and saw them and behold they were sad And he asked Pharaohs Eunuches which were with him in the ward of his lords house saying wherefore are your faces evill to day And they sayd unto him wee have dreamed a dreame and there is no interpreter of it and Ioseph sayd unto them doe not interpretations belong to God tell me them I pray you And the chiefe of the butlers told his dreame to Ioseph and sayd unto him in my dreame behold a vine was before mee And in the vine were three branches and it was as though it budded the blossome therof shot-up the clusters thereof brought forth-ripe grapes And Pharaohs cup was in my hand and I tooke the grapes and pressed them into Pharaohs cup and I gave the cup into Pharaohs hand And Ioseph sayd unto him This is the interpretation of it the three branches they are three dayes Yet within three dayes shall Pharaoh lift-up thine head and restore thee into thy place and thou shalt give Pharaohs cup into his hand after the former manner when thou wast his butler But remember mee with thee when it shall bee well with thee and doe mercy with mee I pray thee and make mention of me unto Pharaoh and bring me forth out of this house For I was stollen by stealth out of the land of the Hebrewes and here also I have not done any thing that they should put mee into the dungeon And the chiefe of the bakers saw that he had given a good interpretation and he said unto Ioseph I also saw in my dream and behold three white baskets were on my head And in the uppermost basket there was of all Pharaohs meat of bakers worke and the fowles did eat them out of the basket upon my head And Ioseph answered said This is the interpretation thereof the three baskets they are three daies Yet within three dayes shall Pharaoh lift up thy head from off thee and shall hang thee on a tree and the fowles shall eate thy flesh from off thee And it was in the third day which was Pharaohs birth day that he made a banquet unto all his servants and hee lifted-up the head of the chiefe of the butlers and the head of the chiefe of the Bakers among his servants And he restored the chiefe of the butlers unto his butlership and hee gave the cup into Pharaohs hand And the cheife of the bakers hee hanged as Ioseph had interpreted to them Yet did not the chiefe of the butlers remember Ioseph but forgat him Annotations BUtler or cupbearer who used to give the cup into the kings hand v. 13. So Nehe. 1. 11. Verse 2. Eunuches or officers in Chaldee Princes see Gen. 37. 36. chiefe or Prince The Greek translateth Archioinochoos the Chiefe wine powrer and Archisi●opoi●s the Chiefe bread-maker The Chaldee Rabshakei Vers. 3. Provost Marshall see Gen. 37. 36. tower prison Gen. 39. 20. Verse 4. some dayes or a yeare for so the word dayes often signifieth see Gen. 24. 55. and 4. 3. Verse 5. according to the interpretation that is no vaine dreame but significant and shewing things to come according to the interpretation that Ioseph gave of them Of dreaming see the notes on Gen. 20. 3. Vers. 6. sad the Greeke translateth troubled and so the Hebrew importeth an angerly discontent and fretfull trouble of mind Prov. 19. 3. with a sad and lowring countenance Dan. 1. 10. So dreames and visions sent of God use much to affect men Gen. 41. 8. Dan. 2. 1. 3. Matt. 27. 19. Vers. 7. evill that is sad as the Greeke translateth skuthropa which word the Evangelists use in like sense Luk. 24. 17. Matt. 6. 16. so good is often used for merry or cheerfull Esth. 1. 10. Esa. 65. 14. Vers. 8. no interpreter they being prisoners could not goe to the Soothsayers and wise men of Egypt as that people was wont to doe Gen. 41. 8. When Gods Oracles are not opened and understood it is a cause of heavinesse Rev. 5. 4. tell me Ioseph was in bonds as an evill doer but the word of God is not bound and so Paul 2 Tim. 2. 9. Here Iosephs faith shewed it selfe before hee himselfe was a dreamer Gen. 37. 5. 9. now hee becommeth an interpreter and maketh a way for the accomplishment of those promises and calleth these idolaters from their superstitions to the true God as Deut. 18. 10. 11. 12. Esay 8. 19. And taxeth the vanity of such in our times as write bookes of the art of interpreting dreames Ver. 9. behold
which I have wrought in Egypt and my signes which I have put amongst them and that ye may know that I am Iehovah And Moses and Aaron came in unto Pharaoh and sayd unto him Thus saith Iehovah the God of the Hebrewes How long re●usest thou to humble thy selfe before mee Send away my people that they may serve mee For if thou refuse to send away my people behold I bring to morrow the Locusts into thy coast And they shall cover the eye of the earth and one shall not bee able to see the earth and they shall eate the residue of that which is escaped which remaineth unto you from the haile and shall eate every tree which groweth for you out of the field And they shall fill thy houses and the houses of all thy servants and the houses of al the Egyptians which thy fathers and thy fathers fathers have not seene since the day that they were upon the earth unto this day and he turned himselfe and went out from Pharaoh And Pharaohs servants said unto him How long shall this man be a snare unto us send away the men that they may serve Iehovah their God knowest thou not yet that Egypt is destroyed And Moses and Aaron were brought againe unto Pharaoh and hee said unto them Goe serve Iehovah your God who and who are they that shall goe And Moses said We will goe with our yong and with our old with our sonnes and with our daughters with our flockes and with our herds will we goe for we have a feast of Iehovah And he said unto them Let Iehovah be so with you as I will send away you and your little ones see to it for evill is before your faces Not so goe now yee men and serve Iehovah for that you did request and he drove them out from Pharaohs presence And Iehovah sayd unto Moses Stretch out thy hand over the land of Egypt for the Locusts that they may come up upon the land of Egypt and eate every herbe of the land all that the haile hath left And Moses streched out his rodde over the land of Egypt and Iehovah brought an East wind upon the land all that day and all the night the morning was and the East wind brought up the Locusts And the Locusts went up over all the land of Egypt and rested in all the coasts of Egypt exceeding heavie before them there were no such Locusts as they and after them shall no such be And they covered the eye of all the earth and the land was darkned and they did eate every herbe of the land and all the fruit of the trees which the haile had left and there remained not any greene thing in the trees or in the herbes of the field in all the land of Egypt And Pharaoh hastened to call for Moses and for Aaron and he said I have sinned against Iehovah your God and against you And now forgive I pray thee my sinne onely this once and intreat ye Iehovah your God that he may take away from me this death only And he went out from Pharaoh and intreated Iehovah And Iehovah turned a vehement strong sea wind and tooke away the Locusts and fastened them to the red sea there remained not one Locust in all the coast of Egypt And Iehovah made strong the heart of Pharaoh and hee sent not away the sonnes of Israel And Iehovah said unto Moses Stretch out thy hand toward the heauens and there shall bee darkenesse over the land of Egypt that one may feele the darkenesse And Moses stretched out his hand toward the heavens and there was obscure darknesse in all the land of Egypt three daies They saw not any man his brother neither rose they any man from his place three daies but to all the sonnes of Israel there was light in their dwellings And Pharaoh called unto Moses and said Goe yee serve Iehovah onely let your flockes and your herds be stayed let your little ones also goe with you And Moses said Thou also shalt give into our hand sacrifices and burnt-offrings that we may doe sacrifice to Iehovah our God And our cattell also shall goe with us there shall not an hoofe be left for thereof shall wee take to serve Iehovah our God and we know not with what we shall serve Iehovah untill we come thither And Iehovah made strong the heart of Pharaoh and hee would not send them away And Pharaoh said unto him Get thee from mee take heed to thy selfe see my face no more for in the day thou seest my face thou shalt die And Moses said Thou hast spoken well I will not see thy face againe any more Annotations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here beginneth the fifteenth Section or Lecture of the Law see Gen. 6. 9. Vers. 1. for I or though I have made heavy that is hardned see Exod. 7. 14. of him of Pharaoh and his servants therefore the Greeke translateth it them saying that these signes may hereafter come upon them Vers. 2. thou this also meaneth Moses and the Israelites as after he saith yee and so the Greeke translateth here And in Deut. 6. 20. 22. Moses willeth Israel to tell their sonnes of the signes and wonders great and evill which the Lord had brought upon Egypt The like is in Psal. 78. 5. 6. 7. c. the things the Chaldee saith the miracles Vers. 3. Hebrewes in the Chaldee Iewes humble thy selfe The Greeke translateth how long wilt thou not reverence me Vers. 4. Locusts or Grashoppers the Hebrew is Locust put generally for a multitude of Locusts as tree for trees Gen. 3. 2. And the originall Arbeh hath the denomination of a multitude because their nature is to be many together as Prov. 30. 27. the Locusts have no king yet goe they forth all of them by heapes and huge multitudes are therefore resembled to Locusts Ier. 46. 23. Iudg. 6. 5. Vers. 5. the eye put for the whole face or upmost part of the earth which is seene with the eye as the Greeke translateth it the sight or superficies The Chaldee explaines it of hiding the sight of the sunne from the earth so in verse 15. Humane writers testifie that the great Locusts flie and make great noise with their wings as if they were birds and doe darken the Sunne Plinie booke 11. chapter 29. that which is escaped Hebr. the escaping or evasion Vers. 6. houses the Locusts are reported to gnaw all things even the doores of houses Plinie booke 11. chapter 29. Some of the Hebrewes write that these Locusts did not onely hurt the fruits of the earth but men also as the author of the booke of Wisedome c. 16. vers 9. saith the bitings of Locusts and of flies killed them neither was there found any remedy for their life Vers. 7. servants the nobles and counsellors of Egypt a snare that is a destruction by the plagues that he bringeth vpon us This word snare usually signifieth the meanes of destruction as Exod 23.
33. Ios. 23. 13. 1 Sam. 18. 21. which here the Egyptians impute unto Moses whereas a snare is in the transgression of an evill man Prov. 29. 6. knowest thou the Greek interpreteth it or wouldest thou know Vers. 9. we have Hebr. to us is whereby is meant we have as is noted on Genes 12. 16. The word is is supplied here in the Greeke version feast of Iehovah so called because it was commanded by him Exod. 5. 1. and was to bee kept unto him as the Chaldee expounds it a feast before the Lord and as elsewhere it is said a feast unto Iehovah Exod. 32. 5. Vers. 10. so with you c. It is an imprecation or curse because he purposed not to let them goe but as God forced him to send them away so turned he his curse into a blessing to them Exod. 12. 30. 31. and 13. 21. 22. The Chaldee paraphraseth the Word of the Lord so be your help Here Satan who had before sought the death of Israels Infants Exod 1. seeketh to retaine them at lest in bondage and when he cannot hinder the redemption of the whole Church yet to hinder it in part So in Revel 12. 13. 17. when the Dragon could not hurt the woman he maketh warre with the remnant of her seede evill this word is used both for sinne and for the punishment of the same as Ierem. 18. 8. if they turne from their evill I will repent of the evill that I thought to doe unto them Both may be here implied by Pharaoh but the latter chiefly threatning more affliction if they left not off their intended course The Chaldee expoundeth it thus see how the evill which you thinke to doe sitteth before your faces he drove that is Pharaoh drove or caused them to be driven out of his presence Or he drove is put for they were driven see the notes on Gen. 16. 14. Vers. 13. over the land of Egypt the Greeke expoundeth it towards heaven the east winde which is a strong and violent winde with it God drove hacke the sea Exodus 13. 21. and by it his judgements are often signified Gen. 41. 7. Psalme 48. 8. Esay 27. 8. Ezek. 19. 12. Ier. 18. 17. L●●ust● or Grashoppers and with them caterpillers also as David sheweth in Psal. 105. 34. 35. and 78. 46. They are of Gods heavy judgements upon sinners Deut. 28. 38. 1 King 8. 37. and unto this eight plague of Egypt the army of Antichrist is resembled that tormented men Rev. 9. 3. 5. 7. c. Vers. 14. heavy both grievous for the hurt they did and for the multitude of them as the Greeke explaineth it many such Yet great judgements upon Israel are mentioned by Locusts Iocl 1. 2. 3. 4. and by humane writers it is said that in India there are some of three foot long Plinie booke 11. chapter 29. Vers. 15. the eye the face as verse 5. darkned that is hid and defaced and as the Greeke transl●teth corrupted Vers. 17. death that is deadly plague so 2 King 4 40. death is in the pot Vers. 19. sea winde that is west winde as the Chaldee explaines it the Greeke saith from the sea For the maine sea lay westward see Genes 12. 8. fastened or pitched them in the Greeke and Chaldee translate cast them but the word meaneth that they were so throwne in as there to remaine and rise no more as when a Tent or other thing is pitched and fast nailed After this manner God often destroyeth Locusts in other places being taken up by heapes with the winde they fall into seas or lakes saith Plinie b 11. c. 29. red sea or weedy sea called in Hebrew the sea Suph which word signifieth sedge or sea-weedes that grew therein and whereof it seemeth it had the name see Exod. 2. 3. Ion. 2. 5. The Holy Ghost in Greeke calleth it Eruthran the Red sea Act. 7. 36. Heb. 11. 29. either of the red sand of that sea or red mountaines by it or of one Erythras a king as Strabo writeth in his 16. booke But the Latines called it Rubrum m●r● that is the Redsea Plinie Hist b. 13. c. 25. Pomp. Mela. b. 3. chap. 7. and by that name it is usually knowne in these parts of the world In this sea Pharaoh himselfe with his armie were afterward drowned Exod. 14. Vers. 20. made strong that is hardned as the Greeke translateth see Exod. 4. 21. V. 21. there shal be or as the Gr. translateth let there be darknesse Of this plague also God warneth not Pharaoh before hand see Ex. 8. 16. that one may feele or ●nd ●e that is Pharaoh or every one shall feele meaning as the Gr. translateth it palpable darkeness● such as may hee felt with the hand for the thicknesse of the ●yre The Hebrew word signifieth so●etime to f●ele Iudg. 16. 26. sometime on the contrary to take away or remove Exod. 13. 22. in which latter sense the Chaldee paraphrase here expoundeth it after the darkenesse of the night is re 〈…〉 d meaning that the day should be turned to 〈…〉 Vers. 22. obscure darkenesse Hebr. darkenesse of 〈◊〉 that is most obscure blacke and thicke The Gr 〈…〉 sseth it by three words darkenesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 darkenesse This ninth plague David celebrateth in Psal. 105. 28. and unto it the fift plague of the spirituall Egypt is compared Rev. 16. 10. where the kingdome of the Beast is full of darkenesse and men gnaw their tongues for paine A righteous judgement of God upon those that oppressed his people the light of the world Matth. 5. 14. and rebelled against the light as Iob 24. 13. Vers. 23. saw not neither by sunne or stars from above neither by fire beneath had they any light So the light of the wicked shall be put out and the sparke of his fire shall not shine the light shall bee darke in his tabernacle Iob 18. 5. 6. from his place or from under him the Greek translateth from his bed Thus in them the saying was fulfilled the wicked shall bee silent in darkenesse 1 Sam. 2. 9. was light so they had beene freed from former plagues see Exodus 9. 26. and God promiseth like mercie to his Church by the Gospell saying Arise thou bee inlightned for thy light is come c. darkenesse shall cover the earth and grosse darkenesse the peoples but Iehovah shall arise upon thee c. Esay 60. 1. 2. Vers. 25. doe sacrifice or offer The word sacrifice here understood is elsewhere expressed as in 1 King 12. 27. and when the word doe or make is joyned with sacrifices as in this place it signifieth to offer as Levit. 9. 7. 22. and 16. 9. Exodus 29. 36. 39. 41. 42. Vers. 26. not an hoofe not any thing saith the Chaldee Thus Iakob went before out of Mesopotamia into Canaan with all his cattell and substance Gen. 31. 18. And Moses constancie to keep the commandement of God unto the smallest things in every particular is an example of the
a citie above two thousand cubits to goe further is unlawfull for 2000. cubits are the 〈…〉 of a 〈…〉 c. Maimony in Misneh treat of the Sabbath c. ●7 〈◊〉 1. 2. V. 31. like cortander in shape quantity but the colour white as 〈◊〉 or crystall Num. 11. 7. The Heb. Gad is not found in this signification but here and in Num. 〈◊〉 7. some think it to be 〈…〉 d but the Greeke cor 〈…〉 and the Chaldee Cusbar in Thargum Ierusalemy which is the Arabik name of Coriander doe confirm the common translation taste of it to wi● as it was gathered and uncoqued was like 〈…〉 but being baked c. it tasted like 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈…〉 V. 33 golden pot so the Apostle in Heb 9. 4. following the common G 〈…〉 version translated this word which is not found but in this ●oly place put there Heb. give there the fulnesse of an Omer before Ieh vah that is before the Arke of testimonie which was a signe of Gods presence So it is explained in v. 34. And in 〈◊〉 Chro. 20. ●3 all Iudah stood before Iehovah 〈…〉 hat is in the house of Iehovah verse 5. Vers. 34. Testimonie that is the tables of Gods law which were in the Arke which testified Gods will to the people see Exod. 25 16. 21. These were given afterward at mount Sinai and there the Arke was made although therefore Moses rehearseth the thing here to make a full end of the storie of Manna yet the performance of this was not till after Vers. 35. did eat Manna all of them for their naturall food and it preserved their life but many of them pleased not God by reason of their unbeleefe 1 Coriathians 10. 5. Iude verse 5. therefore though they did eat Manna yet they are dead Ioh. 6. 49. even as they that now eat the Lords Supper unworthily are guilty of his body and blood and doe eat judgement to themselves not discerning the Lords body 1 Cor. 11. 27. 29. but they that by beleeving in Christ doe eat the true bread which came downe from heaven doe not die but have life eternall and he will raise them up at the last day Iohn 6. 35. 47. 51. 54. Vers. 36. Ephah a common measure much like and English bushel containing three Seahs or pecks mentioned in Gen. 18. 6. as the Chaldee here translateth an Omer is one of ten that is the tenth part of three Seahs so also the Greek saith the tenth of three measures The Ephah therefore contained so much as 432. hens egges about 7. gallons and a halfe of our measure So the Omer was more than twice so much as the Chaenix a measure spoken of in Rev. 6. 6. which Chaenix was wont to be a mans allowance of bread corne for a day By which Gods bounty appeared to his people in allowing for every of them daily an Omer of Manna verse 16. which contained so much as 43. hens egges and somewhat more CHAP. XVII 1 The people murmur● for water at Rephidi●● 4 Moses crieth to the Lord who sendeth him for water to the R 〈…〉 in Horeb. 7. The place is called Massah and Meribah 8 Amalek fighting with Israel is overcome by the holding up of Moses hands 14. God threat 〈…〉 〈…〉 Amalek 15 Moses buildeth the altar Iehovah 〈◊〉 AND all the congregation of the sons of Israel journeyed from the wildernesse of Sin after their journeyes according to the mouth of Iehovah and they camped in Rephidim and there were no waters for the people to drinke And the people contended with Moses and said Give ye us waters that we may drinke and Moses said unto them Why contend you with me why tempt ye Iehovah And the people thirsted there for waters and the people murmured against Moses and said Wherefore is this that thou hast brought us up out of Egypt to kill us and our sonnes and our cattell with thirst And Moses cried unto Iehovah saying What shall I doe unto this people they bee almost ready to stone me And Iehovah said unto Moses Goe on before the people and take with thee of the Elders of Israel and thy rod that wherewith thou smotest the river take in thy hand and goe Behold I will stand before thee there upon the rocke in Horeb and thou shalt smite the rocke and waters shall come forth out of it and the people shall drinke and Moses did so in the eyes of the Elders of Israel And hee called the name of the place Massah and Meribah because of the contention of the sonnes of Israel and because they tempted Iehovah saying Is Iehovah among us or not And Amalek came and fought with Israel in Rephidim And Moses said unto * Iesus Ioshua Chuse us out men and goe thou out fight with Amalek to morrow I will stand on the top of the hill and the rod of God in my hand And Ioshua did as Moses had said to him to fight with Amalek and Moses Aaron and Hur went up to the top of the hill And it was when Moses hold up his hand then Israel prevailed and when he let downe his hand then Amalek prevailed And Moses hands were heavy and they tooke a stone and put it under him and he sate upon it and Aaron and Hur staied up his hands one on this side and one on the other side and his hands were steadie untill the going downe of the Sunne And Ioshua discomfited Amalek and his people with the edge of the sword And Iehovah said unto Moses write this for a memoriall in a booke and put is in the cares of Io 〈…〉 That wiping I will wipe out the remembrance of Amalek from under the heavens And Moses built an altar and called the name of it Iehovah Nissi And said Because the hand upon the throne of Iah Iehovah will have warre with Amalek from generation to generation Annotations AFter their or by their journeyes which were from Sin to Dophkah from Dophkah to Al 〈…〉 and from thence to Rephidim the place here spoken of Num. 33. 12. 14. the mouth that is as the Greeke and Chaldee doe translate the word of the Lord. See Gen. 24. 57. Rephidim in Greeke Raphidein V. 2. contended or did chide with many reprechfull provoking speeches so they did again in Num. 20. 3. 4. upon the like occasion give ye thou and Aaron who have brought us hither see Exod. 16. 2. 3. tempt ye by unbeleefe for they doubted of Gods presence with them verse 7. and would by miracles be assured thereof which is to tempt God as Matth. 16. 1. Psal. 78. 18. 19. Vers. 3. us so the Greeke also translateth in the Hebrew is me and my sonnes c. speaking of the multitude as of one man Vers. 4. cried the Chaldee translateth praied This was Moses usuall refuge in such troubles see Exod. 14. 15. and 15. 25. Num. 11. 10. 11. they be almost ready Hebr. yet a little and they 〈◊〉 stone me Like outrage they shewed also
afarre off This though it were a speciall favour to the Elders and served for confirmation of the things spoken by Moses yet signified it the impotency of the Law which kept men afar off and could not bring them neere unto the Lord nor unite them unto him as the Gospell of Christ doth by faith Heb. 10. 19. 22. and 12. 18. 22. c. Vers. 2. with him with Moses not with the Elders therefore the Greeke translateth with them For the people abode beneath at the foot of the mount the Elders went up as it were halfe way and saw part of Gods glory vers 9. 10. but Moses himselfe went up to the top of the mount into the darke cloud v. 18. For the Law was to bee given by the hand or ministerie of a mediatour Gal. 3. 19. Ver. 3. will doe the Greeke addeth and heare or obey as is expressed in v. 7. Thus the covenant between God and Israel was established by mutuall and willing consent albeit they yet knew not the impossibilitie of the Law which is weak through the flesh Rom. 8. 3. So in Exod. 19. 8. Vers. 4. wrote in a booke Heb. 9. 19. for the stonie tables were written by the finger of God him-selfe Exod. 31. 18. an altar which represented God the first and chiefe party in the covenant pillars or statues the Gr. translateth them stones and pillars were wont to be of stones erected Gen. 28. 18. 22. and 31. 45. and 35. 14. according to or for the twelve tribes that is to represent them the other party in the Covenant and their hard stony nature as the tables of stone signified their stony hearts 2 Cor. 3. 3. 14. See Exod. 31. 1● Vers. 5. the yong men that is the first borne as the Chaldee translateth which were priests or sacrificers untill the Levites taken in stead of the first-borne of Israel Numb 3. 41. had the priesthood in their tribe And the Hebrew word doth not alwaies signifie men yong in yeers but fit for service or ministerie to their elders so Iesus the servant of Moses and other such servants are often called yong men Exod. 33. 11. Gen. 14. 24. 22. 3. 2 Sam. 18. 15. 1 King 20. 14. of peace-offerings Gr. of salvation By these two sorts of sacrifices whereof see Lev. 1. and 3. chap. the sanctification of the people was testified who by the death of Christ whom these sacrifices did figure out presented themselves wholly to God as obedient servants and shewed thankfulnesse for the peace and salvation which through him they had obtained Rom. 12. 1. 2. Heb. 13. 15. See also the notes on Exod. 19. 10. bullocks and other beasts as the Apostle testifieth of bullocks and of goats Heb. 9. 19. but the one is here named as principall Vers. 6. on the altar and so on the booke Heb. 9. 19 which as it seemeth was laid on the altar to bee sanctified thereby Vers. 7. and obey or heare hearken unto that is g 〈…〉 y learne and obey See the notes on Exodus 4. 31. Vers. 8. on the people which may be meant of the twelve pillars set up to represent the people vers 4. Howbeit the Chaldee paraphrase saith he sprinkled it on the Altar to make propitiation for the people Thus the first covenant or testament was not dedicated without blood as the Apostle observeth in Heb. 9. 18. 23. and the patternes of heavenly things were purified by the blood of these sacrifices signifying that Christ by his death should sanctifie himselfe for his people and them unto himselfe by the blood of a better testament Iohn 17. 19. Heb. 9. 13. 14. 1 Pet. 1. 2. And whereas the sprinkling and purifying in the Law was usually done with water scarlet wooll and hyssope Levit. 14. 6. 7. the Apostle telleth us that this here was so done though Moses nameth them not Heb. 9. 19. behold c. the Apostle explaineth it thus This is the blood of the Covenant or of the Testament which God hath commanded unto you Heb. 9. 20. Thus the Sacrament of the old Testament confirmed by the blood of beasts had a resemblance unto the New Testament established upon better promises and confirmed by the blood of Christ. But that was for workes of the Law this is for remission of sins Mat. 26. 28. Heb. 9. 15. Vers. 10. the God that is signes of the glory and presence of the God of Israel For never man saw God neither can see him 1 Tim. 6. 16. Therefore the Chaldee expounds it The glory of the God of Israel and the Greeke translateth they saw the place where the God of Israel stood of Saphire bricke Hebrew bricke of Saphire whereby is meant Saphire stone hewed like bricke wherewith the place under him was paved So also the Greeke translateth it Or it may be Englished of whitenesse of Saphire that is of white Saphire stone for bricke ●ath the name in Heb. of whitenesse The Chaldee translateth under the throne of his glory was as 〈◊〉 were a worke of precious stone The Saphire is also mentioned in Ezekiels vision of Gods Throne and glorie Ezekiel 1. 26. It is a very precious trans●atent stone of the colour of the skie see Ex 〈…〉 s 28. 19. The worke of bricke might call them 〈◊〉 remember their bricke worke in Egypt Exodus 1. 14. and 5. 16. 19. from which bondage God now had brought them to labour in the heavenly worke of his Law and the mysteries of ●he same whereby the throne of his glory should be erected among them and his Church which ●s as the footstoole of the Lord Lam. 2. 1. should have the foundations laid with Saphires Esay 54. ●1 and such should be the polishing of the Saints Lamentations 4. 7. the body the Greeke ●nd Chaldee translate the sight or semblance of heaven And this cleere heavenly appearance ●id see forth the favour of God towards them 〈◊〉 keepe his Covenant as on the contrary a darke or cloudy Heaven is a signe of Gods displeasure Ieremy 4. 23. 28. Zeph. 1. 15. It signified also the cleannesse puritie that should be in the people of God for clearnesse or in puritie Vers. 11. the Nobles or the select or chosen men as the Greeke translateth meaning those Elders spoken of in verse 9. laid not his hand that is hurt or affrighted them not because they went up by the leave and Word of God not of their owne temeritie which was before forbidden Exodus 19. 21. So the laying of the hand often signifieth Nehemiah 13. 21. Psal. 55. 21. so the Chaldee translateth they had not hurt and the Greeke not one of them was dismayed or killed did eate c. The Chaldee paraphraseth they saw the glory of God and rejoyced in their sacrifices which were accepted as if they had eaten and drunke So other of the Hebrewes as in Elle shemoth rabbah say they fed their eyes with the brightnesse of the Majestie of God Christ promising felicitie to his Disciples sayth
for the close fastning of the cover of the Arke which was as large as the arke it selfe vers 17. The Greeke interpreteth golden writhen waves round about So in ver 24. Vers. 12. shalt put Hebr. shalt give Vers. 13. barres or staves to cary it with verse 14. the Greeke calleth them bearers Vers. 14. to beare the Arke this none might doe but the Levites and upon their shoulders Numb 7. 9. 2 Chron. 35. 3. When David faulted herein and set the Arke upon a wagon the Lord shewed his wrath in killing Vzza see 1 Chr. 13. 7. 10. 11. and 15. 12. 15. Vers. 15. not be removed this caution was left the Levites should thinke themselves discharged at any time from bearing Gods Ark therfore even in Solomons Temple the barres were left in their places but with their ends out to bee seene 1 Kings 8. 8. The Hebrew cannons say when they beare the Arke upon their shoulders they beare it with their faces one towards another and their after parts outward and their faces inward And they are warned that they pull not the barres out of the ring● c. Maimony treat of the Instruments of the Sanctuary ch 2. Sect. 13. Vers. 16. the Testimonie in Greeke the Testimonies that is the two tables of stone whereon the Law or ten commandements were written which were a testimony of the Covenant betweene God and the people and should testifie against them if they kept it not as Moses sheweth for the booke of the Law Deut. 31. 26. Hereupon those tables are called the tables of the Testimony Exod. 31. 18. and the arke into which they were put the Arke of the Testimony Exod. 25. 22. neither was there any thing in the Ark but they 1 Kin. 8. 9. and the Tabemacle wherein the Arke was placed is called the Tabernacle of the Testimony Exod. 38. 21. Act. 7. 14. So elsewhere the booke of the Law is called the Testimony 2 King 11. 12. and the Gospell of Christ hath the same name 1 Cor. 2. 1. 2 Tim. 1. 8. Likewise because on those Tables the words of the Covenant were written Exod. 34. 28. therefore they were called the tables of the Covenant Deut. 9. 9. 11. 1● and the Arke that they were put into the Ark 〈…〉 〈◊〉 Covenant Num. 10. 33. Heb. 9. 4. Ver● 〈◊〉 a covering mercie-seat named in Hebrew 〈◊〉 which hath the signification of covering 〈◊〉 〈…〉 stering over Gen. 6. 14. and is commonly 〈◊〉 the mercifull covering and propitiation of 〈…〉 nes Psal. 65. ●4 Whereupon this is translated in Greeke and with the allowance of the holy Ghost hilusterion Hebr. 9. 5. that is a 〈◊〉 or mercy 〈◊〉 And the Greeke version 〈◊〉 addeth hilasterion ●pithema that is a propitiatorie covering and it is by the Apostle applyed to Christ called Gods hilasterion or propitiatorie through faith in his blood to declare Gods justice for the remession of sinnes that are past Rom. 3. 25. he is the propitiation for our sinns 1 Iohn 2 2. So this mercie-seat on which God did sit betweene the wings of the Cherubims was a figure of Christ by whom our transgressions of the Law are forgiven and covered Vers. 18. Cherubims or Cherubs See Gen. 3. 24. We keepe the Hebr. name following the Apostle who also keepeth the same name in Gr. Heb. 9. 5. where he calleth them Cherubims of glorie The name Cherub is neer unto Rechub a charet used to ride upon and God is said to ride upon the Cherub Psal. 18. 11. and to sit upon the Cherubims Psa. 80. 2. and the Cherubims in Solomons Temple are called a charet 1 Chron. 28. 18. The use of these was to cover or overshadow the mercy-seat w th their wings Ex. 25. 20. as they were made of it v. 19. and from this seat God used to speak unto Moses v. 22. Num. 7. 89. These being of the similitudes of heavenly things Heb. 9. 23. may diversly be applied unto Christ whose mediation was signified by this mercy-seat and to the Ministers of God both the Angels in heaven Gods fiery charets 2 Kin. 6. 17. Psal. 68. 18. whose service he useth for his honor to attend upon Christ and upon his Church into whose mysteries they desire to looke Heb. 1. 6. 14. 1 Pet. 1. 12. and his Ministers also on earth For Kings are called by the names of Cherubs Ezek. 28. 14. and the foure living creatures with eyes wings Rev. 4. 6. 8. w ch by comparison with Eze 〈…〉 1. 5. 6. 10. and 10. 1. 14. 20. were Cherubims are of them that are redeemed unto God by the blood of Christ Rev. 5. 8. 9. 10. so distinguished from heavenly Angels Rev. 5. 11. These with heavenly affections looking into the law and Christ the mercy-seat are such as on whom he also rideth by the preaching of the Gospel Ps. 45. 5. Act. 9. 15. But the chiefe significatiō of the Cherubs here respecteth Christ himselfe the Mercy-seat of which they were made on the two ends thereof v. 19. And to this glorious seat where Gods presence with his Church was manifested the throne of God is answerable in the Christian Church in the presence of which throne his people are and serve him day and night in his Temple Rev. 7. 15. 17. and 4. 2. 4. 5. 6. and 8. 3. and 16. 17. and 21. 3. 5. and 22. 1. compared with Ier. 3. 17. Psal. 80. 2. of beaten worke that is of whole peeces beaten out with the hammer The like is said of the Candlesticke vers 31. 36. and of the Trumpets Numb 10. 2. The Gr. translateth it turned worke Vers. 20. shall stretch Hebrew shall be stretching or spreading covering or shadowing as the Greeke which the Apostlefolloweth doth translate Hebrewes 9. 5. This word is used for protection and defence from evil● Psal. 91. 4. 140. 8. Exod. 33. 22. and the King of Tyrusis is called an anointed Cherub that covered or protected Ezek. 28. 14. This here being as is foreshewed a figure of Christ the protecting Cherubs may signifie his kingdome ps 99. 1. the mercy seat which they covered his priesthood Rom. 3. 25. and the voice which spake from the fame his prophesie Numb 7. 89. Heb. 1. 1. 2. Iudg. 20. ●7 one to another Hebr. man to his brother Ver. 22. will meet or will convene at set times and to appoint and order things for the Church as the words following do explaine Hereupon the Tabernacle wherein this Arke was had the name the Tabernacle of Meeting or of the Congregation where I will meet with thee Exod. 30. 36. The Chaldee translateth I will appoint my word to thee there the Greeke I will be knowne to thee from thence So this was the sign of Gods presence with and direction of his Church as before is noted on ver 18. The Hebrew Doctors say that the heart of man is answerable to the Most holy place of the Sanctuarie wherein was the Arke and the Covering-mercy-seat and the Cherubims whereby
sore pestilence to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thereof from God by some Prophet or a Priest or a Dreamer of dreames And as the High 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 was adorned in his 〈◊〉 with Vrim and Thummim translated in Greek Manifestation and Truth so among the Egyptians their high Priest is reported to have an ornament about his necke of a Saphire stone and the ornament was called Aletheia that is Truth as Aeliam● writeth in his Greeke History booke 14. After the losse of Vrim and Thummim and Prophets in Israel the godly Iewes held them to the Law of Moses as they were commanded by the last Prophet Mal. 4. 4. And hereunto Iesus sonne of Syrach in Ecclus. 33. 3. seemeth to have reference saying The Law is faithfull to him that understandeth as the asking of Dela that is as the Oracle of Vrim and Thummim for Vrim is translated into Greeke Dela 1 Sam. 28. 6. R. Moses bar Maimon saith They made in the second Temple Vrim and Thummim whereby he meaneth the Brestplate with the precious stones to the end they might make up all the High priests eight ornaments without which he might not administer although they did not enquire of God by them And wherefore did they not enquire by them Because the holy Ghost was not there And every Priest that speaketh not by the holy Ghost and on whom the Divine-majestie resteth not they inquire not by him Maimony treat of the Implements of the Sanctuary Chap. 10. Sect. 10. According to this phrase are those speeches to be understood in Ioh. 7. 39. The holy Ghost was not yet because Iesus 〈◊〉 not yet glorified and in Acts 19. 2. Wee have not so much as heard whether there be an holy Ghost Wherby is meant the gifts of the Spirit in Prophesie Tongues c. as there followeth in vers 6. T 〈…〉 holy Ghost came on them and they spake with Tongues and prophesied which gifts being before ceased were restored by the Gospell an evident proofe that the Christ was come Ioel 2. 28. 32. Acts 2. 4. 17. 18. And in Christ this mystery of Vrim and Thummim was fulfilled for in the heart of him our great High-priest were the gifts of the holy Ghost without measure 3. 34. unto all Light and Manifestation of the Truth with all perfection and integrity Iohn 1. 4. 9 17. and 3. 12. 13. and 18. 37. Coloss. 2. 3. whereby the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Iesus Christ is come unto us by whom the Spirit of Truth is sent into us to dwell with us and to abide with us for ever Iohn 14. 16. 17. who also hath given us to put on the Brestplate of Faith and Love 1. Thessalon 5. 8. Vers. 31. the Robe in Hebrew Megnil in Greek Hupodutes that is an Vnderclothing it was a long garment worne next under the Ephod The Hebrewes say Vpon the Robe was the Ephod and the Brestplate and he girded with the curious girdle of the Ephod upon the Robe under the Brestplate and therfore it is called the Robe of the Ephod because he gird●● it with the Ephod Maimony in Implements of the Sanctuary Chap. 10. Sect. 3. See also Exodus 29. 5. and Levit. 8. 7. of the Ephod the Greeke here translateth it Poderee that is of the garment-downeto the foot So in Revel 1. 13. Christ appeareth 〈…〉 ed with a garment downe to the foot in the Gr. there Poderee to shew himselfe as High Priest for the Church Vers. 32. an hole called in Hebrew a mouth top Hebr. head a binding or welt called in Hebrew a lip woven worke Hebrew the work of the weaver Iosephus in his 3. booke of Antiquities Chap. 8. saith This coat was not of two peeces but woven in one without seames on shoulders or sides Maimony in treat of the Implements of the Sanctuary chap. 9. Sect. 3. saith The Robe was all of blew and the threds thereof were twelve times double and the hole thereof was woven at the beginning of the weaving And it had no sleeves but was divided into two skirts from the end of the necke unto beneath after the manner of all Robes and was not joyned together but about all the neck only The Gospell noteth of Christ how in the dayes of his flesh he wore a coat without seame woven from the top throughout Iohn 19. 23. Though that were not a priestly garment yet was it mysticall Vers. 33. Pomgranats that is similitudes of them so the Greeke translateth as it were Pomgranats of the flourishing pomegranat tree scarlet every sort of these three saith Maimony being twisted of eight threds as it is written upon the skirts of it twisted Exodies 39. 24. So the threds of these skirts were in all foure and twenty And hee made them like pomgranats which open not their mouth and hung them on the Robe Maimony treat of the Implements of the Sanct. Chap. 9. Sect. 4. Wheresoever this word TVVISTED is used alone as it is in Exod. 39. 24. it must be eight double threds Ibid. Chap 8. Sect. 14. The Greek version both here and in Exod. 39. 24. addeth the fourth stuffe and of fine linnen twined but the Hebrew wanteth this as also the Chaldee bells in number threescore and twelve as Maimony sheweth in the soresaid treatise chap. 9. Sect. 4. and they were hanged 36 on the one skirt and 36 on the other And in these 72 bells were 72 clappers all of gold and the bell together with the clapper in it is that which is called in Hebrew Pagnamon a Bell saith Maimony ibidem Vers. 35. to minister in the same or when hee ministreth sound or voice that is the sound of his bells Whereby was signified the voice of Christ which is heard of God in his prayer and mediation and heard of the people in his teaching and instruction Heb. 5. 7. and 7. 25. Deuter. 33. 10. Esay 58. 1. Mat. 12. 18. Therefore these Bels were of gold to signifie the purity and preciousnesse of the words of Christs accompanied with Pomgranats to signifie the fruits and comfortable effects of Christs both mediation and doctrine For Pomgranats were of the fruits of the holy Land Deut. 8. 8. and they with the wine that is in them signified the fruits and graces of the Saints Song 4. 〈◊〉 13. and 8. 2. Therefore many such were also in Solomons Temple 2 Chron. 3. 16. and 4. 13. And the care that this Robe should not be rent verse 32. signified the unity of the doctrine and faith of Christ which should bee among his people without rents or schismes 1 Cor. 1. 10 13. 1 Tim. 1. 3. goeth in c. that is publikely administreth as this phrase signifieth Numb 27. 17. 1 Chron. 27. 1. Acts 1. 21. that he dye not or and he shall not dye Vers. 36. Plate the Hebrew Tsits properly signifieth a floure the Greeke Petalon a leafe because it appeared faire and glorious after it is called the plate of the holy crowne
him And Aaron said unto them Breake-off the eare-rings of gold which are in the eares of your wives of your sonnes and of your daughters and bring them unto me And all the people brake-off the eare-rings of gold which were in their eares and brought them unto Aaron And he received them at their hand and fashioned it with a graving-toole and he made it a molten calfe and they said These be thy gods O Israel which brought thee up out of the land of Egypt And Aaron saw it and he built an Altar before it and Aaron proclaimed and said To morrow is a feast to Iehovah And they rose-up-early on the morrow and offred Burnt offrings and brought-neere Peace-offrings and the people sate-downe to eat and to drinke and rose-up to play And Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Goe get thee downe for the people which thou broughtest-up out of the land of Egypt have corrupted themselves They have turned-aside quickly out of the way which I commanded them they have made them a molten calfe and they have bowed themselves-downe thereto and have sacrificed thereunto and said These be thy gods O Israel which have brought thee up out of the land of Egypt And Iehovah said unto Moses I have seene this people and behold it is a stiffe-necked people And now let me alone and my anger shall waxe hot against them and I will consume them and I will make of thee a great nation And Moses earnestly-besought the face of Iehovah his God and said Wherefore O Iehovah shall thy anger waxe hot against thy people which thou hast brought-forth out of the land of Egypt with great power and with a mighty hand Wherefore should the Egyptians speake and say For evill did hee bring them out and kill them in the mountaines and to consume them from upon the face of the earth Turne from the hotnesse of thine anger and repent of the evill against thy people Remember Abraham Isaack and Israel thy servants unto whom thou swarest by thy selfe and spakest unto them I will multiply your seed as the starres of the heavens and all this land which I have spoken of will I give unto your seed and they shall inherit it for ever And Iehovah repented concerning the evill which hee had spoken to doe unto his people And Moses turned and went downe from the mountain the two Tables of the testimony were in his hand the tables were written on both their sides on the one side on the other were they written And the tables they were the worke of God the writing that was the writing of God graven upon the Tables And Ioshua heard the voice of the people as they shouted and hee said unto Moses there is a voyce of warre in the campe And he said It is not the voice of them that shout for masterie neither is it the voice of them that cry for discomfiture the voice of singing doe I heare And it was when he came nigh unto the campe then he saw the calfe and the dances and Moses anger waxed hot and he cast the Tables out of his hands brake them beneath the mount And hee tooke the calfe which they had made and burnt it in the fire and ground it till it was small and strewed it upon the face of the water and made the sonnes of Israel drinke of it And Moses said unto Aaron what did this people unto thee that thou hast brought upon them so great a sinne And Aaron said Let not the anger of my Lord waxe hot thou knowest the people that they are set on evill And they said unto me Make gods for us which may goe before us because this Moses the man which brought us up out of the land of Egypt wee know not what is become of him And I said unto them Who soever hath any gold breake ye it off and they gave it me and I cast it into the fire and there came-out this calfe And Moses saw the people that they were naked for Aaron had made them naked unto their shame amongst those that rose up against them And Moses stood in the gate of the campe and said Who is for Iehovah let him come unto me and all the Sons of Levi gathered themselves unto him And hee said unto them Thus saith Iehovah the God of Israel Put ye every man his sword upon his thigh Passe ye and returne ye from gate to gate in the campe and kill ye every man his brother and every man his fellow-friend and every man his neighbour And the Sons of Levi did according to the word of Moses and there fell of the people in that day about three thousand men And Moses said Fill ye your hand to day unto Iehovah even every man in his Son and in his brother that that he may give upon you this day a blessing And it was on the morrow that Moses said unto the people you have sinned a great sin and now I will goe-up unto Iehovah peradventure I shall make-atonement for your sin And Moses returned unto Iehovah and said Oh this people hath sinned a great sin and they have made them gods of gold And now if thou wilt forgive their sin and if not wipe me I pray thee out of thy Booke which thou hast written And Iehovah said unto Moses Whosoever sinneth against me I will wipe him out of my Booke And now goe leade the people unto the place that I have spoken to thee behold my Angell shall goe before thee and in the day when I visit then will I visit their sin upon them And Iehovah plagued the people for that they made the calfe which Aaron made Annotations DElayed The first signification of the Hebrew word is to be ashamed Gen. 2. 25. and because long tarrying and looking for ones comming causeth shame as in Iudg. 3. 25. they tarried till they were ashamed therefore the word is also used for tarying or delaying of the time Iudg. 5. 28. and is so here translated by the Chaldee and the Greek and in Rev. 10. 6. time is used for delay the people that is some of them as the like word in v. 6. is opened by Paul in 1 Cor. 10. 7. Gods that is an image or representation of God as after in v. 4. and the words here following manifest This narration sheweth how the Israelites who promised to doe all that the Lord commanded Exod. 19. 8. did behave themselves in keeping of the morall Law and of that great Commandement which God had both spoken to them himselfe from heaven and repeated againe by Moses Exod. 20. 4. 23. that so the impossibility of the Law in that it was weake through the flesh might be seene in this people even at the first before any obedience was performed Rom. 8. 3. Nehem. 9. 13. 16. become of him or done to him They looked for Moses to bring them a forme of worship and some visible signe of Gods presence among them as afterwards
unto the evill of thy people which thing is here implyed but the Hebrew phrase meaneth also the evill of punishment which God should repent of that is not inflict upon them speaking after the manner of men as in Gen. 6. 6. Therefore the Chaldee addeth repent of the evill which thou thinkest to doe to thy people which is confirmed by v. 14. V. 13. by thy selfe God having no greater to sweare by and by such an oath willing to shew the immutability of his counsel as Paul expoundeth it Heb. 6. 13. 17. The Chaldee translateth by thy Word see Gen. 22. 16. 17. 18. unto which place this praier of Moses hath speciall reference where also the blessing of all nations in Christ is mentioned which is the ground of this request and of Gods yeelding thereunto So the Hebrew Doctors after a sort acknowledged saying Then Moses returned sought mercy at the face of the Lord and the Lord remembred the inclination of Isaack who was bound by his father in mount Morijah upon the Altar and the Lord turned from his anger and caused his divine-presence to dwell in the midst of them as before Thargum in Cant. cap. 1. vers 13. cap. 2. vers 17. Vers. 15. on the one Hebr. on this side and on this This manner of writing on both side was also in other mysticall books Ezek. 2. 10. Rev. 5. 1. It signified in respect of the Law it selfe that it hath both the outward letter and inward spirituall meaning Ro. 7. 14. Gal. 4. 24. in respect of men that the Law should be written outwardly in their actions before men and inwardly in their hearts before God Matth. 5. 16. Heb. 8. 10. Rom. 2. 28. 29. See the notes on Exod. 31. 18. Vers. 16. the worke of God herein they differed from the second tables which were the worke of Moses Exod. 34. 1. It is a tradition of the Iewes that these first tables were bewen out of the Saphir of the throne of Gods glory mentioned in Exod. 24. 10. Thargumin Cant. cap. 1. verse 11. Vers. 17. Ioshua or as the Greeke writeth him Iesus see Exod. 17. 9. of them that shout or of them that answer or sing Hebrew of answering or singing The Chaldee translates it it is not the voice of strong men which overcome in the warre neither is it the voice of weake men which are discomfited discomfiture or weakenesse of such as are overcome singing for play and voluptuousnesse good cheare c. as in v. 6. Therefore the Chaldee translates it the voyce of them that play and the Greeke addeth of them that sing for wine Vers. 19. his hand or his hands that is each of his hands the Hebrew hath both readings the first by the vowels and margine the other by the letters in the line So in Exod. 35. 11. Lev. 9. 22. and 16. 21. Deur 2. 33. breake them to signifie the breaking of the covenant by reason of their sin For that Moses did this advisedly and by the motion of Gods Spirit appeareth by his relation of it againe in Deut. 9. 16. 17. Wherefore the Tabernacle of the congregation wherein the Lord was to be sought was upon this pitched a farre off from the campe untill by Moses intreaty reconciliation was made between God and the people Exod. 33. 7. 9. c. Vers. 20. small even as dust Deut. 9. 21. that it might utterly be abolished and that they might drinke thereof the waters of the brooke that came downe out of the mount Deut. 9. 11. from the Rocke in Horeb Ex. 17. 6. which Rock was Christ 1 Cor. 10. 4. drinke By this they were taught the way of salvation from their sins whiles Moses that is the Law giveth the knowledge of sin condemnation for the same Rom. 3. 20. Gal. 3. 10. and forceth men unto Christ the Rocke from whom doe flow the waters of life wherin all sinne is swallowed up to the repentant beleeving sinner who by drinking the dust thereof with the waters of the Gospel into their owne bowels doe acknowledge the curse which they have deserved and doc judge themselves who are else to be condemned of the Lord Gal. 3. 24. Ezek. 36. 31. and 20. 43. 1 Cor. 10. 31. Compare Num. 5. 17. 19. c. V. 22. aroset or lie in evill as the Apostle useth a like speech of the world 1 Ioh. 5. 19. or are in evill that is are very evill as Gods works are said to be in faith Ps. 33. 4. that is most faithfull or true the woman is said to be in the transgression 1 Tim. 2. 14. that is the transgressor and many the like The Greeke translateth thou knowest the violent-force of this people Vers. 34. there came out Aaron here is not so free in confessing his owne sinne as he did the peoples but speaketh of the Calfe as if it had beene made rather by hap then by his art verse 4. But Aarons sinne was so great as the Lord was very angry with him to have destroied him had not Moses praied for him also Deut. 9. 20. for he had made the people naked unto their shame as after in verse 25. Compare Aarons excuse with Adams Gen. 3. Vers. 25. naked in the shame of their sinnes deprived of the glory and protection of God as naked unarmed men to bee devoured of their enemies Compare Gen. 3. 10. Rev. 3. 18. and 16. 15. The Greeke translateth it dissipated or scattered for Aaron had dissipated them for a rejoycing to their adversaries unto shame or infamie and as the Greeke translates it a rejoycing or mockerie which the Chaldee paraphraseth thus to blot them with an evill name in their generations So the Thargum on Solomons Song cap. 1. vers 12. saith hereof the wicked of that generation rose up and made a golden calse together with the mixed people which were among them and they made their workes to stinke and their evill name went out into the world And Paul applieth the like against the Iewes Through breaking the law dishonourest thou God For the name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles through you Rom. 2. 23. 24. amongst those that rose up against them or by their adversaries For a people naked without Gods protection are easily by their enemies foyled and put to shame as in Num. 14. 42. 43. 45. 2 Chron. 12. 5. and 28. 5. 6. Vers. 26. the gate the publike place of judgement see Gen. 34. 20. Deut. 17. 5. Ruth 4. 1. 11. let him come this word supplied also by the Greeke Moses through haste and earnestnesse omitteth See the like in Gen. 13. 9. and 11. 4. and 23. 13. The Chaldee also addeth it saying They that feare the Lord let them come unto me Vers. 28. 3000 men the principall authors of this wickednesse for that many moe were guilty also of the same appeareth by verse 30. c. Vers. 29. Fill your hand that is Consecrate your selves and your service to the Lord a phrase taken from the
affection toward repentant and beleeving sinners 1 in pittying their misery 2 shewing favour and grace unto them though unworthy 3 long suffring their infirmities 4 of much mercy and bounty in doing them good 5 of much truth in fulfilling his promises unto them 6 and extending the like mercy to their children even to the thousand generation 7 and forgiving their sinnes of all sorts wherin the blessednesse of man consisteth Psalm 32. 1. 2. Rom. 4. 6. 7. 8. long suffring or long 〈◊〉 he be angry Hebrew long of anger or of nostrith mercy or bounteousnesse kindnesse which David six and twenty times in one Psalme confesseth to endure for ever Psal. 136. Compare also Neh. 9. 17. Ion. 4. 2. Psal. 103. 7. 8. 9. c. Vers. 7. for thousands that is as Tharg●● Ierusalemy explaineth it for a thousand generations See Exod. 20. 6. The Greek translateth and doing many unto thousands not clearing cleare that is 〈◊〉 will in no wise cleare or acquit hold innocent to wit the guilty person as the Greeke version addeth or as the Chaldee saith them that convert not Also the Ierusalemy Thargum expoundeth it hee will not clear sinners in the day of the great Iudgement The like defect is in Num. 14. 18. Nahum 1. 3. and in other like speeches as Lev. 19. 18. which sometime the Scripture it selfe supplyeth as is noted on Gen. 4. 20. and 24. 33. And these two last attributes are in respect of Gods dealing with the wicked unto whom he imputeth no righteousnesse for their good but inflicteth punishment upon them and theirs unto perdition Yet this his justice upon the wicked is a part of his goodnesse towards his people as it is said The just shall rejoyce when he seeth the vengeance he shall wash his feet in the blood of the wicked Psalm 58. 11. visiting that is punishing see Exod. 20. 5. sonnes to wit of the wicked or rebellious as the Chaldee here addeth And Thargum Ierusalemy saith remembring the sinnes of wicked fathers upon the rebellious sonnes unto the third generation and unto the fourth generation Vers. 8. bowed himselfe or worshipped fell prostrate Thargum Ierusalemy expoundeth it he confessed and lauded God See the notes on Exod. 4. 31. Vers. 9. now goe or I pray thee goe to wit with the signes of his presence in the cloudy fiery pillar The Chaldee saith Let the Majesty of the Lord goe By the Majesty or Divine-presence of the Lord which the Hebrewes call She●inah wee may well understand Christ for the Hebrews usually distinguish this from God the Father and say there is no comming before the blessed and most high King without Shecinah R. Menachem on Levit. 10. Our Saviour more plainly saith No man commeth unto the Father but by me Ioh. 14. 6. Of him the ancient Iewes seeme to speake under this name Shecinah though at this day they despise their salvation See before on Exod. 33. 14. 15. and 34. 6. and 14. 19. for it is or though it be a stiffe necked people yet pardon thou c. For in the time of favourable-acceptation it was well with them by Shecinah the Divine-majesty that tooks pitty upon them saith R. Menachem take us for inheritance or inherit possesse thou us which the Greeke translateth we shall be thine This is the blessednesse of a people that God chuseth them to bee his inheritance as Psalm 33. 12. Zach. 2. 12. and God doth inherit or possesse those whom hee subdueth unto his obedience and ruleth over them Psal. 82. 2. Levit. 25. 46. Vers. 10. he said the Greeke explaineth it the Lord said unto Moses strike that is make to wit with thee as the Greeke explaineth it marvels in Greeke glorious things and so the Euangelist useth the word Luke 13. 17. the people rejoyced for all the glorious things that were done by Iesus where the Syriak hath marvelous things So in Iob 5. 9. Exod. 33. 16. This promise seemeth to concerne the marvelous workes which God after did before all Israel in the dayes of Iosua as when the Sunne and moone stood still in the midst of heaven c. Ios. 10. 12. 13. of which it is there said Is not this written in the booke of Iasher which the Chaldee there expoundeth the booke of the Law as being a thing whereof Moses here wrote created the Greeke saith done and creating is the making or doing of a new marvelous and glorious thing as Gen. 1. 1. Numb 16. 30. a fearfull thing or he is fearfull meaning God but the Gr. expounds it they are marvelous things with thee that is as the Greeke translateth to thee meaning all Israel as the words following manifest or with thee meaning Moses that is by thy hand as Paul saith not I but the grace of God with me 1 Cor. 15. 10. Vers. 11. Observe thou or keepe for thy selfe for thine owne good Amorite that is Amorites c. as the Chaldee translateth See Gen. 10. 16. Exod. 23. 23. 28. Verse 12. snare or cause of thy ruine See Exod. 23. 33. Vers. 13. pillars or standing images statues see Exod. 23. 24. groves which they used to consecrate to their gods offring sacrifice under greene trees Deut. 12. 2. 2 King 16. 4. So among other heathens trees and groves were the Temples of their gods saith Pliny hist. booke 12. chap. 1. And in the Romane Lawes of the 12 Tables in the 2 law of Religion it was commanded to have groves in the fields For this cause Israel is here bidden to cut them downe and in Deut. 12. 3. to burne them and were also forbidden to plant any grove or any tree neere unto the altar of the Lord Deut. 6. 21. Vers. 14. other god to the idols of the peoples as the Chaldee expoundeth it Vers. 15. goe a-whoring that is commit idola●●y which is spirituall whoredome Ier. 3. 9. and so the Chaldee explaineth it here to erre after their errors that is their idols he that is the inhabitant aforesaid put for all and every of the inhabitants therefore the Greeke translateth they call and so after Compare Num 25. 1. 2. Prov. 9. 13. 15. Vers. 17. molten gods or gods of metall Hebrew of melting So Levit. 19. 4. Exod. 20. 23. Vers. 18. as I or which I commanded but the Hebrew asher is put for caasher as in Exodus 23. 15. and so the Greeke translateth it here Abib in Greeke the moneth of new fruits See Exod. 13. 4. Vers. 19. is mine or shall be mine that is sanctified unto me see Exodus 13. 2. 12. that which openeth or the first borne as the Greeke and Chaldee here translateth it See Exod. 13. 12. 13. and 22. 29. 30. Vers. 20. with a lambe a living lambe of the sheepe or goats and no other beast as is noted on Exod. 13. 13. and the lambe was to be given to the Priest Num. 18. 8. 15. The Hebrewes say It might be redeemed with a lambe whether male or female unblemished or blemished small or
the bars on the Arke and put the Covering-mercy-seat above upon the Arke And he brought the Arke into the Tabernacle and set up the veile of the covering and covered the arke of the Testimony as Iehovah commanded Moses And hee put the Table in the Tent of the Congregation upon the side of the Tabernacle Northward without the veil And he set-in-order upon it the order of bread before Iehovah as Iehovah commanded Moses And he put the Candlesticke in the Tent of the congregation over-against the Table on the side of the Tabernacle Southward And hee caused the lamps to ascend before Iehovah as Iehovah commanded Moses And he put the altar of gold in the Tent of the congregation before the veil And he burned thereon incense of sweet-spices as Iehovah commanded Moses And hee set-up the hanging-veil of the doore of the Tabernacle And the altar of the burnt-offring he put at the doore of the Tabernacle of the Tent of the Congregation and offred upon it the burnt-offring and the meat-offring as Iehovah commanded Moses And he set the Laver betweene the tent of the Congregation and the altar and put water there to wash And Moses and Aaron and his sonnes washed thereat their hands and their feet When they went into the Tent of the Congregation and when they came neere unto the altar they washed as Iehovah commanded Moses And hee reared up the Court round-about the Tabernacle and the altar and set up the hanging veil at the gate of the Court and Moses finished the worke And the cloud covered the Tent of the Congregation and the glory of Iehovah filled the Tabernacle And Moses was not able to enter into the Tent of the congregation because the cloud dwelt vpon it and the glory of Iehovah filled the Tabernacle And when the cloud was taken-up from over the Tabernacle the sonnes of Israel journeyed in all their journeyes But if the cloud were not taken-up then they journeyed not till the day that it was taken-up For the cloud of Iehovah was upon the Tabernacle by day and fire was on it by night in the eyes of all the house of Israel in all their journeyes Annotations IN the day to wit the first day so the Greeke explaines it In the first day of the first moneth in the new Moone Among the Iewes the moneths of the yeere were the moneths of the Moone as their yeers were the yeeres of the Sunne Maimony in treat of Sanctifying the new Moone chap. 1. And all new Moones or first dayes of the Moneths were solemne feasts unto Israel Num. 28. 11. 14. Psalm 81. 3. This which was the first moneth of the second yeere after their comming out of Aegypt was solemnized the first day by the rearing up of the Tabernacle here described which being done the Princes of Israel brought offrings of wagons and oxen for the service of the Tabernacle and other offrings for the dedicating of the Altar which solemnity dured twelve dayes Num. 7. On the fourteenth day of this moneth the Israelites kept the feast of the Passeover in the wildernesse Num. 9. 1. 2. 3. The new Moone following which was on the first day of the second moneth the Israelites were numbred and their Tents set in order foure-square round about the Tabemacle Num. 1. 1. 2. c. and 2. 2. 3. c. and all uncleane persons were put out of the Campe Numb 5. 2. 3. 4. On the twentieth day of that moneth the Cloud rethe Tabernacle now reared up was then taken downe againe and the Israelites tooke their journeyes out of the wildernesse of Sinai Num. 10. 11. In the meane space God by voice out of the most holy of the tabernacle taught Moses and Israel all those lawes for sacrificing cleansing and other religious duties w ch are written in the whole booke of Leviticus and the nine first Chapters of Numbbers Lev. 1. 1. c. Num. 1. 1. c. of the Congregation or of the meeting where-God met w th his people Ex. 25. 22. 30. 36. Elsewhere it is named the Tent of the testimony or Tabernacle of witnesse Num. 9. 15. 17. 7. 8. so in the new Testament Act. 7. 44 Rev. 15. 5. because the Tables of Testimony were kept in the Arke therein Exod. 25. 16. and so the Greeke translateth it in this place Ver. 3. cover the Arke that is hide it from the eyes of men by hanging the veile before it which parted the most holy place from the holy Hereupon it is called the covering veile Numb 4. 5. The mystery of this veile is noted on Ex. 26. 33. V. 4. the order or the disposition thereof that is the shewbread which was weekly to be set in two rows upon it see Ex. 25. 30. The Gr. translateth shalt propose the proposition meaning the bread of propositiō or shew-bread so called in Matt. 12. 4. cause to ascend that is to burne or shalt light see Exodus 25. 37. and 27. 20. V. 5. set Heb. shalt give which is used for setting placing disposing c. often in this chapter and else-where see Gen. 1. 17. hanging-veil or coveringveil which hindred the people from entring or seeing into the holy place see Exod. 26. 36. Ver. 6. Tabernacle of the Tent so called because the Tabernacle was overspread and covered with the Tent as v. 19. and Ex. 26. 7. and so it was an overspread and covered Tabernacle signifying Gods Church by his providence covered protected A like phrase is in Rev. 15. 5. the Temple of the tent of the testimony in heaven was opened For Moses Tabernacle is also called a Temple or Palace as 1 Sam. 1. 9. and 3. 3. Psal. 27. 4. and 138. 2. V. 7. there that is therein as the Gr. translateth in it so v. 30. See Exod. 30. 18. V. 8. hanging veil or covering see Ex. 27. 16. V. 9. oile whereof see Ex. 30. 23. c. Levit. 8. 10. Num. 7. 1. holy Hebr. holinesse V. 10. holy of holies Hebrew holinesse of holinesses that is most holy as that which hallowed the sacrifices see Exod. 29. 37. V. 15. eternal priesthood so that their children after the shold not need to be anointed but administer by reason of this first unction of their fathers only the high Priests were anointed in the generations following Lev. 4. 3. See the notes on Exod. 30. 33. V. 17. second yeere to wit after they were come out of Egypt as the Gr. version here addeth for explanation and as Moses speaketh in Num. 9. 1. first of the moneth that is the first day of it as the first of the feast Matt. 26. 17. is expounded the first day of the feast Mark 14. 12. The Greeke saith in the New moone see the annotations on v. 2. V. 18. the Tabernacle a visible signe of Gods presence dwelling with governing his Church in Christ Lev. 26. 11. Eze. 3. 27. 28. as it is said I heard a great voice out of heaven saying Behold the Tabernacle
you from other peoples A man must not apparell himselfe with the apparell that is peculiar unto them nor let the locks of his head grow like the lockes of their heads nor shave off the sides and leave the haire in the midst as they doe c. nor build places as they build temples for idolatrie c. Maimony treat of Idolatrie ch 11. sect 1. Vers. 4. my statutes that is mine onely as him thou shalt serve Deut. 6. 13. is expounded by our Saviour him onely thou shalt serve Matt. 4. 10. It meaneth also all my statutes Deutero 12. 32. and so The words of this law Deut. 27. 26. is explained by the Apostle all things which are written in the booke of the law Ga. 3. 10. therfore in the next verse here the Greeke version addeth And ye shall keepe all my statutes Of this it is said Iehovah who brought you up out of the land of Egypt with great power and a stretched out arme him shall ye feare and him shall yee worship and to him shall yee doe sacrifice and the Statutes and the jugdements and the Law and commandement which he wrote for you yee shall observe to doe for evermore and yee shall not feare other Gods and the Covenant which I have made with you yee shall not forget c. 2 King 17. 36. 38. By this therefore God forbiddeth them all mens inventions Eccles. 7. 29. the works of their owne hands Ier. 25. 6. and the statutes of the Kings of Israel which they after made without the commandement of the Lord. 2 King 17. 8. Mat. 6. 16. Vers. 5. shall live by them or in them that is shal have eternall life of God for doing them and so the Chaldee paraphraseth hee shall live by them to life eternall and as Solomon Iarchi saith in the world that is to come This and the like promises elsewhere as in Ezek. 20. 13. are legall and differ from the promises of the Gospell as the Apostle observeth saying The just shall live by faith and the Law is not of faith but the man that doth them shall live by them Gal. 3. 11. 12. and againe For Moses describeth the justice which is of the Law that the man which doth them shall live by them alledging the very words of this text according to the Greeke version but the justice which is of faith speaketh on this wise Say not in thine heart who shall goe up to heaven c. That if thou shalt confesse with thy mouth that Iesus is the LORD and shalt beleeve in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead thou shalt be saved Rom. 10. 5. 9. Vers. 6. None of you Heb. Man man yee shall not approach that is not any man To approach or come neere is used for carnall copulation as in Gen. 20. 4. Abimelech had not come neere unto her So in Ezek. 18. 6. and Esa. 8. 3. I approached unto the Prophetesse and she conceived c. Moreover from this word approach the Hebrewes comparing herewith the 30. v. doe say Who so commeth to any of these nakednesses the unlawfull copulations following either by way of copulation or that imbraceth or kisseth by way of lust any of his kinne is to be beaten by the Law For the meaning is yee shall not approach unto the things which may bring you unto the uncovering of their nakednesse And it is unlawfull for a man to make signes with hand foot or eye as Prov. 6. 13. to any of these or to sport with her or to gaze on her beautie c. Maimony in Issure biah chap. 21. sect 1. 2. neere-kin The Hebrew Sheer signifieth flesh Psal. 73. 26. Prov. 5. 11. and 11. 17. And as Basar flesh is sometime used for kindred Gen. 29. 14. so is Sheer in this case of mariage and copulation and so by the Chaldee and Greeke it is translated neere and neere-of kinne nakednesse that is the secrets or shamefull part of the body whereof since sinne came on mankinde we are most ashamed therfore the Greeke translateth it shame or uncomelinesse which also the holy Ghost alloweth in Rev. 16. 15. and in Rev. 3. 18. it is called the shame of nakednesse To uncover nakednesse here meaneth carnall copulation and incest not onely out of maried estate but also unlawfull and incestuous mariages The Hebrewes say Whatsoever copulation is forbidden in the Law for which one is guilty of cutting off and which are spoken of in Levit. 18. they are called Nakednesses and every one of them is called incest or nakednesse as with mother or sister or daughter and the like Maimony treat of Wives chap. 1. sect 5. Vers. 7. of thy father and the nakednesse of thy mother This is one fact but a double sinne for by uncovering the fathers nakednesse is meant the lying with his wife as Levit. 20. 11. and as after in verse 8. and in verse 14. the uncovering of the uncles nakednesse is expounded the approaching unto his wife The Hebrewes say Hee that lieth with his mother and shee his fathers wife is double guility whether it bee while his father is living or after his death once for that she is his mother and againe for that she is his fathers wife Maimony in Issureibiah chap. 2. sect 2. It may also be thus spoken to imply the woman with her father as the man with his mother and so Ionathan in his Targum here paraphraseth The woman shall not lye with her father and the man shall not ly with his mother V. 8. thy fathers wife though shee be not thine owne mother but mother in law This was Reubens sinne who lay with Bilhah his fathers concubine Gen. 35. 22. It was a sinne infamous among the heathens 1 Cor. 5. 1. The Hebrew canons say A mans fathers wife and his sonnes wife and his brothers wife and his fathers brothers wife these foure are a nakednesse unto him that is unlawfull for him for ever whether they be of the betrothed or of the maried be they divorsed or not divorsed bee their husbands alive or dead except it bee his brothers wife who hath left no childe at his death Deut. 25. 5. And if he lye with any one of them whiles her husband is alive he is double guilty in respect that she is of his neere kinne and againe for that she is another mans wife Maimony in ●ssureibiah chap. 2. sect 1. it is thy fathers nakednesse that is it belongeth to him onely to uncover the same Vers. 9. whether she be borne at home c. Hebr. of the birth or kindred of the house or home or of the birth abroad which the Chaldee expoundeth thus which is begotten by the father of an other woman or of thy mother by an other man The Hebrew canons further explaine it thus whether shee be his sister by his father or by his mother either in maried estate or by fornication as if his mother or his father have committed whordome with others
Iudah and the other tribes as wee see in Num. 2. Moses was furnished with wisdome and knowledge but wanted speech and utterance therefore Aaron was given to bee his mouth and spokes-man Act. 7. 22. Exod. 4. 10. 14. 16. ye● Moses by his writings speaketh now eloquently in all Churches and shall doe to the worlds end when Aaron is silent The like was in Paul whose weaknesse in speech was his reproach among the false Apostles 2 Cor. 10. 10. and 11. 6. though he 〈…〉 lled in knowledge and other graces the fruits 〈…〉 eof the world still reapeth from his Epistles Vers. 47. that entred to wit into the warfare or 〈◊〉 as vers 3. the service of service the 〈…〉 ke of ministery assisting the Priests when the Tabernacle stood and taking it downe and setting it vp the Greeke translateth it the worke of workes the service of burden the worke of bearing the Tabernacle when it was removed in Greeke the workes that were to be borne Vers. 48. eight thousand and 500. and 80. Behold the small number of such as warred the spirituall warfare of God in his Sanctuary that of the whole tribe of Levi there were but 8580. fit men when the tribe of Iudah afforded 74. thousand and 600. for the outward warfare in the host of Israel Num. 1. 27. Vers. 49. the month in Chaldee the word in Greeke the voice mustered he or he numbred meaning Moses and the Princes as vers 34. spoken of as of one man CHAP. V. 1 The uncleane are removed out of the Campe. 5. Confession restitution is to be made in trespasses 11. The law of jealousie 15. How the suspected woman is to be brought unto the Priest with an oblation 19. is to be abjured by the Priest 24. and is to drinke of the bitter water that causeth the curse 17. The events following if she be defiled or not defiled ANd Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Command the sonnes of Israel that they send away out of the campe every leper and every one that hath an issue and every one defiled by a soule Both male and female shall yee send away without the campe shall yee send them that they defile not their campes in the middest whereof I dwell And the sonnes of Israel did so and sent them away without the campe as Iehovah spake unto Moses so did the sonnes of Israel And Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Speake unto the sonnes of Israel A man or a woman when they shall doe any of all the so 〈…〉 es of men to transgresse a transgression against Iehovah and that soule bee guiltie Their they shall confesse their sinne which they have done and he shall restore his trespasse in the principall thereof and the fist p 〈…〉 t thereof shall he adde unto it and shall give it to him against whom he hath trespassed And if the man have no kinsman to restore the trespasse unto him the trespasse shall be restored vnto Iehovah unto the Priest beside the ramme of the atonements whereby atonement shall be made for him And every heave-offering of all the holy things of the sonnes of Israel which they shall bring neere unto the priest shall bee his And every mans hallowed things shall be his that which any man giveth to the priest his it shall be And Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Speake unto the sonnes of Israel and say unto them Any man if his wife goe aside and transgresse against him a transgression And a man lye with her with seed of copulation and it be kept close from the eyes of her husband and she hath hid herselfe and she is defiled and there is no witnesse against her and she is not taken And the spirit of jealousie passe upon him and he be jealous of his wife and she be defiled or the spirit of jealousie passe upon him and he be jealous of his wife and shee be not defiled Then shall the man bring his wife unto the Priest and he shall bring her offering for her the tenth part of an Ephah of barley meale hee shall not powre oile upon it nor put frankincense thereon for it is a Meat-offering of jealousies a Meat-offering of memoriall making memoriall of iniquitie And the Priest shall bring her neere and make her stand before Iehovah And the priest shall take holy water in an earthen vessell and of the dust which is in the floore of the Tabernacle shall the Priest take and put it into the water And the Priest shall make the woman to stand before Iehovah and shall uncover the womans head and put in her hands the Meat-offering of memoriall it is the Meat-offring of jealousies in the hand of the Priest shall be the bitter water that causeth the curse And the Priest shall charge her by an oath and say unto the woman If no man have lien with thee and if thou hast not gone aside to uncleannesse under thy husband be thou free from the bitter water that causeth the curse But thou if thou hast gone aside under thy husband and if thou be defiled and some man hath had his copulation with thee beside thine husband And the Priest shall by oath charge the woman with an oath of cursing and the Priest shall say unto the woman Iehovah give thee to be for a curse and for an oath among thy people when Iehovah doth giue thy thigh to fall and thy belly to swell And this water that causeth the cu●se shall enter into thy bowels to make the belly to swell and the thigh to fall and the woman shall say Amen Amen And the Priest shall write these curses in a booke and he shall blot them out into the bitter water And he shall cause the woman to drinke the bitter water that causeth the curse and the water that causeth the curse shall enter into her to bitternesses And the Priest shall take out of the womans hand the Meat-offering of jealousies and shall wave the Meat-offering before Iehovah and offer it upon the Altar And the Priest shall take an handfull of the Meat-offering even the memoriall thereof and burne it upon the Altar and afterward hee shall cause the woman to drinke the water And when he hath caused her to drinke the water then it shall bee if she be defiled and have transgressed a transgression against her husband that the water that causeth the curse shall enter into her to bitternesses and her belly shall swell and her thigh shall fall and the woman shall bee for a curse among her people And if the woman be not defiled but be cleane then she shall be free and shall conceive seed This is the law of jealousies when a woman goeth aside under her husband and is defiled Or a man when the spirit of jealousie passeth upon him and he be jealous of his wife and shall make the woman to stand before Iehovah and the Priest shall doe unto her all this law And the man shall be free from iniquity and
Sol Iarchi expoundeth it Prepare yourselv●s for vengeance and so he saith in ser. 12. 3. Sanctifie that is prepare them for the day of slaughter The 20 verse sheweth that this may be implied wept in the eares in ver 20. wept before the Lord and so the Chaldee turneth it here I● meaneth that the Lord had seene and heard their complaint for weeping is often joyned with lifting up the voyce or crying out as Ger. 27. 39. Iudg. 2. 4. and 21. 2. 1 Sam. 11. 4. and 24. 16. and 30. 4. Verse 20. Vntill a moneth of dayes to wit yee shall eat as the Greeke expresseth Meaning a whole moneth as a yeare of dayes is an whole yeare 2 Sam. 14 28. So in Gen. 29. 14. loathsome Hebr. to loathsomnesse or alienation which the Greek translateth to choler the Chaldee to offence that is offensive have despised or contemptuously refased set at nought which the Greeke translateth disobeyed the Lord the Chaldee rejected the Word of the LORD who is the Chaldee saith whose Majestie or Divine presence remaineth among you Verse 22. to suffice them so the Greeke and Chaldee expound the Hebrew Ma●sa which usually signifieth to finde but here is used for obtaining that which is sufficient so in Ios. 17. 16. Iudg. 21. 14. Here Mose sheweth that the thing promised was unpossible in mans judgement both in respect of the multitude of men and length of time and therefore he mentioneth beasts and fishes which also are flesh 1 Cor 15. 39 but speaketh not of fowles as thinking least of all that they should be filled with them yet God sufficed them with such verse 31. So Philip said unto Christ Two hundred 〈…〉 worth of bread is not sufficient for this multitude that every one may have a little Ioh. 6. 7 9. Verse 23. hand waxed short that is power abated the Greeke expoundeth it Shall not the Lords hand be sufficient the Chaldee thus Shall the word of the Lord be hindered Hand is often used for power as being the instrument wherewith power is shewed Deut. 32. 36. Ios. 4. 24. and 8. 20. shortnesse signifieth lessening and is applied sometime to the Lords Spirit as in Mic. 2. 7. is the spirit of Iehovah shortned Sometime to his hand as here and in Esai 59. 1. Behold Iehovahs hand is not shortned that it cannot save and in Esai 50. 2. Is my hand shortned at all that it cannot redeeme or have I no power to deliver where the latter sentence explaineth the former Verse 25. they prophesied this was a gift and effect of Gods Spirit upon them and is elsewhere so explained as upon the handmaids in those dayes I will powre out my spirit Ioel 2. 29. that is I will power out of my spirit and they shall prophesie Act. 2. 18. So in Act. 19. 2. 6. And when Saul was anointed to be King the Spirit of God came upon him and hee prophesied 1 Sam. 10. 6 10. Prophesying was not onely a foretelling of things to come but sometime a declaring of the word of God unto the people see Exod. 7. 1. Gen. 20. 7. And thus Paul saith He that prophesieth speaketh unto men to edification and exhortation and comfort 1 Cor. 14. 3. Sometime it was a singing of praises unto God as they that prophesied with Harps with Psalteries and with Cymbals to confesse and to praise the LORD 1 Chron. 25. 1 3. did not adde that is prophesied no more but that day as God spake the ten commandements and added not that is spake no moe or after such a manner to the people Deut. 52. 2. Thus the Greeke here translateth and they added no more and Sol. Iarchi saith they did not adde i. they prophesied not save that day onely so it is expounded is Siphre Howbeit the Chaldee translateth it ceased not in a contrary signification which sometime is in the Hebrew words But seeing the Chaldee so expoundeth that also in Deut. 5. 22. that the Lord ceased not which seemeth to meane a continuance till all those ten words were finished we may likewise understand him here to meane a continuance for that day as Saul in Naioth prophesied all that day and all that night 1 Sam. 19. 24. and not a continuance alwayes for this seemeth to be a temporary gift and miracle for confirmation of their Office as in 1 Sam. 10. 6 11. Verse 26. Medad in Greeke Modad the spirit in Chaldee the spirit of prophesie that were written by Moses in a booke or in papers as the Hebrews thinke and so were appointed among the rest to come to the Tabernacle verse 16. 24. but went not out for what cause the Scripture sheweth not but by comparing this their fact with others it is probable that as Saul when hee should have beene made King withdrew and hid himselfe among the stuffe 1 Sam. 10. 22. so these two unwilling to take the charge upon them withdrew their shoulders and came not to the Tabernacle yet the Lord by his Spirit found them out for whither shall men goe from his Spirit or whither shall they flee from his presence Psal. 139. 7. The Hebrewes have here their uncertaine conjectures Sol. Iarchi saith They were all written expresly by their names and should have beene taken by Lots For the count was made for the twelve tribes out of every tribe six except two tribes of which were but five Moses tooke seventy two papers or 〈◊〉 and on seventy of them he wrote AN ELDER and on two A PART and he chose six out of every tribe so there were seventy and two Then he sa●● unto them take up your papers out of the basket Who so tooke up with his hand a paper on which was written AN ELDER he was sanctified to that office but he in whose hand came up A PART unto him he said The Lord will not have thee Verse 28. of his choise young men in Greeke his chosen one the Chaldee saith of his young men The originall word signifieth also youth whereupon some translate it the minister of Moses frō his youth but this seemeth not fit for Moses shepheards life in Midian from which he came but a little before this argueth the contrary forbid thou them This he spake of envious zeale for his master Moses sake as the verse following sheweth that he would not have the use of the gift of prophesie common or because they obeyed not Moses to come out as he commanded So the disciples forbade one that cast our devils in Christs name because he followed not with them Luk 9. 49 50. Marke 9. 38. Targum Ionathan explaineth it M. Lord Moses request mercy from before the Lord and forbid them the spirit of Prophesie Verse 29. Enviest thou or Hast thou en●isus zeale or jealousie for my sake which is a prohibition Have it not as Thinke ye that I am come to give peace on earth Luke 12. 51. that is Thinke it not Mat. 10. 34. but O who shall give or and O
tabernacle Num 2. so the hand of God for the increase and diminishing of their campes may be seene thus In the first and chiefest quarter Eastward were IVDAH Issachar and Zabulon all increased Iudah was the father and figure of Christ under whose standard all that camp march are blessed In the second quarter Southward were REVBEN Simeon and Gad who were all diminished as Reuben for his sin lost his honor and birthright 1 Chro. 5. 1. so his sons rebelled Num. 16. and Simeon sinned with an high hand Num. 25. In the third quarter Westward were EPHRAIM Manasseh and Benjamin of whom the first was diminished the other two increased In the fourth quarter Northward were DAN Aser and Naphtali of whom the two former were multiplied the third and last diminished Concerning the families of the tribes excepting Levi they are 57 in all For here are families 1 Of Manasseh 8. 2 Of Benjamin 7. 3 Of Gad 7. 4 Of Simeon 5. 5 Of Iudah 5. 6 Of Aser 5. 7 Of Reuben 4. 8 Of Issachar 4. 9 Of Ephraim 4. 10 Of Naphtali 4. 11 Of Zabulon 3. 12 Of Dan 1. The sum of all the families is 57 to whom if we adde the twelve tribes and Iakob himselfe the father of them all the whole number is Seventie w ch was the number of the soules of Iakobs house that went into Egypt Gen. 46. 27. But comparing these now with the heads of families named in Gen. 46. we shall see five families rooted out one of Simeon Leahs son one of Aser the son of Leahs handmaid and three of Benjamin Rachels son whose ten families are decayed unto seven In these numbers increase and decrease of the tribes and families of Israel we may behold that w ch lob saith of Gods works Who knoweth not in all these that the hand of the Lord hath wrought this in whose hand is the soule of every living thing and the breath of all flesh of man Behold he breaketh downe and it cannot be built againe he shutteth up a man and there can be no opening He increaseth the nations and destroyeth them he enlargeth the nations and straitneth them Iob 12. 9 10. 14. 23. Vers. 53. Unto these the land shall be divided So the naturall sons of Israel onely had inheritance but under the Gospell it is prophesied that the strangers also should have inheritance among the tribes Ezek. 47. 22 23. By this also it appeareth that the tribes diminished had a double punishment losse of men and a lesser inheritance in the holy land both which are opposed to the covenant and promise made to their fathers w ch stood on these two branches multitude of children and inheritance of the land Gen. 12. 2. 7. and 13. 15 16. and 15. 5. 8. 18. and 17. 2. 6. 8. and 22. 17. and 26. 3 4. and 28. 13 14. and 35. 11 12. Sol. larchi here saith To these and not to them that are lesse than twentie yeares old although they came to full twentie before the division of the land For loe the land was seven yeares in conquering c. yet none had portion in the land but these six hundred thousand one thousand and if one of them had six sons they received but their fathers portion onely But Chazkuni referreth it to the families saying To these the 57 families reckoned here shall the land be divided for inheritance by the number of names 57 portions according to the 57 heads of families So it is written in Num. 33. 54. Ye shall divide the land by lot for an inheritance among your families This figured that onely such shall have their part in the kingdome of heaven as are chosen and called of God and have their names written in the lambs booke of life Rom. 8. 28 29 30. 1 Pet. 1. 2 3 4. 5. Rev. 21. 27. Vers. 54. To the many To the tribe and familie w ch hath many persons in it Thou shalt give them the more Hebr. thou shalt multiply his inheritance So the portions were not all equall in quantitie but proportioned to the multitude of men in the tribes and families To the tribes which had the greater multitudes they gave the greater portion though the portions were not equall for lo every tribe had his portion according to his multitude saith Sol. Iarchi on Num. 26. Hereupon the sons of Ioseph complained of their small portion in respect of their great multitude Ios. 17. 14. Vers. 55. by lot Although Eleazar the high Priest Iosua the governour and 12 princes of the tribes appointed of God Num. 34. 17 18. c. were to divide the land yet to cut off contention and to shew the providence disposition of God according to the purpose of his will hee commandeth lots to be cast for The lot causeth contention to cease and parteth betweene the mightie Prov. 18. 18. and The lot is cast into the lap but the Whole disposing thereof is of the LORD Pro. 16. 33. And the Hebrew Doctors say The portions were not made but by lot and the lot was by the mouth of the holy Ghost Sol. Iarchi on Num. 26. The manner of doing it was thus First the land was by men divided into parts according to the number of the tribes as Iosua sent men to divide the land which remained into seven parts and to describe it according to the inheritance of them and so to bring the description unto him that he might cast lots for them before the Lord. And they described it by cities into seven parts in a booke and brought it to Iosua who cast lots for them in Shiloh before the Lord and so every tribe received as their lot came up according to their families Ios. 18. 4. 11. c. Moreover in the Hebrew records it is said that it was not divided but by Vrim and Thummim which was the oracle of God in the brest-plate of the high Priest Exo. 28. Num. 27. 21. as it is said in Num. 26. 56. According to or At the mouth of the lot When Eleazar was cloathed with Vrim and Thummim Iosua and all Israel stood before him there was a Kalphi a vessell whereinto the lots were put whereof see the Annotations on Lev. 16. 8. of the Tribes names and a Kalphi of the names of the limits or bounds of the countries set before him and hee being directed by the holy Ghost said Naphtali commeth up the limit Genasareth commeth up he tooke out of the Kalphi of the tribes and Naphtali came up in his hand out of the Kalphi of the limits and the limit Genasareth came up in his hand And so for every tribe Talmud Bab. in Baba bathra c. 8. in Gemara and Sol. Iarchi on Num. 26. But observe that the land within lordan was divided onely to nine tribes and an halfe because two tribes an halfe had their portion on the outside of Iordan Num. 34. 13. 14 15. By reason of this dividing the land by lot the Scripture calleth
acknowledge faces that is be partiall respecting one more than another see Lev. 19. 15. Deut. 1. 17. Prov. 24. 23. take a gift or a bribe this is repeated from Exod. 23. 8. see the Annotations there Vers. 20. Iustice justice that is all manner justice and nothing but justice exactly carefully and continually shalt thou follow the Greeke translateth Iustly that which is just shalt thou follow The doubling of the word is for more vehemency see Deut. 2. 27. and when a word is trebled it is most vehement as in Ezek. 21. 27. Esay 6. 3. Vers. 21. not plant thee or not plant unto thee or for thy selfe see the like phrase in Exod. 20. 4. a grove called in Hebrew Asherah of Felicity or happinesse a blessed grove such the heathens used for the service of their gods as is noted on Exod. 34. 13. but the Lord would not have such neere his altar in his service notwithstanding the Israelites corrupted themselves herewith sundry times as Iudg. 3. 7. and 6. 25. 1 King 14. 23. and 16. 33. 2 King 21. 3. 7. and there were prophets of the groves 1 King 18. 19. For this sin God threatned to root up Israel out of the good land which he gave to their fathers 1 King 14. 15. The Hebrewes say He that planteth a tree neere unto the Altar or in any part of the Court-yard whether it be barren tree or tree that beareth food although he doe it for to adorne the Sanctuary and beautifie it he is to be beaten Deut. 16. 21. Because this was the manner of Idolaters they planted trees by the altars side that the people might assemble there Maimony treat of Idolatrie ch 6. s. 9. Vers. 22. set thee up a pillar or set up for thy selfe a statue or standing image whereof see the annotations on Lev. 26. 1. CHAP. XVII 1 The things sacrificed to the Lord must be unblemished 2 Idolaters are to be stoned to death being convicted by witnesses 8 Hard controversies are to be determined by the Law which the Priests and Iudges shewed which were in the place that the Lord should chuse 12 The contemner of that determination must die 14 The election and dutie of a King THou shalt not sacrifice unto Iehovah thy God Oxe or Lambe wherein is blemish any evill thing for that is an abomination to Iehovah thy God If there be found in the midst of thee in any of thy gates which Iehovah thy God giveth unto thee man or woman that hath done evill in the eyes of Iehovah thy God in transgressing his covenant And hath gone and served other gods and bowed himselfe downe unto them either to the Sunne or to the Moone or to any of the host of the heavens which I have not commanded And it be told thee and thou hast heard of it and hast inquired diligently and behold it be a truth and the thing certaine that this abomination is done in Israel Then thou shalt bring forth that man or that woman which have done this evill thing unto thy gates the man or the woman and shalt stone them with stones and they shall die At the mouth of two witnesses or of three witnesses shall he that is to die be put to death he shall not be put to death at the mouth of one witnesse The hand of the witnesses shall be first upon him to put him to death and afterward the hand of all the people and thou shalt put away the evill from the midst of thee If a matter be too hard for thee in judgment betweene bloud and bloud betweene plea plea and betweene stroke and stroke matters of controversies within thy gates then thou shalt arise and goe up unto the place which Iehovah thy God shall chuse And thou shalt come unto the Priests the Levites and unto the Iudge that shall be in those dayes and thou shalt inquire and they shall shew unto thee the word of judgement And thou shalt doe according to the word which they shall shew unto thee they of that place which Iehovah shall chuse and thou shalt observe to doe according to all that they informe thee According to the Law which they shall teach thee and according to the judgement which they shall say unto thee thou shalt doe thou shalt not decline from the word which they shall shew unto thee to the right hand or to the left And the man that will doe presumptuously not to hearken unto the Priest that standeth to minister there before Iehovah thy God or unto the Iudge even that man shall die and thou shalt put away the evill from Israel And all the people shall heare and feare and not doe presumptuously any more When thou art come into the land which Iehovah thy God giveth unto thee and shalt possesse it and dwell therein shalt say I will set over me a King as all the nations that are round about me Setting thou shalt set over thee a King whom Iehovah thy God shall chuse from among thy brethren shalt thou set over thee a King thou maist not set over thee a man that is a forrainer which is not thy brother But he shall not multiply horses to himselfe nor cause the people to returne to Egypt to the end to multiply horses for Iehovah hath said unto you yee shall not adde to returne this way any more Neither shall hee multiply wives to himselfe that his heart turne not away neither shall he greatly multiply to himselfe silver and gold And it shall be when hee sitteth upon the throne of his kingdome that hee shall write for him-selfe the Copie of this Law in a Booke out of that which is before the Priests the Levites And it shal be with him he shal reade therein all the daies of his life that he may learn to feare Iehovah his God to keepe all the words of this Law and these Statutes to doe them That his heart be not lifted up above his brethren and that hee turne not aside from the commandement to the right hand or to the left to the end that he may prolong his daies in his kingdome hee and his sonnes in the midst of Israel Annotations NOt sacrifice in Greek not offer which is more generall and so the Law also saith in Lev. 22. 20. see the annotations there Oxe or Lambe these are the greatest and the least sacrifices under which two all other are comprehended The Oxe is not to be understood of a gelded beast which wee usually call an Oxe for so it became blemished and unfit for sacrifice but of a Bull as the originall properly signifieth And the Lambe in Hebrew Se● implyeth the Kid also as Exod. 12. 3 5. blemish in Hebrew Mum of which the Chaldee Muma and Greeke Momos are derived Whereupon Christ is called the Lambe amomos that is without blemish 1 Pet. 1. 19. It meaneth any superfluity want or deformity in any part as is more largely shewed on Lev. 22. 22. 24. And it
Lord 1 Sam. 8. 5 6 7. and 12. 12 17 19. Then God gave them a king in his anger and took him away in his wrath Hos. 13. 11. Vers. 15. Setting thou shalt set that is thou shalt in any wise set thus bindeth hee them to doe this during according to the rules here given both for the good of their Common-wealth and Church and for a figure of Christ to whom the kingdome of Israel did belong Esay 32. 1. Zach. 9. 9. Luk. 1. 〈◊〉 32 33. thy God shall chuse either by the manistery of his Prophets as by Samuel hee anointed Saul 1 Sam. 10. 1. and David 1 Sam. 16. 1. by Ahijah he chose Ieroboam 1 King 11. 29 31 35. or by other meanes as by Vrim and Thum 〈◊〉 by Lot or the like thy brethren in this Christ was figured as also in his other functions of 〈…〉 phesie and Priesthood for so it is written Ie 〈◊〉 thy God will raise up unto thee a Prophet from the middest of thee of thy brethren Deut. 18. 15. And in all things it behoved him to be made like unto his brethren that be might bee a mercifull and faithfull high Priest c. Heb. 2. 17. Vers. 16. not multiply horses not get him many horses lest hee should put confidence in worldly strength whereof horses were the principall as appeareth by Psal. 20. 8. Deut. 20. 1. Prov. 21. 31. to Egypt in which land were many horses which they accounted the strength of their countrey 2 Chron. 1. 16. and 9. 28. whereupon it is said Woe to them that goe downe to Egypt for helpe and stay on horses c. Esay 31. 1. not adde to returne that is not againe returne either for the cause aforesaid or for to dwell there because of their great idolatries and other sinnes whereby Gods people might be corrupted So Ieremy from the Lord disswaded the Iewes from going into Egypt Ier. 42. 10 14 16 17 c. The Hebrewes say It is lawfull to dwell in all the world save in the land of Egypt but it is lawfull to returne to the land of Egypt for mer chandise c. Maim treat of Kings ch 5. s. 7 8. Vers. 17. multiply wives take many wives the Hebrews and some Christians understand this prohibition of exceeding many as Solomon had seven hundred 1 King 11. 3. and not that moe wives than one are here forbidden But howsoever God bare with the Kings Patriarkes and other men that had moe wives than one and that this custome prevailed yet from the beginning it was not so when he made but two to be one flesh Gen. 2. 24. Mat. 19. 5. Mal. 2. 14 15. that his heart turne not away or neither shall his heart turne away to wit from the Lord unto the pleasures of life or unto other gods by meanes of many wives as of Solomon it is said His wives turned away his heart after other gods and his heart was not perfect with the Lord his God 1 King 11. 4. Although his mother taught him better saying Give not thy strength unto women nor thy waies to that which destroyeth Kings Prov. 31. 1 3. greatly multiply or vehemently exceedingly multiply silver and gold which is another meane whereby the heart may be withdrawne from God for when men be rich and full they are in danger to denie and say Who is the Lord Prov. 30. 8 9. and they cannot serve God and Mammon Matt. 6. 24. the care of this world and the doceitfulnesse of riches choke the word of God Matt. 13. 22. and they that will bee rich fall into tentation and a snare and into many foolish and hurtfull lusts which drowne men in destruction and perdition 1 Tim. 6. 9. Vers. 18. when he sitteth upon the throne that is when he is King see the notes on Exod. 11. 5. the copie of this Law the Greeke translateth it this Deuteronomie The Hebrewes have recorded thus When the King sitteth upon the throne of his kingdome hee is to write him the booke of the Law for himselfe over and beside the booke which is left him of his fathers c. If his fathers have lest him none or if that be lost he is to write him two bookes of the Law the one he is to reserve in his house for so he is commanded as every one of Israel the other is not to depart from before him If he goe out to war it goeth with him if he fit in iudgment it is to be with him c. Maimony treat of Kings c. 3. s. 1. before the Priests the originall booke of the Law was kept in the Sanctuary as appeareth by Deut. 31. 26. 2 King 22. 8. out of that was the Kings copie to be written that it might be perfect Vers. 19. it shall be with him in all places whither hee went hee caried this copie of the Law with him as before is noted So God said unto Iosua This booke of the Law shall not depart out of thy mouth but thou shalt meditate therein day and night c. Ios. 1. 8. Thus David did as appeareth by Psal. 119. 16 24 97 98 99 c. learne to feare under this name feare notonely the inward reverence but the outward worship and service of God is also implied even all true Religion as that which is written their feare towards ●●ee is taught by the precept of men Esay 29. 13. is expounded by our Saviour In vainè they worship mee teaching doctrines the precepts of men Matt. 15. 9. Vers. 20. not lifted up above his brethren because the honour of the King was great and all were to obey him in the Lord Ios. 1. 16 17 18. Eccles. 8. 2 3 4. Rom. 13. 1. therefore hee is warned to shunne pride and loftinesse of heart whereupon David said Lord my heart is not haughty nor mine eies lofty c. Psal. 131. 1 2. The contrary was found in Nebuchadnezzar to whom the most high God gave a kingdome and majestie and glory and honour ●●but when his heart was lifted up and his minde hardened in pride he was deposed from his kingly throne and they tooke his glory from him Dan. 5. 18 20. The Hebrewes say As the Scripture giveth great honour to the King and every one is bound to honour him so it commandeth him that his heart be humble within him and wounded as it is said in Psal. 109. 22. My heart is wounded within mee And he may not carry himselfe with pride of heart in Israel more than is meet Deut. 17. 20. but must be gratious and pittifull both to little and great and goe out and come in for their pleasure for their good and have regard of the honour of the smallest And when he speaketh unto all the congregation in generall words hee should speake gently as it is said by David in 1 Chron. 28. 2. Heare mee my brethren and my people It is also said in 1 King 12. 7. If thou wilt be a servant unto this people
vers 10. Vers. 2. the day that is the time the first opportunity For this rite was fulfilled not the first day that Israel went into Canaan but after as Ios. 8. 30 c. So day is used for time Luke 19. 42. set up or erect to wit stones for pillars as in Exod. 24. 4. to signifie the tribes of Israel who being brought of God into his good land were by this extraordinary ●ite to professe their homage and obedience unto him otherwise to undergoe the curses of his Law Which their consciences accusing them of they might be led unto Christ for redemption frō the curse with plaister or with lime whiting that the words of the Law might be written thereon a memoriall of Gods benefits unto them This word plaister is used to signifie hypocrisie as Paul called Ananias a p 〈…〉 red or whited wall Acts 23. 3. and the Pharisees are likened to whited or plaistered s 〈…〉 which appeare beautiful outward c. Mat. 23. 27. And that seemeth also to be intended here that all such as seeke life by the workes of the Law which Israel after did Rom. 9. 31 32. have their hearts within hard and stony Ezek. 36. 26. though outwardly they appeare of another nature and colour and have the profession of the Law upon them wherein they glory Rom. 2. 17 23. Therefore afterward blessings and cursings are mentioned vers 12 13. but Moses rehearseth none but curses as being the due of all such hypocrites And from the last verse of this Chapter Paul proveth that as many as are of the workes of the Law are under the curse Gal. 3. 10. Vers. 3. all the words either the ten commandements called the ten words Exod. 34. 28. which are the summe of all Law or all the words following in this chapter See the notes on vers 8. that thou maist goe in and consequently possesse and enjoy the land which figured heaven for the Law promiseth life to them that doe it Rom. 10. 5. though unto man it is unpossible Or it may be read for that thou art come in as being a reason of this seruice and of their dutie to keepe the Law And so the Greeke translateth When as thou art come in Vers. 4. Ebal or Gebal as the Greeke writeth it Gaibal and here the other mount Ger 〈…〉 zim vers 12. is also understood but because the Curses onely are after expressed and they were on mount Ebal therefore it is named Of this mount see v. 12 13. with plaister or with lime as ver 2. Vers. 5. An Altar to signifie God the other party in the covenant as was at mount Sinai Exod 24. 4. and to teach by it and the sacrifices offered thereon that there could be no salvation but by Christ and his sacrifice for remission of sinnes yron that is any yron toole to hew or polish them but they should be as they were naturall to signifie the perfection that should be in Christs humane Nature whereby hee was acceptable to God though before men hee seemed altogether deformed Esay 52. 14. and 53. 2. he was the stone cut out without hands Dan. 2. 34 35. And no man might lift up an yron toole upon these stones to teach that mans wisedome is foolishnesse with God see the notes on Exod. 20. 25. where the axe of man polluteth the Altar of God Vers. 6. of whole stones and not of hewen Exod. 20. 25. Of such whole or entire stones did Iosua build it Ios. 8. 31. Burnt-offerings to obtaine of God by Christ forgivenesse of sins and sanctification of life see the Annotations on Lev. 1. Vers. 7. Peace-offerings to shew their hope of peace and prosperity by Christ and their thankefulnes for his graces see Lev. 3. eat there keeping a holy banquet for the flesh of the peace-offerings were eaten by the owners and Priests Levit. 7. 15 c. This taught them the spirituall joy which they should have in Christ for his deliverance of them from the curse of the Law and his flesh wee doe eat unto life eternall Gal. 3. 13. Ioh. 6. 51. Vers. 8. very plainly or plainly and well or fairly Heb. making them plaine doing them well Hereby is meant a large and faire writing easie to be read of all as in Habak 2. 2. That all sorts of people might have the knowledge of Gods Law and learne to doe the same And by this it appeareth that all the words commanded to be written or the Copie of the Law which Iesus wrote Ios. 8. 32. were not the whole booke of Deuteronomie much lesse all Moses books as some have thought for what stones would suffice for such a worke With these whited stones on whose outside the Law was written we may compare that white stone in Rev. 2. 17. which Christ giveth to all his and in the stone a new name written which no man knoweth saving he that receiveth it those being to shew the worke of the Law outwardly this the worke of Christs grace and Spirit inwardly Compare also 2 Cor. 3. 2 3. Vers. 9. Take heed and heare or Attend hearken and heare as the Chaldee expoundeth it but the Greeke saith Be silent and heare art become the people or art made for a people to Iehovah by renewing of the covenant declared so to be and therefore bound to obey his commandements as it is said For all peoples will walke every one in the name of his God and we will walke in the name of Iehovah our God for ever and ever Mic. 4. 5. Vers. 10. therefore thou shalt Hebr. And thou shalt obey the Chaldee saith shalt receive the Word of the Lord. By obeying or hearkning unto is meant the due observing or keeping of the things spoken as our fathers have not hearkned unto the words of this booke 2 King 22. 13. is explained our fathers have not kept 2 Chron. 34. 21. Commandements or Commandement meaning every one in particular and all in generall for the offending in one point maketh us guiltie of all Iam. 2. 10. See the like in Deut. 5. 10. Vers. 12. Gerizzim called in Greeke Garizein of it and the other mount Ebal Moses said before they were over against Gilgal beside the Okes of Moreh Deut. 11. 30. and Benjamin these six here named were the worthiest tribes all borne of Iakobs wives the free women and none of the handmaids children God shewing hereby the strength and noblenesse of the Blessings above the Curses and that they belong to such children of the free women as Paul teacheth us in an allegorie Gal. 4. 22 31. Howbeit though Moses appointeth these to blesse yet hee expresseth not the blessings by such silence leading his prudent reader to looke for them by another which is Christ Ioh. 1. 17. Act. 3. 26. For silence in the holy story often implieth great mysteries as the Apostle in Heb. 7. teacheth from the narration of Melchisedek in Gen. 14. Vers. 13. for the curse that is to pronounce it In speaking of
turneth aside See the Law concerning this in Deut. 24. 17. Vers. 20. fathers wife of this and the rest that follow see Lev. 18. Because men give themselves over to divers noysome lusts of the flesh God causeth divers curses to be pronounced against this sin the more to deterre men from following the same in any sort Vers. 24. smiteth this word is used sometime for slaying or killing as Deut. 1. 4. and 13. 15. sometime for wounding only Zach. 13. 6. or chastising Deut 28. 27 28. sometime for smiting with the fist of wickednesse Esai 58. 4. or with the tongue Ier. 18. 18. in secret the Greeke expoundeth it by guile Vers. 25. a reward a bribe or gift as the Greeke translateth it gifts and this is the Magistrates sin Deut. 16. 19. and was found in Israel as Mic. 3. 11. The heads thereof judge for bribes to smite in Chaldee to kill a soule that is a person the bloud of an innocent or as the Greeke expoundeth it of innocent bloud which is an effect of briberie as in Ezek. 22. 12. In thee have they taken bribes to shed bloud Vers. 26. Cursed be he the Greeke translateth Cursed be every man and so the Apostle alleageth it Gal. 3. 10. where he giveth this doctrine So many as are of the works of the Law are under the curse that whiles men doe the Law outwardly yet are they cursed by the Law as being privie transgressors for the Law is spirituall but men are carnall sold under sinne Rom. 7. 9 14. confirmeth not or stablisheth not which the Greeke and our Apostle in Gal. 3. 10. expound continueth not For when the just man turneth away from his justices and committeth iniquitie c. all his justice that he hath done shal not be mentioned in his trespasse that he hath trespassed and in his sinne that he hath sinned in them shall he die Ezek. 18. 24. See the Annotations on Lev. 26. 15. the words in Greeke all the words see the like in Lev. 25. 18. Exod. 25. 40. Deut. 19. 15. And so the Apostle citeth this place in Gal. 3. 10. continueth not in all things written in the booke of the Law to doe them this is an exposition of the former word confirmeth and sometime the one is put for the other as to confirme the words of this covenant 2 King 23. 3. for which another Prophet saith to doe the words 2 Chron. 34. 31. For not the hearers of the Law are just before God but the doers of the Law shall be justified Rom. 2. 13. And for asmuch as there is not a just man upon earth that doth good and sinneth not Eccles. 7. 20. therefore by the deeds of the Law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight Rom. 3. 20. that the Apostle rightly gathereth as many as are of the works of the Law are under the curse Gal. 3. 10. Therefore the use of the Law was to be a Schoolemaster unto Christ who hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us Gal. 3. 24. 13. CHAP. XXVIII 1 Vpon condition of observing and doing all Gods commandements hee promiseth many blessings earthly and heavenly 15 But for disobedience he threatneth manifold curses plagues and miseries ANd it shall be if hearkening thou shalt hearken unto the voice of Iehovah thy God to observe to doe all his commandements which I command thee this day that Iehovah thy God will give thee to bee high above all the nations of the earth And all these blessings shall come upon thee and overtake thee if thou shalt hearken unto the voice of Iehovah thy God Blessed shalt thou be in the city and blessed shalt thou be in the field Blessed shall be the fruit of thy wombe and the fruit of thy ground and the fruit of thy cattell the increase of thy kine and the flockes of thy sheepe Blessed shall be thy basket and thy dough trough Blessed shalt thou be when thou commest in and blessed shalt thou be when thou goest out Iehovah will give thine enemies that rise up against thee to be smitten before thy face they shall come out against thee one way and flie before thee seven waies Iehovah will command the blessing to be with thee in thy store-houses and in all that thou settest thine hand unto and he will blesse thee in the Land which Iehovah thy God giveth unto thee Iehovah will stablish thee unto him selfe for an holy people as hee hath sworne unto thee if thou shalt keepe the commandements of Iehovah thy God and walke in his waies And all peoples of the earth shall see that the name of Iehovah is called upon thee and they shall bee afraid of thee And Iehovah will make thee plenteous in good things in the fruit of thy wombe and in the fruit of thy cattell and in the fruit of thy ground in the land which Iehovah sware unto thy fathers to give unto thee Iehovah will open unto thee his good treasure the heavens to give the raine of thy land in his season and to blesse all the worke of thine hand and thou shalt lend unto many nations and thou shalt not borrow And Iehovah will give thee to be the head and not the taile and thou shalt bee above only and shalt not be beneath if thou hearken unto the commandements of Iehovah thy God which I command thee this day to observe and to doe And thou shalt not goe aside from any of the words which I command you this day to the right hand or to the left to goe after other gods to serve them And it shall bee if thou wilt not hearken unto the voice of Iehovah thy God to observe to doe all his commandements and his statutes which I command thee this day that all these curses shal come upon thee and overtake thee Cursed shalt thou be in the citie and cursed shalt thou be in the field Cursed shall be thy basket and thy dough-trough Cursed shall be the fruit of thy wombe and the fruit of thy ground the increase of thy kine and the flockes of thy sheepe Cursed shalt thou bee when thou commest in and cursed shalt thou be when thou goest out Iehovah will send upon thee a curse vexation and rebuke in all that thou settest thine hand unto which thou wouldest doe untill thou bee destroyed and untill thou perish quickly because of the evill of thy doings for that thou hast forsaken mee Iehovah will make the pestilence cleave unto thee untill he have consumed thee from off the land whither thou goest to possesse it Iehovah will smite thee with the consumption and with the burning-ague and with an inflammation and with an extreme burning and with the sword and with blasting and with meldew and they shall pursue thee untill thou perish And thy heavens which are over thine head shall be brasse and the earth which is under thee shall be iron Iehovah will give the raine of thy land to be
powder and dust from the heavens shall it come downe upon thee untill thou be destroyed Iehovah will give thee to bee smitten before thine enemies thou shalt goe out against him one way and flee before him seven waies and thou shalt bee for a removing to all the kingdomes of the earth And thy carkasse shall bee for meat to all the fowles of the heavens and to the beasts of the earth and none shall fray them away Iehovah will smite thee with the boyle of Egypt and with the Emrods and with the scab and with the itch whereof thou canst not be healed Iehovah will smite thee with madnesse and with blindnesse and with astonishment of heart And thou shalt bee groping at noone day as the blinde gropeth in thicke darknesse and thou shalt not prosper in thy wares and thou shalt bee onely fraudulently oppressed and robbed all daies and none shall save thee Thou shalt betroth a wife and another man shall lie with her thou shalt build an house and thou shalt not dwell therein thou shalt plant a vineyard and shalt not make it common Thine oxe shall be slaine before thine eies and thou shalt not eat thereof thine asse shall be violently taken away from before thy face and shall not returne unto thee thy sheepe shall be given unto thine enemies and thou shalt have none to save Thy sonnes and thy daughters shall be given to another people and thine eies shall see and shall faile with longing for them all the day and there shall be no power in thine hand The fruit of thy land and all thy labour shall a people eat up which thou knowest not and thou shalt be onely fraudulently oppressed and crushed all daies And thou shalt be mad for the sight of thine eies which thou shalt see Iehovah will smite thee with an evill bovle on the knees and on the legs wherof thou canst not be healed from the sole of thy foot even unto the top of thine head Iehovah will bring thee and thy king which thou shalt set overthee unto a nation which thou hast not knowne thou or thy fathers and there thou shalt serve other gods wood and stone And thou shalt be for an astonishment for a proverbe and for a by-word among all peoples whither Iehovah shall lead thee Much seed shalt thou carry out into the field and little shalt thou gather in for the Locust shall consume it Thou shalt plant vineyards and dresse them but thou shalt not drinke the wine nor gather the grapes for the worme shall eat it Thou shalt have olive trees in all thy coast but thou shalt not anoint thy selfe with the oile for thine Olive shall cast his fruit Thou shalt beget sonnes and daughters but they shall not be thine for they shall goe into captivity All thy trees and the fruit of thy land shall the grassehopper possesse The stranger that is within thee shall get up above thee on high on high and thou shalt come downe below below He shall lend to thee and thou shalt not lend to him hee shall bee the head and thou shalt bee the taile And all these curses shall come upon thee and shall pursue thee and overtake thee untill thou bee destroyed because thou hearkenedst not unto the voice of Iehovah thy God to keepe his commandements and his statutes which hee hath commanded thee And they shall be upon thee for a signe and for a wonder and upon thy seed for ever Because thou servedst not Iehovah thy God with joyfulnesse and with goodnesse of heart for the abundance of all things Therefore thou shalt serve thine enemies whom Iehovah will send against thee in hunger and in thirst and in nakednesse and in want of all things and hee will put a yoke of iron upon thy necke untill he have destroyed thee Iehovah will bring against thee a nation from far from the end of the earth as the Eagle flieth a nation whose tongue thou shalt not heare A nation of a strong face which will not regard the face of the old nor shew grace to the young And hee shall eat the fruit of thy cattell and the fruit of thy land untill thou hee destroyed which shall not leave unto thee corne new wine or new oile the increase of thy kine or flockes of thy sheepe untill he have destroyed thee And he shall besiege thee in all thy gates until thine high and fenced walls come downe wherein thou trustedst thorowout all thy land and hee shall besiege thee in all thy gates thorowout all thy land which Iehovah thy God hath given unto thee And thou shalt eat the fruit of thy wombe the flesh of thy sonnes and of thy daughters which Iehovah thy God hath given unto thee in the siege and in the straitnesse wherewith thine enemies shall distresse thee The man that is tender among you and very delicate his eie shall bee evill towards his brother and towards the wife of his bosome and towards the remnant of his sonnes which he shall leave So that he will not give to any one of them of the flesh of his sonnes whom hee shall eat because hee hath not left unto him any thing in the siege in the straitnesse wherewith thine enemies shall distresse thee in all thy gates The tender woman among you and delicate which would not adventure the sole of her foot to set it on the ground for delicatenesse and for tendernesse her eie shall bee evill towards the husband of her bosome and towards her sonne and towards her daughter And towards her after-birth that commeth out from betweene her feet and towards her sonnes which shee shall beare for shee shall eat them for want of all things in secret in the siege and in the straitnesse wherewith thine enemy shall distresse thee in thy gates If thou wilt not observe to doe all the words of this Law that are written in this booke to feare this glorious and fearefull name Iehovah thy God And Iehovah will make marvellous thy plagues and the plagues of thy seed plagues great and permanent and sicknesses evill and permanent And he will bring upon thee every disease of Egypt which thou wast afraid because of them and they shall cleave unto the. Also every sicknesse and every plague which is not written in the booke of this Law them will Iehovah bring upon thee until thou be destroyed And yee shall be left with a few men whereas yee were as the starres of the heavens for multitude because thou hearkenedst not unto the voice of Iehovah thy God And it shall be as Iehovah rejoyced over you to doe you good and to multiply you so Iehovah will rejoyce over you to make you perish and to destroy you and ye shall bee plucked from off the Land whither thou goest in to possesse it And Iehovah will scatter thee among all peoples from the end of the earth and unto the end of the earth and there thou shalt serve other gods which thou
that is which lieth in his bosome as Mic. 7. 5. Vers. 57. her after-birth and so her little one therein as the Chaldee expoundeth it the least of her children Vers. 58. fearefull in Greeke marvellous Vers. 59. thy plagues or every of thy plagues as the forme of the Hebrew word implieth thy seed Chald. thy children permanent or firme faithfull and continuing long as Tharg Ionath explaineth which shall dure long upon your bodies Vers. 60. disease or sicknesse in Greeke sorrow Of the plagues of Egypt see Exod. 8. c. Vers. 62. with a few men Greeke in a short or small number Chald. a people of number that is soone numbred See this fulfilled Esay 1. 9. hearkenedst not Chaldee receivedst not the word Vers. 63. will rejoyce although the destruction of the wicked is to themselves miserable yet Gods judgements upon them are unto him his Angels and all the Saints joyfull Rev. 18. 20. Ps. 58. 11 12. Ier. 51. 48. for when the wicked perish there is shouting joy Prov. 11. 10. Vers. 64. and unto the end c. that is from one end of the earth to another A like phrase is from the end of the heavens unto the end of them Matt. 24. 31. Mark 13. 27. This dispersion of the Iewes is visible even to this day serve other gods the Chaldee expoundeth it serve peoples that serve idols but it implieth Gods judgment in giving them over to further sinne see the notes on vers 36. Vers. 65. not finde ease or not have quietnesse Vnto this curse of the Law for sinne is opposed the promise of grace in Christ Ier. 31. 2. a trembling heart in Greeke a faint or discouraged heart See Levit. 26. 36. Esay 1. 5. failing of eies in Greeke failing eies that shall looke for deliverance but not see it pining of soule in Greeke a melting soule that is sorrowfull and fearefull See Lev. 26. 16. 1 Sam. 2. 33. Vers. 66. hanging in doubt that is uncertaine as after followeth So the Greeke thy life shall bee hanging before thine eies not have assurance of thy life or not beleeve in thy life in Greeke not beleeve thy life that is have no assurance of it but alwaies feare death Vers. 67. Who will give that is O that it were evening see Deut. 5. 29. A lively description of misery wherein every houre by night or by day seemeth long and tedious Compare Iob 7. 3 4. Vers. 68. to Egypt the house of bondage Exod. 20. 2. and figure of spirituall bondage under sinne and Satan in which estate the Law leaveth all men till they be redeemed by grace in Christ. So another Prophet saith They shall not dwell in I●hovahs land but Ephraim shall returne to Egypt and they shall eat uncleane things in Assyria Hos. 9. 3. CHAP. XXIX Mos●● being to renew the covenant exhorteth Israel to obedience by the m●mory of the workes they have seene 10 All stand before the Lord to enter into his covenant 18 The great wrath on him that flattereth himselfe in his wickednesse 29 Secret things belong unto God THese are the words of the covenant which Iehovah commanded Moses to strike with the sonnes of Israel in the land of Moab beside the covenant which he stroke with them in Horeb. And Moses called unto all Israel and said unto them You have seene all that Iehovah did before your eies in the land of Egypt unto Pharaoh and unto all his servants and unto all his land The great tentations which th●e eies have seene the signes and those great wonders Yet Iehovah hath not given unto you an heart to know and eies to see and eares to heare unto this day And I have lead you forty yeares in the wildernesse your cloathes are not waxen old upon you and thy shooe is not waxen old upon thy foot Ye have not eaten bread neither have you drunke wine or strong drinke that yee might know that I am Iehovah your God And yee came unto this place and Sihon king of Heshbon and Ogh king of Bashan came out against us unto battell and wee smote them And we tooke their land and gave it for an inheritance to the Reubenites and to the Gadites and to halfe the tribe of the Manassites Therefore yee shall keepe the words of this covenant and doe them that ye may wisely doe all that ye● doe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yee stand this day all of you before Ieho 〈…〉 your God your heads of your tribes your elders and your officers all the men of 〈◊〉 Your little ones your wives and thy 〈◊〉 that is within thy campe from the 〈◊〉 of thy wood unto the drawer of thy water That thou shouldest passe into the covenant of Iehovah thy God and into his 〈◊〉 which Iehovah thy God striketh with ●●ee this day That hee may stablish thee this day for a people unto himselfe and that he may bee unto thee a God as hee hath spoken unto thee and as hee hath sworne unto thy fathers to Abraham to Isaac and to Iakob And not with you your selves alone doe I strike this covenant and this oath But with him that is standing here with us this day before Iehovah your God and with him that is not here with us this day For ye know how we have dwelt in the land of Egypt and how wee have passed in the midst of the nations which yee passed by And yee have seene their abominations and their filthy idols wood and stone silver and gold which were with them Lest there should be among you man or woman or family or tribe whose heart turneth away this day from Iehovah our God to goe to serve the gods of those nations lest there should bee among you a root that beareth gall and wormewood And it be when he heareth the words of this oath that hee blesse himselfe in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walke in the imagination of mine heart to adde the drunken to the thirsty Iehovah will not spare him but then the anger of Iehovah and his jealousie shall smoke against that man and every curse that is written in this book shall lie upon him and Iehovah will blo● out his name from under the heavens And Iehovah will separate him unto evill out of all the tribes of Israel according to all the curses of the covenant that is written in this book of the Law And the after generation your sonnes that shall rise up after you and the stranger that shall come from a farre land shall say when they shall see the plagues of that land and the sicknesses thereof wherewith Iehovah hath made it sicke That all the land thereof is brimstone salt and burning that it is not sowen neither springeth nor any grasse groweth therein like the overthrow of Sodom and Gomorr●h Admah and Zebojim which Iehovah overthrew in his anger in his wrath Even all nations shall say Wherefore hath Iehovah done thus unto this land what meaneth the heat
of this great anger Then they shall say Because they have forsaken the covenant of Iehovah the God of their fathers which he strucke with them when he brought them forth out of the land of Egypt For they went and served other gods and bowed themselves downe unto them gods whom they knew not and hee had not imparted unto them And the anger of Iehovah was kindled against this land to bring upon it every curse that is written in this booke And Iehovah rooted them out of their land in anger and in wrath and in great indignation and cast them into another land as it is this day The secret things belong unto Iehovah our God and the things revealed belong unto us and to our sonnes forever to doe all the words of this Law Annotations TO strike or to cut whereof see the notes on Gen. 15. 18. Here the covenant is renewed betweene God and the people and it is the same in effect with the covenant made at Horeb Exod. 19. and 24. save that Christ who is the end of the legall covenant is here more cleerely revealed especially in Chap. 30. vers 11 14. of Moab the countrey on the out side of Iordan whereof see Deut. 1. 1 5. in Horeb or Choreb that is mount Sinai where the covenant was given Ex. 20. and the blessings and curses for confirmation thereof Lev. 26. 3 46. Vers. 3. tentations or trialls whereby God tried the Israelites faith and the hardnesse of the Egyptians in letting Israel goe see Deut. 4. 34. and 7. 19. From Gods former benefits whereof they had experience hee exhorteth them unto the keeping of the covenant Vers. 4. not given unto you This sheweth the unability of man to understand the things of God without the gift of God And long after this Paul complaineth of the Iewes even unto this day when Moses is read the veile is laid over their hearts 2 Cor. 3. 15. and Christ saith that to them it was not given to understand the mysteries of the kingdome of heaven Matt. 13. 11 13 14. Vers. 5. upon you or from upon you that is so as you should put them off and cast them from you Compare Deut. 8. 4. Vers. 6. bread to wit ordinary bread out of the earth but God hath nourished you with Manna the bread of heaven Psal. 78. 24 25. Deut. 8. 3. Vers. 7. Sihon in Greeke Seon king of Esebon Of this history see Num. 21. Vers. 8. wee tooke in Chaldee wee subdued to the Reubenites in Chaldee to the tribe of Reuben c. See the performance hereof in Num. 32. Vers. 9. wisely doe or prudently carry and with understanding and consequently prosper so in 1 King 2. 3. Ios. 1. 7 8. Here beginneth the one and fiftieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 section of the Law see the notes on Gen. 6. 9. Vers. 10. your heads of your tribes that is your heads or chiefe men which are the heads of your tribes the Greeke translateth them by one word Archiphuloi that is the chiefe or Rulers of the tribes Vers. 11. thy stranger in Greeke the proselyte which is in the midst of your campe Such of that mixed multitude as came out of Egypt with Israel Exod. 12. 38. and others that had joyned themselves to the Church hewer of thy wood such ashewed wood and drew water were the basest servants or slaves of Israel as afterward was the case of the Gibeonites Ios. 9. 21 27. who also by faith were admitted into the Church and covenant of Israel Vers. 12. That thou shouldest passe He speaketh to them all as to one man and to passe into the covenant is a phrase taken from the manner of making covenants when they passed betweene the parts of the sacrifices Gen. 15. 17. Ier. 34. 18 19 20. his oath or his execration in Greeke his curses because they tooke the curses of the Law upon them if they kept not the Covenant This is called the oath of God Eccles. 8. 2. So this people returned from the captivity of Babylon entred into a curse and into an oath to walke in Gods law which was given by the hand of Moses Neh. 10. 29. Vers. 13. a God or for a God this is the substance of the Covenant even such as is made with us in Christ 2 Cor. 6. 16. Heb. 8. 10. Rev. 21. 3. See the Annotations on Gen. 17. 7. Vers. 15. not here meaning their posterity throughout all generations to whom this covenant did alike belong So in Thargum Ionathan it is expounded and with every generation that shall rise up unto the worlds end c. But this is to be understood with exception of the new Covenant which God promised and hath now stablished unto us in Christ Ier. 31. 31 32 33. Heb. 8. 7 8 9 10. Vers. 16. how wee have dwelt or that which we have dwelt which Ionathan expoundeth the number of yeares that wee have dwelt This their peregrination in Egypt and deliverance thence with Gods gracious conduct of them thorow the wildernesse are named as motives to perswade unto obedience Vers. 17. filthy idols in Hebr. Gillulim whereof see Levit. 26. 30. in Greeke Idols Vers. 18. Lest there should be or as the Greeke and Chaldee explaine it That there be not whose heart the heart is to bee kept with all diligence because out of it are the issues of life Prov. 4. 23. According therefore to this Paul warneth the Israelites Take heed brethren lest there be in any of you an evill heart of unbeleefe in departing from the living God Heb. 3. 12. from Iehovah in Chaldee from the feare of the Lord. the gods in Chaldee the idols of the peoples a root an evill heart forementioned which is hidden from men as the root is hidden in the earth but the fruits after doe appeare The Chaldee translateth it a man beareth or fructifieth beareth fruit in Greeke springeth up which word Paul useth in Hebr. 12. 15. gall and wormwood the Greeke translateth with gall and bitternesse whereby is meant sinnes as the Chaldee explaineth it and as it was said to Simon Magus Thou art in the gall of bitternesse and in the bond of iniquity Act. 8. 23. The Apostle respecting this place saith lest any root of bitternesse springing up trouble you Heb. 12. 15 for enc●oles with gall saying enochlee trouble Gall or Hem 〈…〉 ke was a bitter and poisonous weed growing in the East countries as appeareth by Hos. 10. 4. and wormewood likewise which are applied sometime to sinnes as here and in Amos 6. 12. Deuteronom 32. 32. sometime to bitter punishments as in Ier. 9. 15. and 23. 15. Lament 3. 15 19. Vers. 19. of this oath or as the Greeke saith of this curse see vers 12. I shall have peace or peace shall be unto me that is safety and prosperity without hurt or punishment imagination or contemplation that which the heart hath spied out and looketh unto So the Chaldee translateth it imagination or conceit but the Greeke
calleth it aberration This sinne Ieremy often imputeth to this people Ier. 3. 17. and 7. 24. and 9. 14. and 11. 8. and 16. 12. and 18. 12. and 23. 17. to adde the drunken to wit the drunken soule to the thirsty or the moist to the dry meaning to adde sinne unto sinne in abundance as in Esay 30. 1. The soule that desireth is said to thirst Psal. 63. 1 and as the godly doe hunger and thirst after righteousnesse Matt. 5. 6. so doe the wicked after unrighteousnesse and drinke it up like water Iob 34. 7. which when he hath glutted himselfe therewith hee may be said to have added drunkennesse to his thirst Some understand it also of punishment for sinne which the Chaldee favoureth translating that I may adde unto him the sinnes of ignorance unto the sinnes of presumption The Hebrew Sephoth to adde is sometime used for to consume or destroy as in Psal. 40. 15. in which sense the Greeke Interpreters tooke it here saying that the sinner destroy not also him that is without sinne Vers. 20. not spare or not forgive him in mercy For if wee walke in the light as God is in the light the bloud of Iesus Christ his Sonne cleanseth us from all sinne 1 Ioh. 1. 7. But God will not bee mercifull to any that unfaithfully commit iniquity Psal. 59. 6. jealousie which is the rage of a man that he will not spare in the day of vengeance Prov. 6. 34. applied here unto the Lord as in Exod. 20. 5. smoke in Greeke burne a signe of great displeasure as in Psal. 74. 1. shall lie upon him the Greeke and Chaldee translate shall cleave unto him See this word in Gen. 4. 7. Vers. 21. out of all the tribes in Greeke from all the sonnes of Israel that is from the communion of the Church whereto hee addeth daily such as shall be saved Act. 2. 47. even as before in v. 20. the man was separated from communion with God So he threatneth against the false Prophets they shall not be in the secret of my people neither shall they be writtē in the writing of the house of Israel neither shal they enter into the land of Israel Ezek. 13. 9. And this is a separation unto evill or for his hurt as on the contrary the Levites were separated for their good when they were designed to stand before the LORD to minister unto him c. Deut. 10. 8. that is written in Chaldee that are written meaning all and every one Vers. 22. made it sicke in Greeke which he hath sent upon it God here signifieth such a certainty of his judgments as all peoples within the Church and without should be witnesses of them Vers. 23. and salt which maketh the land barren as saltnesse is used for barrennesse in Psal. 107. 34. So Abimelech sowed the city with salt which hee made utterly desolate Iudg. 9. 45. and the wicked man shall dwell in a salt land and not inhabited Ier. 17. 6. and of mytie places which should not be healed it is said they shall bee given to salt Ezek. 47. 11. any grasse or any herbe in Greeke any greene thing which phrase is used in Rev. 9. 4. This signified a spirituall barrennesse in mens hearts that they should not bringforth the fruits of the Spirit Heb. 6 7 8. overthrow of Sodom whereof see Gen. 19. 24 25. with the Annotations Zebojim by the letters Zebiim but read Zebojim as is noted on Gen. 14. 〈◊〉 in Greeke Sebocim These two cities were destroyed with Sodom and Gomorrhe and so another Prophet saith unto Israel How shall I make thee as Admah shall I set thee as Zebojim Hos. 11. 8. in his anger to their condemnation 2 Pet. 2. 6. he overthrew them and repented not Ier. 20. 16. Vers. 24. shall say every man to his neighbour as Ier. 22. 8. that is one to another Vers. 25. stroke Hebr. cut that is made with them which the Greeke translateth covenanted or disposed with their fathers For things done to the fathers are applied to the children see v. 14 15. The like speech is in 1 King 9. 8 9. they shall say Why hath Iehovah done thus unto this land and to this house And they shall answer Because they have forsaken Iehovah their God who brought forth their fathers out of the land of Egypt c. which another Prophet recordeth thus Because they have forsaken Iehovah the God of their fathers who brought them forth out of the land of Egypt 2 Chron. 7. 22. So in Ier. 22. 8 9. Vers. 26. other gods in Chaldee the idols of the peoples gods whom they knew not or gods which knew not them and he had not imparted that is and hee to wit any of those gods had not imparted or bestowed any good thing upon them Thus the Chaldee Paraphrast expounds it and they had not done good unto them and Ionathan in Tharg and they had not divided unto them Or it may be referred to the true God that he had not imparted that is taught them to have any part or fellowship with those gods or their services The Greeke translateth neither had hee distributed unto them And whereas it is said of the Sunne Moone and Stars that God hath imparted them unto all nations Deut. 4. 19. this here may aggravate their idolatry that not onely worshipped such but even the fictions also of the heathens gods which they never saw knew or had any manner of benefit by them whereby their sinne was the moreodious Vers. 27. every curse the Greeke paraphraseth according to all the curses of the covenant which are written in the booke of this Law The accomplishment of this was acknowledged by Daniel The curse is powred upon us and the oath that is written in the Law of Moses the servant of God because we have sinned against him Dan. 9. 11. c. Vers. 28. rooted them out or plucked them up which is contrary to planting Ier. 24. 6. and 42. 10. and 45. 4. Thus the Law of Moses leaveth sinners under the curse and rooted out of the Lords land but grace in Christ towards repentant and beleeving sinners planteth them upon the land and they shall no more be plucked up Amos. 9. 15. for they are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation 1 Pet. 1. 5. and cast them or sent them in the Hebrew the word cast hath an extraordinary great letter to signifie the greatnesse of this punishment And Baal Hatturim noteth upon it there is a great Lamed and a want of Iod to teach that there is no casting away like that of the ten tribes Whereof see 2 King 17. 18 23. Vers. 29. The secret things belong or hidden things are to be left unto Iehovah This is to be understood generally of all secret things which God hath not revealed in his word as the times or seasons which the father hath put in his owne power Act. 1. 7. the day and houre of judgment Matt. 24. 36.
and all other like things Particularly it may be applied to Gods counsell concerning the Israelites in punishing and casting them off for their sinnes and afterward calling a remnant of them which the Apostle treating of in Rom. 11. saith O the depth of the riches both of the wisdome and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments and his waies past finding out Rom. 11. 33. The Hebrew Nistaroth here used sometime meaneth secret sinnes as Psal. 19. 13. Vnto which some of the Hebrewes referre this speech that secret sinnes God will punish but open sinnes are for men to punish Chazkuni on Deut. 29. so Ionathan in Thargum explaineth it Hidden sinnes are manifest before the Lord our God and hee will take vengeance on them c. and the things revealed or but open or manifest things belong to us and to our sonnes upon which last words the Hebrew text hath extraordinary pricks to stir up attention to the matter here spoken as it is indeed worthy of all observation for it teacheth the continuall duty of Gods people in all ages to learne his law to doe the same and to have care that true religion may bee continued among their posterity The Hebrewes say Every man of Israel is bound to learne the Law be he poore or rich be he in health of body or under chastisements be he young or old and decrepit though he be so poore that he lives on almes yea though he have wife and children he is bound to set himselfe a time to leanne the Law by day and by night as it is said and thou shalt meditate therein day and night The great wise men of Israel some of them were hewers of wood and some drawers of water and some blinde notwithstanding they imployeth themselves in learning the Law day night How is a man bound to learne the law Vntill the day of his death as it is said and lest they depart from thine heart all the daies of thy life Deut. 4. 9. and all the while that he imployeth not himselfe in learning he forgetteth Maimony in Thalmud Torah chap. 1. sect 8 9 10. CHAP. XXX 1 Great mercies promised to the repentant sinners 11 The commandement is manifest and wordneere 15 Life and death are set before them with an exhortation to chuse life ANd it shall be when all these things are come upon thee the blessing and the curse which I have set before thee and thou shalt cause them to returne unto thine heart in all the nations whither Iehovah thy God hath driven thee And thou returne unto Iehovah thy God and shalt hearken to his voice according to all that I command thee this day thou and thy sonnes with all thine heart and with all thy soule Then Iehovah thy God will returne thy Captivity and have compassion upon thee and will returne gather thee from all the peoples whither Iehovah thy God hath scattered thee If any of thine bee driven out unto the outmost part of the heavens from thence will Iehovah thy God gather thee from thence will he take thee And Iehovah thy God will bring thee into the land which thy fathers possessed and thou shalt possesse it and hee will doe thee good and multiply thee above thy fathers And Iehovah thy God will circumcise thine heart and the heart of thy seed to love Iehovah thy God with all thine heart and with all thy soule that thou maiest live And Iehovah thy God will put all these curses upon thine enemies and upon thy haters which persecuted thee And thou shalt returne and hearken to the voice of Iehovah and do all his commandemēts which I command thee this day And Iehovah thy God will make thee plenteous in every worke of thine hand in the fruit of thy wombe and in the fruit of thy cattell and in the fruit of thy land for good for Iehovah will returne to rejoyce over thee for good as hee rejoyced over thy fathers If thou shalt hearken unto the voice of Iehovah thy God to keepe his commandements his statutes that which is written in this booke of the law if thou shalt returne unto Iehovah thy God with all thine heart and with all thy soule For this commandement which I command thee this day it is not hidden from thee neither is it far off It is not in the heavens to say Who shall goe up for us to the heavens and take it for us and cause us to heare it that wee may doe it Neither is it beyond the sea to say Who shall goe over to beyond sea for us and take it for us and cause us to heare it that wee may doe it But the word is very nigh unto thee in thy mouth and in thy heart to doe it See I have set before thee this day life and good death and evill In that I command thee this day to love Iehovah thy God to walke in his waies and to keepe his commandements and his statutes and his judgments that thou maist live multiply and Iehovah thy God may blesse thee in the Land whither thou goest in to possesse it But if thine heart turne away and thou wilt not heare but shalt be drawne away and bow downe thy selfe to other gods and serve them I denounce unto you this day that perishing yee shall perish yee shall not prolong your daies upon the land which thou art passing over Iordan to goe in thither to possesse it I take the heavens and the earth to witnesse against you this day life and death I have set before thee the blessing and the curse therefore chuse thou life that thou maist live thou and thy seed To love Iehovah thy God to hearken to his voice and to cleave unto him for hee is thy life and the length of thy daies to dwell upon the land which Iehovah sware unto thy fathers to Abraham to Isaac and to Iakob to give unto them Annotations THese things Hebr. these words that is things before spoken of Here follow promises of grace in Christ to repentant and beleeving sinners the blessing that is as the Chaldee explaineth it the blessings and the curses After the experiment of the Law and weakenesse thereof that it cannot keepe men in the state of blessednesse nor deliver them from the curse they are as by a Schoolemaster brought unto Christ Gal. 3. 24. Rom. 8. 3 4. have set Hebr. have given So in v. 15. and 19. cause them to returne or reduce bring againe to thine heart that is call to minde consider seriously So in Deut. 4. 39. This is the beginning of repentance and turning to the Lord by calling to minde their sinnes and Gods words and workes as in 1 King 8. 46 47. If they sinne against thee c. and thou bee angry with them and deliver them to the enemy c. If they shall make it returne to their heart in the land whither they were caried captives and returne and make supplication unto
his commandements 1 Iohn 5. 3. And this is his commandement that we should beleeve on the name of his Sonne Iesus Christ and love one another c. 1 Iohn 3. 23. Vers. 17. But if or And if thine heart turne c. This is the death and evill fore-spoken of see Deut. 29. 18. other gods in Chaldee the idols of the peoples Vers. 18. perishing yee shall perish that is assuredly and speedily perish as the Greeke saith perish with perdition So in Deut. 4. 26. Vers. 19. I call the heavens c. This obtestation of heavens and earth used also before in Deut. 4. 26. may be understood of God and the Angels in heaven as Paul expresseth them in 1 Tim. 5. 21. or of the other creatures also in heaven and in earth as Iosua said This stone shall be a witnesse unto us for it hath heard all the words of the Lord c. Ios. 24. 27. So in Deut. 32. 1. Esa. 1. 2. Give eare O heavens heare Oearth in Psa. 50. 4. He will call to the heavens from above and to the earth to judge his people and in Iob 20. 27. the heavens shall reveale his iniquity and the earth shall rise up against him I have set Hebr. I have given that is faithfully proposed by doctrine and discharged my dutie so in vers 15. The life and blessing which he set before them was by the faith of Christ Gal. 2. 16. and 3. 9. the death and curse was by refusing Christ and seeking to be justified by the workes of the Law for as many as are of the workes of the Law are under the curse Gal. 3. 10. therefore chuse Hebr. and chuse thou or and thou shalt chuse which is the dutie of all Gods people to be performed by grace in Christ. So David chose the way of truth the precepts of God Psal. 119. 30. 173. Compare also Ios. 24. 15 22. Thargum Ionathan explaineth this speech thus and chuse ye the way of life which is the Law that ye may live in the life of the world to come you and your sonnes This is true if it be understood not of the Law of workes but of the Law of faith as Rom. 3. 27 28. and 9. 31 32 33. Vers. 20. to hearken to his voice in Chaldee to receive his word unto him Chald. unto his feare he is thy life that is the author of thy life and salvation through Christ as in Iohn 17. 3. This is life eternall to know thee the onely true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent yea Christ himselfe is the resurrection and the life Iob. 11. 25. and 14. 6. And in 1 Iohn 5. 20. We know that the Sonne of God is come and hath given us an understanding that we may know him that is true and we are in him that is true even in his Son Iesus Christ this is the true God and eternall life CHAP. XXXI 1 Moses being ready to die encourageth the people that should goe into Canaan 7 He encourageth Iosua that should be their Governour 9 He delivereth the Law unto the Priests which was to be read in the soventh yeere unto the people 14 Moses and Iosua present themselves before the Lord 16 who fore-telleth the peoples falling from him and his anger against them therefore 19 Hee commandeth a song to be written to testifie against the people 24 Moses delivereth the booke of the Law to the Levites to be kept in the side of the Arke for a witnesse against them and their rebellion 28 Hee maketh a protestation to the Elders 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ANd Moses went and spake these words unto all Israel And hee said unto them I am an hundred twenty yeeres old this day I can no more goe out and come in and Iehovah hath said unto me thou shalt not goe over this Iordan Iehovah thy God he goeth over before thee hee will destroy these nations from before thee and thou shalt possesse them Iosua he shall go over before thee as Iehovah hath said And Iehovah will doe unto them as hee did to Sihon and to Og Kings of the Amorite and unto the land of them whom hee destroyed And Iehovah will give them before you and yee shall doe unto them according to every commandement which I have commanded you Be ye strong and couragious feare not neither be discouraged because of them for Iehovah thy God he it is that goeth with thee he will not faile thee nor for sake thee And Moses called unto Iosua and said unto him in the eies of all Israel Be thou strong and couragious for thou shalt goe in with this people into the land which Iehovah hath sworne unto their fathers to give unto them and thou shalt cause them to inherit it And Iehovah he it is that goeth before thee hee will be with thee hee will not faile thee nor forsake thee feare not neither be dismaid And Moses wrote this Law and gave it unto the Priests the sonnes of Levi which bare the Arke of the covenant of Iehovah and unto all the Elders of Israel And Moses commanded them saying at the end of seven yeeres in the solemnity of the yeere of release in the feast of Boothes When all Israel is come to appeare before Iehovah thy God in the place which he shall chuse thou shalt reade this Law before all Israel in their eares Gather together the people men and women and children and thy stranger that is within thy gates that they may heare and that they may learne and may feare Iehovah your God and observe to doe all the words of this Law And that their sonnes which have not knowne may heare and learne to feare Iehovah your God all the daies that yee shall live on the land whither ye are going over Iordan to possesse it And Iehovah said unto Moses Behold thy daies approach to die call Iosua and present your selves in the Tent of the congregation that I may give him a charge And Moses and Iosua went and presented themselves in the Tent of the congregation And Iehovah appeared in the Tent in a pillar of a cloud the pillar of the cloud stood over the doore of the Tent. And Iehovah said unto Moses Behold thou liest downe with thy fathers and this people will rise up and goe a whoring after the gods of the strangers of the land whither they are going in to be amongst them and will forsake mee and breake my covenant which I have stricken with them And mine anger shall be kindled against them in that day and I will forsake them and will hide my face from them and they shall be devoured and many evils and distresses shall finde them and they will say in that day have not these evils found us because our God is not amongst us And I hiding will hide my face in that day for all the evils which they shall have done in that they are turned unto other gods And now write ye
this song for you and teach it the sonnes of Israel put it in their mouthes that this song may be a witnesse for mee against the sonnes of Israel For I will bring them into the land which I sware unto their fathers that floweth with milke and honey and they shall eat and be filled and be fat and they will turne unto other gods and serve them and despightfully provoke me and breake my covenant And it shall be when many evils and distresses have found them that this song shall answer before them for a witnesse for it shall not be forgotten out of the mouth of their seed for I know their imagination which they doe this day before I have brought them in unto the land which I sware And Moses wrought this song in that day and taught it the sonnes of Israel And he charged Ioshua the sonne of Nun and said Be strong and couragious for thou shalt bring in the sonnes of Israel unto the land which I sware unto them and I will be with thee And it was when Moses had made an end of writing the words of this Law in a booke untill they were finished That Moses commanded the Levites which bare the Arke of the covenant of Iehovah saying Take this booke of the Law and put it in the side of the Arke of the covenant of Iehovah your God that it may be there for a witnesse against thee For I know thy rebellion and thy stiffe necke Behold while I am yet alive with you this day yee have beene rebellious against Iehovah and how much more after my death Gather together unto mee all the Elders of your Tribes and your Officers that I may speake in their eares these words and call the heavens and the earth to witnesse against them For I know that after my death corrupting yee will corrupt your selves and will turne aside from the way which I have commanded you and evill will befall you in the latter daies because yee will doe evill in the eyes of Iehovah to provoke him to anger through the worke of your hands And Moses spake in the eares of all the Church of Israel the words of this song untill they were ended Annotations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here beginneth the two and fiftieth Section or Lecture of the Law See the notes on Gen. 6. 9. And here Moses setteth the state of Israel in order before his death OLd Hebr. sonne of an hundred and twenty yeeres of which phrase see Gen. 5. 32. So long while Noe preached to the world building the Arke Gen. 6. 3 14. 1 Pet. 3. 19 20. Of these 120. yeeres Moses lived 40. in Pharaohs court in Egypt Acts 7. 20 23. forty in the land of Madian Acts 7. 29 30. Exod. 7. 7. and 40. yeeres he governed Israel I can no more goe out that is no more administer in my office see the Annotations on Num. 27. 17. This inability of Moses was not so much for his age for his eye was not dim nor his naturall moisture fled Deut. 34. 7. as for the ordinance of God next mentioned and Iehovah or for Iehovah hath said as is shewed in Num. 20. 12. Deut. 3. 25 26. And is often in stead of For as is noted on Gen. 12. 19. Or it may be taken as another reason why Moses might no longer governe them Vers. 3. Ioshua in Greeke Iesus who was substitute in Moses place Num. 27. 16 17 18. c. A figure of our Lord Iesus who by grace and truth bringeth us into Gods eternall rest after the ending of Moses Law Iohn 1. 17. Rom. 10. 4. Thus the people are comforted in respect of their sorrow for Moses death by promise of the Lords presence among them and Ioshuahs succeeding government under him Vers. 4. of the Amorite that is of the Amorites as the Greeke translateth by whose destruction before mentioned in Numb 21. 23. c. Deut. 2. and 3. Israel is encouraged against their other enemies the land that is the people of the land Vers. 5. commanded you which was to root them out and let none remaine Deut. 20. 16 17. Vers. 6. Be ye strong or Be confirmed Hold fast to wit your faith in God in Greeke Quit you like men which word Paul useth in 1 Cor. 16. 13. So after in vers 7. couragious or be hardy strong valiant in heart and carriage This word is applied to the heart in Psal. 27. 14. and armes in Prov. 31. 17. and signifieth an increase and stedfastnesse Prov. 24. 5. Ruth 1. 18. The like exhortation is often used as Ios. 10. 25. 1 Chron. 22. 13. 2 Chron. 32. 7. hee it is in Chaldee his Word it is So in vers 8. faile thee or let thee goe leave thee to thy selfe but will hold thee fast So vers 8. and Ios. 1. 5. Heb. 13. 5. Vers. 7. strong and couragious or confirmed and strong as vers 6. Iosua being to beare the charge and toile of the people hath the same exhortation and promise in particular that was before unto all and it was in the eyes of all lest any after Moses death should deny his authority A like speech Davide made to Salomon 1 Chron. 28. 20. Vers. 8. he will be with thee the Chaldee paraphraseth his Word will be thy helpe Vers. 9. this Law in Greeke all the words of this Law in a booke which bare the Arke they had the chiefe charge to looke to the Arke and other holy things and though the Levites bare it as appeareth by Num. 3. 31. and 4. 15. and 10. 21. yet sometime the Priests themselves also bare it as when they passed over Iordan Ios. 3. 6 17. when they compassed Iericho Ios. 6. 12. So after in v. 25. Moses spake to the Levites the Elders the Magistrates as the Priests by teaching so the Elders by governing are to look that the Law of the Lord be observed Mal. 2. 7. Hos. 4. 6. Mich. 3. 1. 2 Chron. 19. 6 8 9 10. Vers. 10. of seven yeeres that is of every seventh yeere which was a yeere of release Deu. 15. 1. the solemnity or the set time as the Greeke and Chaldee translate it the time release of debts Deut. 15. 1 2 c. that being freed from worldly cares they might apply their mindes to Gods Law A figure of the yeere of grace and remission of our debts by Christ whereupon wee should give our selves to holinesse Luke 4. 18 19 21. Rom. 6. 10 11 12 13. Boothes or Tabernacles whereof see Lev. 23. Vers. 11. which he shall chuse to set his Arke and Tabernacle and so to place his name there Deut. 16. 2. thou shalt reade speaking to Israel generally and it was performed in speciall by the chiefest of them either the high Priest as Ezra the chiefe of them that returned from Babylon read it Nehem. 8. 1 2 3 c. or as the Hebrewes say the King himselfe when they had a King used to reade For this Commandement was to Ioshua
first followed the margine Iehoschaphas paravit classem Iehoshaphat made ships afterward Iunius keepeth the line Iehoshaphato decem fuerunt naves Iehoshaphat had tenships and sundry other of like sort where the latter version differeth from the former by reason of the difference betweene the line and the margine in the Hebrew Text. These things not commonly knowne may cause the Readers to marvell and be offended at such varietie and seeming contrarietie both in these and other common versions set forth in vulgar tongues for no traslation almost in any language but followeth sometimes the one and sometimes the other and afterward sometime varieth from it selfe upon this occasion Now I without prejudice to any of better judgement setting downe both as the Reader may see in Exod. 21. 8. Lev. 11. 21. and 25. 30. and otherwhere and according to the measure of knowledge which God hath given me endevouring in the Annotations to cleare the Scripture of that seeming contradiction am publiquely taxed as setting downe that which the Hebrew hath not as making God like unto Ianus Bifrons the Idoll with twofaces to looke two divers wayes at once with other like hard imputations and this diversity of writing and reading is from the authoritie of some late Rabbines said to arise from corruption confusion doubting and uncertainty of Scribes c. I will set downe the reasons of my contrary judgement without purpose of further contention let the discreet Reader approve of what liketh him best If those divers readings which the Hebrewes call Keri and Cethib be corruptions of the Scripture they have beene many of them done voluntarily and purposely as is apparant to all of understanding that looke upon them For beside that the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 affirmatiue and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 negative in this word Lo are not one like another to deceive the eye so often in Moses the Prophets it could not arise from mistaking of letters to write Gnapholim for Techorim the Emrods as in Deut. 28. 27. 1 Sam. 5 or Shagal for Shacab as in Deut. 28. 30. Esay 13. 16. and Zach. 14. 2. Chore jonim for Dib jonim as in 2 King 6. 25. Chorachem for Tsoatham and Shenehem for Meme raglehem as in Esay 36. 12. and 2 King 18. 27. Macharaoth for Motsaoth as in 2 King 10. 27. And when Naarah a Young woman is but 22 times used by Moses that it should 21. times be written with want of the last letter so that in copies wanting pricks as many have done and do it might be read Naar a young man that these and sundry the like should be of negligence or oversight cannot with reason be supposed Besides that those words in the line have there usually the pricks or vowels of the words in the margine after which they were read 1 It standeth not with the wisedome goodnesse and providence of God who preserveth all his creatures and hath magnified his Word above all his name Psal. 138 2. that he should suffer his Word in the originall and fountaine thereof left for a peculiar treasure to his Church in all ages to be corrupted and depraved and that in many hundred places to the scorne of Infidels and offence of his weake people The Iewes which hold that God hath more care of the letters and syllables of the Law than of the starres of heaven will loath them that shall seeke so to disgrace the holy Scripture 2 It is noted by the Apostle for a chiefe priviledge of the Iewes that unto them were com 〈…〉 ted the Oracles of God Rom. 3. 1 2. And from them we Christians have received them But this is no praise or advantage as the Apostle attributeth unto them if they have through neg●●gence and of purpose corrupted so many places so that the corruption if such it be hath spread as a Leprosie over all the Bible there being scarce any one little booke but hath the markes of their violent hands upon it Not any one of Moses bookes not Iosua Iudges Ruth Samuel or the Kings not Iob the Psalmes Proverbs Ecclesiastes or the Song of Songs 〈…〉 ot Esai Ezekiel Ieremy the Lamentations or almost any of the small Prophets Not the bookes written after the captivity of Babylon as the Chronicles Ezra Esther Daniel Hag 〈…〉 gai Zaccharie no not so much but the ten Commandements as in Deu. 5. 10. are tainted with this pollution Where then is the praise of the Iew Or where is the faithfulnesse of the Church of God the Pillar and Stay of Truth 1 Tim. 3. 15. if we cannot have the Oracles of God from them with so much fidelitie as we have humane writings from many heathens 3. These sixteene hundred years whiles the Iewes have been cast off from being the Church of God and have beene scattered for their sinnes upon the face of the earth and have bent their studies to disprove Christianitiy yet can they not justly be charged to my knowledge 〈…〉 t they have corrupted the Scripture but the Hebrew text remaineth as it was in the Apostles dayes and may we thinke that they were lesse carefull or conscionable in former times 〈…〉 iles they were Gods Church and had alwaies some good people among them that would have care of the Law They have beene these many years so watchfull that if any fault escape 〈…〉 e Scribe the booke is not allowable to be read in their Synagogues till it be corrected They 〈…〉 ave these rules that if the booke of the Law doe want but a letter or if it have but one letter 〈…〉 re than it should or if one letter touch another or if the forme of any letter be so corrupted that 〈◊〉 cannot be read it is a booke which Children may learne on but it may not be read publiquely 〈…〉 aimony in Sepher Torah c. 10. And for these divers readings called Keri and Cethib which 〈◊〉 them are accounted of Divine Authority they say If the word which is full be written de 〈…〉 or that which is defective full or if a word which is to be read in the margine be writ 〈…〉 in the line as it is to be read as if Iishcabennah be written in the place of lishgalennah Deut. 28. 20. or Techorim in the place of Gnapholim Deut. 28. 27. or the like the booke is not allow 〈…〉 neither hath in it the holinesse of the booke of the Law at all but is as a booke on which children 〈◊〉 Maim ibidem c. 7. s. 11. Yea so farre hath their diligence extended this way that they ●ave reckoned every letter how often it is found thorowout the Bible no people on earth ●ave shewed like religious care of any booke as they have of the holy Scripture that we have no reason to suspect them in former ages whiles they inhabited Sion out of which the Law ●as to come forth unto all nations Esay 2. 3. 4. Kimchi Arias Montanus and such as thinke that these divers readings
neede them not Object If these divers readings were written by the Spirit of God as you will have it then must they bee for our learning and instruction for increase of our comfort and hope Rom. 15. 4 but if you cannot shew that there is a certaine and sure way to gather necessary doctrine from the● for our edification then have wee no reason to thinke with you that they are any part of the Scriptures of God or written by the Spirit of God Answ. All Translators old and new will have many of them to bee written by the Spirit of God as by their versions and notes hath beene manifested yea and the Spirit of God him-selfe by other Prophets hath confirmed sundry of them and they are all for ought that hath beene yet shewed of equall authority 2 If I or another man cannot shew a sure way to gather necessary doctrine from every one of them it followeth not that therefore a sure way could not heretofore or cannot now or shall not here after bee shewed by any 3 From many of them both doctrine and comfort hath soundly beene gathered by sundry men the like I doubt not may be done from the rest as God shall furnish men with more abundan●● of his Spirit Object If it were true that Keri and Chethib were both written by the Spirit of God c. then doe you herein declare your selfe to be guilty of great sinne treachery and unfaithfull dealing with the Scriptures in that you doe leave out divers parts of the same at your pleasure c. as in Gen. 8. 17. and 10. 19. and 25. 23. and 27. 3 c. Answ. 1. This reason if it be of weight woundeth not me alone but thorow my sides all ancient and latter Interpreters that have read noted or expounded some of them as is formerly manifested for none hath ever read or noted them all Though this be no excuse for me wherein I have done amisse 2 Those marginall readings doe many of them concerne the Hebrew tongue and Grammar which however they may be of great and good use for the Hebrewes and such as know that tongue yet are they not of such use in other languages When Arjeh a Lion is noted to be read Ari a Lion in 2 Sam. 23. 20. it sheweth in the Hebrew tongue an agreement with 1 Chron. 11. 22. where it is written onely Ari but in other tongues which write the name of a Lion but one way it hath not such use When Shenajim in statu absoluto as Grammarians call it is noted to be read Shene in statu constructo 2 King 17. 16. both which in English signifie two which word with us varieth not the forme as doth the Hebrew when Anu is by the margin to be read Anachnu in Ier. 42. 6. both which in our language signifie Wee when in the night Lam. 2. 19. is by the letters in the line belel and by the vowels and margin ballajlab both which signifie one thing and many the like as in 1. King 18. 5. and 19. 4. and 21 8. 2 King 7. 12. and 11. 20. and 15. 25. Esay 54 16 c. these differences may be profitably observed by them that know that first tongue but in other speeches cannot so be discerned So the order of the Hebrew Alphabet is set downe of God in some Psalmes and in Ieremies Lamentations which when the Hebrew is turned into other tongues will not so appeare And thus Hotse in Gen. 8. 17. being to be read by the vowels and margin Hojtse bring forth Gojim nations being written in the line with jod and read in the margin with vau in Gen. 25. 23. and sundry the like because they so specially belong to the Hebrew tongue and vary not in our English I have therefore omitted to speake of And if this reason be not of weight let me beare my deserved blame but let not the booke of God be accused of corruption And let the judicious and learned Reader judge of that which hath been said Of the Hebrew Records WHiles the Iewes Common-wealth did stand they had besides the writings of Moses and the Prophets which were of Publike and Divine authority other civill Monuments and private Records as all Kingdomes for the most part have for their use some of which are mentioned in the holy Scriptures Ios. 10. 13. 1 Kin. 11. 41. and 14. 19 29. But those ancient stories are now lost some that were written betweene the times of the last Prophets and the Apostles yet remaine as the two bookes of the Maccabees and that which Iunius calleth the booke of Simeon others the third of the Maccabees the writings of Iosephus Philo and the like When the second Temple was destroyed by the Romans and the Iewes Common-wealth overthrowne and their people scattered about the yeere of Christ 150. R. Iudah hannasi began to gather the private writings notes records and observations which were in the hands of the Doctors of his time and to compile them in one volume others after him added moe unto them with their own Commentaries which worke they called the Thalmud or Doctrinall In which they have recorded the practise of the Law from old time in their Common-wealth and Church according to their understanding but so as many Iewish fables vaine traditions received from their fathers and false expositions of the Scriptures are mixed with other things of better note and use The Thalmud called Ierusalemi was finished about the yeere of our Lord 230. and the other called Babeli about the yeere 500. according to the Canons and constitutions whereof the Iewes live to this day These longsome volumes were after abridged by Moses sonne of Maimon called Maimony and Rambam who lived 1200. yeeres after our Lords birth and he set downe in plainer Hebrew the expositions canons and traditions according to which they had interpreted the Law of God given by Moses and practised the same omitting the discourses fables disputes c. wherewith the Thalmud is re●erced And this Maimony is of such esteeme among the Iewish nation that of him it is said From Moses the Prophet to Moses sonne of Maimon there was none like this Moses Other Expositors they have some ancient as the Chaldee paraphrasts of which Ionathan that interpreted the Prophets is reported to be the Scholler of Gamaliel at whose feet our Apostle Paul learned the Law and Onkelos who paraphrased on the Law was not long after him Their latter Writers follow for the most part the Thalmuds and notwithstanding the many fables and falshoods that are found generally in them yet for the many good things and probable truths which from elder daies they doe record they have beene and are regarded of Christian Writers heretofore and at this day that of them it is said When they doe well they are the best Expositors and when they doe evill they are the worst Now whereas I have alleaged many of their interpretations especially from the Greeke and Chaldee
hath use and so in Psal. 86. 4. Vers. 2. In thee the Chaldee expoundeth it In thy Word so in vers 3. not be abashed that is not disappointed of my hope nor vanquished by my foes See Psal. 6. 11. shew gladnesse insult or triumph for ioy as having got the victory 2 Chron. 20. 27. Vers. 3. yea all or Yea any for whosoever beleeveth in God shall not be ashamed Rom. 10. 10. earnestly expect or patiently hope they shall be or prayer-wise let them be Unfaithfully transgresse that deale disloyally contrary to dutie promise and trust reposed in them So elsewhere he prayeth that no grace be shewed to such Psa. 59. 6. in vaine or without cause and without fruit Psal. 7. 5. Vers. 4. Thy wayes that is thy true faith and religion as Act. 18. 25 26. and thy guidance of mee therein So Moses prayed Exod. 33. 13. learne me thy paths inure me with thy paths or journeyes Learning implieth are and exercise and informing by customable practise Vers. 5. Make me to tread or to goe guide my way in thy truth that is in thy word for that is the truth Ioh. 17. 17. 3 Joh. 3. So after vers 9. Vers. 6. tender mercies or bowels of compassion See Psal. 18. 2. This word noteth the inward affections as the next kinde mercies imply the actions or effects of love from eternitie or from ever This in humane affaires sometime meaneth but of old or a long while Gen. 6. 4. Esay 42. 14. But here and else-where it noteth the eternitie of Gods love which was firme unto his before the world was 2 Tim. 1. 9. Eph. 1. 4. so shewed throughout all generations and is in like sort for ever or to eternity Psal. 100. 5. because our firme happinesse shall have no end Dan. 12. 3. 1 Pet. 1. 4. And these both are conjoyned Psal. 103. 17. Vers. 7. Sinnes of my youth The imagination of mans heart is evill from his youth Gen. 8. 21. and of all mans life youth commonly is most vaine Eccles. 11. 9 10. for which God often punisheth men in their age so making them as Iob saith to inherit the iniquities of their youth Iob 13. 26. Ier. 3. 25. Vers. 8. will he teach or informe with the law for of this word the Law is derived Psal. 19. 8. sinners in the way that is such as sinne and misse the right way God will teach and reduce them thus the Greeke interpreteth it Or those that are sinners he will teach and informe in the way that is right or in his way as vers 9. Vers. 9. to tread in judgement to walke judiciously and as is right and fit Vers. 10. his covenant his testament all bond or league called in Hebrew Brith w ch hath the signification of brotherly or friendly parting of explaining the conditions of agreement For at the making of solemne covenants beasts were killed and parted asunder and the covenant-makers went betweene the parts Gen. 15. 9 10. 17. Ier. 34. 18. Hereupon is the phrase of cutting or striking a covenant Psal. 50. 5. and 83. 6. and 89. 4. The Apostles in Greeke call it diathekee a testament a testamentall covenant or disposing of things Heb. 8. 8. from Ier. 31. 31. And there be two principall covenants or testaments the first that which God made with our fathers when he brought them out of Aegypt the summe whereof was contained in the ten commandements written by the finger of God Deut. 4. 13. Exod. 24. 28. 1 King 8. 21. the other laws written by Moses in a booke called the booke of the covenant 2 King 23. 2. Exod. 24. 4. 7. The second covenant is that new testament all bond which God hath made with us in Christ established upon better promises and confirmed by the bloud and death of Christ the testator as the first was by the bloud and death of beasts Luke 22. 20. Heb. 8. 6. 8. and 9. 16 17 18 c. Vers. 11. even mercisully pardon or therefore thou wilt mercifully forgive This David taketh from Moses who first used this word in a case of great offence Exod. 34. 9. and it betokeneth to spare or pardon upon pacification of grace and mercie and is interpreted by the Apostle in Greeke to be mercicifull propitious or appeased Heb. 8. 12. from Ier. 31. 34. Often used in the Law for forgivenesse upon oblation or intercession made by the Priest Lev. 4. 20. 26. 31. 35. and 5. 10. 13. 16. 18. c. Vers. 12. Who is the man or What manner of man shall he be The Hebrew phrase is Who this the man which also may be resolved Whosoever is the man he shall chuse that is which he shall love and like or which he loveth So chosen Isa. 42. 1. is translated in Greke beloved Matt. 12. 18. Or which he shall require and command for so chusing sometime signifieth 2 Sam. 19. 38. and 15. 15. Vers. 13. lodge in good that is continue in good estate case and prosperitie So lodging is for continuance Iob 17. 2. Prov. 19. 23. and for good the Chaldee saith the blessednesse of the world to come the Greeke translateth in good things the land meaning Canaan the land promised for a possession to Abraham and his seed Gen. 15. 7. and 12. 7. called therfore the land of promise Heb. 11. 9. elsewhere the holy land Zach. 2. 12. the Lords land Ps. 10. 16. the land of Immanuel that is of Christ Isa. 8. 8. a land flowing with milke honey and the pleasantast of all lands Ezek. 20. 6. the seat of Gods ancient Church and figure of his Kingdome Vers. 14. The secret or The mysterie of the Lord meaning that his secret favour is towards them and his secret counsell and mysterie of the faith is revealed unto them for so this word noteth as when Iob saith Gods secret was upon his tabernacle meaning his favour and providence Iob 29. 4. and Gods secret is his counsell Iob 15. 8. Ier. 23. 18. 22. and the hid thing of Christ are often called a mysterie Rom. 16. 25. 1 Cor. 2. 7. and 4. 1. 1 Tim. 3. 9. 16. Eph. 3. 3. 4. 9. Col. 1. 26 27. So Prov. 3. 32. Vers. 16. turne the face or Have respect unto me This was a blessing promised in the law Levit. 26. 9. I will turne the face unto you and make you increase Contrary to this is the hiding of Gods face Psal. 69. 17 18. solitary alone or desolate see Psal. 22. 21. Vers. 17. are inlarged or doe inlarge themselves doe make wide roomth He sheweth his heart to bee penned in with straights and distressing sorrowes which largely spread themselves overall vexations or anguishes tribulations which presse and wring Vers. 18. See my affliction This phrase is taken from Deut. 26. 7. he saw our affliction And it here meaneth a seeing and regarding with compassion and so a redresse and helpe Gen. 29. 22. Exod. 3 7 8. Psal. 31. 8. and 119. 153. and 106. 44. Sometime
so after in vers 13. see Psal. 35. 18. above telling that is moe than I or any can tell or moe than can be told Vers. 7. thou wouldest not or delightedst not Christ was to cause the sacrifice and oblation to cease D●● 9. 27. because it was unpossible that they should purge sinnes Hebr. 10. 4. therefore speaketh hee thus to God his Father Heb. 10. 5. mine eares or eares to me see Psal. 3. 1. digged open or pierced that is thou hast made mee obedient to thy voice contrary to which is the stopping of the eare Psal. 58. 5. so the Chaldee explaineth it thou hast digged open mine eares to hearken unto thy commandements Or mine eares thou hast boared as thy servant for ever according to the law Exod. 21. 6. The Greeke Interpreters to make the sense plainer say but a body hast thou fitted to me meaning that his body was ordained and fitted to be a sacrifice for the sinnes of the world when the other legall sacrifices were refused as unprofitable And thus the Apostle alleageth the words following the Greeke Hebr. 10. 5 10. burnt-offering sacrifice that goeth all up in fire See Psal. 20. 4. sin-offering or expiation oblation for sinne as the Apostle calleth it Hebr. 10. The word Sinne is often in the Law put for the sin-offering Levit. 4. 24 c. Exod. 29. 14 So the Apostle saith Him that knew no sin he made sin that is a sin-offering for us 2 Cor. 5. 21. Vers. 8. Loe I come or am come to wit into the world Hebr. 10. 5. and particularly to Ierusalem to give my selfe a sacrifice for sinne See Mark 10. 32 33 34. The Chaldee not understanding this mystery paraphraseth Loe I enter into life eternall when I have studied or exercised my selfe in the roll of the booke of the law which is written for me alluding as it seemeth to Deut. 17. vers 18 19 20. the roll or volume of the booke that is a booke or scroll of paper or parchment rolled up The like phrase is used Ier. 36. 2 c. Ezek. 2. 9. c. The Hebrew Sepher book is used generally for any writings evidences bils court-rolls c. Deut. 24. 1. 2 King 5. 5 6. Ier. 32. 11. and the bookes in Israel were written in long scrolles and folden or wrapped up Hence is that phrase the heavens shall be folden up like a booke Isa. 34. 4. Rev. 6. 14. it is written So Chist saith The son of man goeth as it is written of him Mat. 26. 24. and Moses wrote of me Ioh. 5. 46. See also Luk. 24. 44. 46. Act. 13. 29. Vers. 9. thy acceptable will by the which will we are sanctified even by the offering of the body of Iesus Christ once Heb. 10. 10. See also Ioh. 6. 38. Luk. 22. 42. Vers. 10. I have preached the glad tidings of or I have evangelized justice of this word the Evangelie or Gospell hath the name the Greeke signifying Good tidings and the English also to like effect made of the Saxon godspell that is a good speech And the justice here meant is thus set forth by the Apostle Now is the justice of God made manifest without the law having witnesse of the law and of the Prophets namely the justice of God by the faith of Iesus Christ unto all and upon all that beleeve c. Rom. 3. 21 22. the great church or assembly congregation So Psal. 22. 23. close not up restraine not as in a prison that words should not be uttered Ier. 32. 2 3. Vers. 11. I said that is mentioned and spoke of as 2 Sam. 6. 22. to the great church the word to is referred to Gods mercy and truth extended to the church The Greeke referreth it to concealed and translateth from the great church And the Hebrew elsewhere usually speaketh Psal. 69. 6. and 78. 4. and 139. 15. Vers. 13. iniquities this word as the former evils is sometime used for sinne sometime for the punishment of sinne See Psal. 31. 11. Vers. 14. Vouchsafe or Let it please thee Vers. 15. to make an end of it to consume or destroy it Compare this conclusion with the 70. Psalme Vers. 16. made desolate or wondrously wasted unto amazednesse and astonishment So after in Psal. 46. 9. and 69. 26. and 73. 19. and 79. 7. for a reward or an end of their shame that they would bring upon me End is used for reward as Psal. 19. 12. or For because of their shame The Hebrew word sometime signifieth because Isa. 5. 23. Genes 22. 18. Deut. 7. 12. aha the Chaldee openeth it with this paraphrase wee are glad at his destruction Vers. 18. thinketh on me in Greeke hath care of me in Chaldee thinketh good for me delay not prolong not the time till the last and consequently faile not The word is so to tarry or linger as to disappoint one of his expectation as Habak 2. 3. Though it tarry wait thou for it shall surely come and shall not delay that is not faile And thus may we understand other like Scriptures as Deut. 7. 10. God will not delay that is not faile to reward him that hateth him Deut. 23. 21. when thou vowest a vow to the Lord thou shalt not delay that is not faile to pay it So Exod. 22. 29. and sundry the like PSAL. XLI David prophesieth of Christs poverty and afflictions 5 His prayer and complaint of his enemies 10 Iudas his treachery 11 Christs resurrection and glorie for which he blesseth God To the Master of the Musicke a Psalme of David O Blessed is hee that prudently attendeth unto the poore weakling in the day of evill Iehovah will deliver him Iehovah will keepe him and preserve him alive he shall be made blessed in the earth and give thou him not to the soule of his enemies Iehovah will uphold him on the bed-sted of languishing sorrow all his bed thou hast turned in his sicknesse I did say Iehovah be gracious to me heale my soule for I have sinned against thee My enemies said evill of me when shall he die and his name perish And if he come to see he speaketh false vanitie in his heart he heapeth up painfull iniquitie to him selfe he goeth forth abroad he speaketh it Together against me whisper doe all that hate me against me they thinke evill to me A mischievous thing is fastened in him and he that lieth downe shall no more rise up Also the man of my peace he whom I trusted in that eateth my bread he hath greatly lifted up the heele against me And thou Iehovah be gracious to me and raise me up and I shall repay them By this I know that thou delightest in me because my enemie shall not shout triumphantly over me And me thou hast sustained me in mine integritie and hast setled me before thy face for ever Blessed is Iehovah the God of Israel from eternitie and unto eternity Amen and Amen Annotations THat prudently attendeth or skilfully carieth himselfe it
all men The Chaldee saith all my dayes were written in the booke of thy memoriall were written Hebr. shall bee written which meaneth a continuall act see Psal. 2. 1. So after shall be formed in the dayes they were formed or what dayes they should be formed meaning that all his members in the dayes that they were in fashioning in his mothers wombe were written downe of God or that the dayes of their forming were written The Chaldee saith in the day when the world was created c. and when not one Hebr. and not one of them or in them Meaning that God had written downe all parts of his body not onely when they were in forming but long before So commending his providence who calleth things which bee not as though they were Rom. 4. 17. Vers. 17. how precious are that is how rare are thy thoughts to me how few of them can I speake of how incomprehensible are thy cogitations The words following shew this to bee the meaning Compare Iob 26. 14. And a thing is said to bee precious which cannot bee attained unto or effected see Psal. 49. 9. Otherwise we may take it thus Thy thoughts that is the thoughts that I have of thee how precious of how much esteeme and worth are they to me So precious is used Psal. 36. 8. The Chaldee expoundeth it How honourable are they that love thee O God and how are their princes fortified mightily increast many and strong see Psal 40. 5. the summes Hebr. heads used for summes and so the Greeke archee Numb 1. 2. and 26. 6. I awake and or when I awake I am still with thee that is still meditating of thee The Chaldee referreth this to the last resurrection thus I shall rise againe in the world to come and shall be still with thee See Psal. 17. 15. Vers. 19. If thou wouldest or O that thou wouldest for it seemeth here to be a wish as also in the Greeke of the new Testament Luk. 12. 49. what will I if it were that is O that it were already kindled So in 1 Chron. 4. 10. If thou wilt blesse mee that is O that thou wouldest blesse Or Surely thou wilt slay c. and men c. this may also be referred to God thus and wouldest say Ye bloudy men depart from me or to David who saith depart ye from me The Chaldee expoundeth it let the men addicted to the judgement of death depart from me Vers. 20. speake of thee or against thee as the like Hebraisme meaneth 1 King 21. 13. witnessed of or against him See the notes on Psal. 5. 5. Or say thee that is mention or speake of as Psal. 40. 11. 2 Sam. 6. 22. The Chaldee understands it of swearing which sweare in thy name deceitfully to a mischievous purpose or with a crafty intent that is craftily wickedly See Psal. 10. 2. lift up doe thy foes c. or thy foes take up thy name to vanitie this sense the Chaldee paraphrase giveth and the phrase is taken from Ex. 20. 7. the word name being understood as in Lev. 24. 11. the word Lord is understood or thy soes lift up their head as is expressed Psal. 83. 2. in vaine that is they are vainly proud and insolent Often times words wanting are to be supplied see the Notes on Psal. 103. 9. Or they lift up thy foes in vaine that is the wicked which speake evill of thee doe vainly extollthine enemies to false vanitie or in vaine see Psal. 12. 3. and 24. 4. Vers. 21. am not I grieved or grieve irke my selfe so Psal. 119. 158. Compare also 2 Chron. 19. 2. Prov. 29. 27. Vers. 23. Prove or trie me Compare Psal. 26. 2. Vers. 24. way of sorrow or of griefe that is wicked way purposes or actions which are grievous to God and men and in speciall the way of idolatry for of this word Idols have their name see Psal. 16. 4. So a word of griefe Prov. 15. 1. is that which grieveth him to whom it is spoken way of eternity or of antiquitie the old way as Ier. 6. 16. meaning the way of faith and godlinesse which God taught from the beginning and which continueth for ever contrary to the way of the wicked which perisheth Psal. 1. 6. PSAL. CXL David prayeth for deliverance from the wicked 9. He prayeth against them 13 He comforteth him-selfe by confidence in God To the Master of the Musicke a Psalme of David RElease mee O Iehovah from the evill man from the man of violent wrongs preserve thou mee Which thinke evill things in heart every day they gather warres They sharpen their tongue like a serpent the hot poison of the Aspe is under their lips Selah Keepe me O Iehovah from the hands of the wicked from the man of violent wrongs preserve thou me which thinke to thrust away my feet The proud have hid a snare for me and cords they have spred a net by the paths side they have set grinnes for me Selah I said to Iehovah Thou art my God heare O Iehovah the voice of my supplications for grace Iehovih Lord the strength of my salvation thou hast covered my head in the day of armes Grant not O Iehovah the desires of the wicked further not his crafty device lest they exalt themselves Selah The head of those that compasse mee about the molestation of their lips shall cover them They shall bring upon them coales he shall fell them into the fire into deepe pits that they rise not up An ill tongued man shall not be est ablished in the earth a man of violent wrong evill shall hunt him to a sudden overthrow I know that Iehovah will doe the judgement of the poore afflicted the doome of the needie Surely the just shall confesse to thy Name the righteous shall sit before thy face Annotations THey gather warres or are gathered to warres getting themselves and other together The active is often used passively Psal. 32. 9. and 109. 13. Vers. 4. of the Aspe or Viper Greeke of Asps so Rom. 3. 13. Compare Psal. 58. 5. Vers. 5. to thrust away my feet or to overthrow my footsteps Vers. 6. by the paths side or fast by my path Heb. at the hand of the path Compare Psal. 142. 4. Ier. 18. 22. Prov. 29. 5. Vers. 8. Iehovih or God see Psal. 68. 21. of armes or of armour that is of battell as the Greeke translateth it when men harnesse themselves This is that helmet salvation Eph. 6. 17. Vers. 9. further not or bring not to passe lest they or they will exalt themselves that is be proud or lofty Compare Deut. 32. 27. Vers. 10. the head that is As for the head the chiefe of those c. An head sometime signifieth a company of chiefe men 1 Chron. 4. 42. though here perhaps some one man is meant as the Chaldee nameth Achitophel It is also used for a band of men as Iob 1. 17. Sometime the Hebrew word signifieth gall as Psal. 69.
heavens in the clouds of the aire Gen. 1. 7. Job 26. 8. and 37. 11. Vers. 6. stablished or made them stand Psalm 119. 91. a statute that is statutes or decrees rules ordinances whereby every creature is bounded to his set time and place as Job 14. 5 13. and 26. 10. whereupon mention is made of the statutes or ordinances of heaven of the Moone and starres c. Iob 38. 33. Ier. 31. 35. and 33. 25. it shall not passe that is not any of the things fore-mentioned shall passe the statute or bound set of God or it the statute shall not passe away or faile or not be altered as Esth. 1. 10. and 9. 27. 28. Vers. 7. dragons or whale-fishes Vers. 8. vapour or smoake exhalation dampe As these and all other creatures are here stirred up to praise the Lord so for our sakes are these things written that we should learne by them to praise the Creator And it is a rule in the Hebrew Canons that for winds when they blow tempestuously and for lightning thunder c. for lights in the aire which seeme to be starres that fall or runne from place to place or blazing stars comets c. when a man seeth any of these hee is to blesse God who hath filled the world with his power and might Also he that seeth the beautifull creatures as going out into the fields or gardens in the spring time seeth the trees sprouting and blossoming he is to blesse God who hath not let his world lacke any thing but hath created in it goodly creatures and saire trees c. for the use of the sons of Adam So for mountaines and hills seas and desarts rivers c. if he see any of them from three daies to three daies he is to blesse the Creater of the world Maimony in Misneh in Beracoth chap. 10. sect 14. 13. 15. Vers. 10. fethered fowle or winged bird Hebr. bird of wing Vers. 13. high advanced or set on high so Esay 12. 4. It is a strong tower into which the righteous runneth and is also set on high in safety Prov. 18. 10. Vers. 14. the horne the power and glory as the Chaldee saith the glory of the kingdome of his people see Psal. 75. 10. This is accomplished in Christ the horne of salvation Luk. 1. 69. the praise understand which is the praise of his Saints that is their glory or an argument of praise to them neare him Gods people are said to be neare unto him in respect of his covenāt with them in Christ Ephes. 2. 13. their service of him Levit. 10. 3. and spirituall alliance in Christ Ioh. 20. 17. 1 Joh. 3. 1. For this word nigh is used for kindred Lev. 21 3. Christ draweth neare unto God for them Jer. 30. 21. and they by him Heb. 10. 19. 22. PSAL. CXLIX God is publikely to be praised for his graces to his Church and power given to the same Halelu-jah SIng ye to Iehovah a new song his praise in the Church of gracious Saints Let Israel rejoyce in his makers let the sons of Sion be glad in their King Let them praise his name with flute with timbrell and harpe let them sing Psalmes unto him For Iehovah taketh pleasure in his people he will beautifie the meeke with salvation The gracious Saints shall be gladsome in glory shall shout joyfully upon their beds The exaltations of God in their throat and a two-edged sword in their hand To doe vengeance on the heathens reproofs in the nations To binde their Kings in chaines and their Nobles in fetters of iron To doe on them the judgement written this comely honour is to all his gracious Saints Halelu-jah Annotations HIs makers the Father the Word and the Hely Ghost which three are one 1 Ioh. 5. 7. The mysterie of the Trinity is in the Hebrew phrase so in many other as Let us make man in our image Gen. 1. 26. Where is God my makers Iob 35. 10. Thy makers is thine husbands Esai 54. 5 Remember thy Creators Eccles. 12. 1. and sundry the like God also is our maker both in nature and grace see Psal. 100. 3. their King Christ as Matth. 21. 5. Song 14. Vers. 3. with slate ●s Psal. 150. 4. or in a dance as Ier. 31. 4. 13. Ps. 30. 12. One name is given both to the dance and the pipe whereto they danced Vers. 4. 〈◊〉 or adorne make glorious so Esa. 60. 7. 9. 13. The Greeke saith exalt Vers. 6. The exaltations that is exalting songs high acts high praises or lifting up of the voice preachings in their throat that is aloud spoken of and proclaimed so Esa. 58. 1. Cry with the throat is Cry aloud two edged Hebr. a sword of mouths that is of two mouthes as is expressed Iudg. 3. 16. in Greeke two mouthed that is two edged biting or cutting both waies This sword is Gods word and commeth out of Christs mouth Ephes. 6. 17. Heb. 4. 12. Rev. 1. 16. Vers. 7. on the beathens by preaching against their idolatries Act. 14. 15. and 17. 16 17 22 c. Compare 2 Cor. 10. 4. 5. 6. Esa. 41. 15. reproofs for sinne as Ioh. 16. 8 c. Vers. 8. To binde their Kings restraining their vices and bringing them under the bonds and subjection of the gospell see Ps. 2. 3. Mark 6. 20. Acts 24. 26. Rev. 21. 24. Esa. 45. 14. a figure of captivity Nahum 3. 10. 2 Cor. 10. 4 5 6. Matth. 16. 19. Nobles or Honourable Vers. 9. written in the booke of God see 1 Cor. 4. 6. Rev. 22. 18. So the Chaldee paraphraseth written in the Law And this may have reference to that law Deut. 7. 1 2 c. honour is or this shall be the honour of all his Saints PSAL. CL. An exhortation to praise Gods holinesse power goodnesse with all kinde of instruments and all breath Halelu-jah PRaise ye God in his sanctity praise him in the firmament of his strength Praise him in his powers praise him according to the multitude of his greatnesse Praise him with the sound of the Trumpet praise him with the psaltery and harpe Praise him with Tymbrel and Flute praise him with Virginals and Organ Praise him with well sounding Cymbals praise him with loud sounding Cymbals Let all breath praise Iah Halelu-jah Annotations IN his sanctity or for his holinesse his most holy being Isa. 6. 3. the first argument of praise from Gods holy essence in himselfe or in his sanctitie his sanctuary his holy place meaning heaven in the firmament of his strength that is for his strong firmament called heaven Gen. 1. 8. the second argument of praise from the frame of the world whereof heaven is chiefest see Psal. 19. 2. or for the out-spreading of his strength that is for his strength spread out as the firmament Vers. 2. in his powers or for his powerfull acts as Ps. 145. 4. the third argument of praise from Gods mighty administration of all things since the creati on of
for us that they without us should not be perfected Heb. 11. 13. 39. 40. Now in Solomons dayes the Church before Christs comming had greatest glory having the Temple builded living under that most wise rich and peaceable King the Israelites being many as the sand which is by the sea in multitude eating and drinking and making mery and dwelling safely every man under his vine and under his fig-tree 1 King 4. 20. 25. notwithstanding Solomon being a Prophet foresaw the ruine of his house and kingdome and in his booke of Ecclesiastes proclaimed all things under the Sunne to be vanity and in this Song prophesieth of the Church and Kingdome of Christ. And as he with many other Prophets and Kings and righteous men desired to see Christ and to heare his words but did not Luke 10. 24. Mat. 13. 17. so here hee manifesteth the desire of him-selfe and of all the faithfull to enjoy the blessings and graces of Christ saying Let him kisse mee Whereby the Church desireth to have Christ manifested in the flesh and to have the loving and comfortable doctrines of his Gospell applyed unto her conscience that shee might not be alwayes under the Schoolemaster of the Law which worketh wrath Rom. 4. 15. but might bee prevented with the grace of Christ be reconciled unto God united unto Christ and have the feeling of his love towards her For kissing is a token of love 1 Pet. 5. 14. Luke 7. 45. was used at the meeting and salutation of friends Exod. 4. 27. and 18. 7. 1 Thess. 5. 26. and David kissed Absalom in signe of favour and reconciliation 2 Sam. 14. 33. And as we are willed to kisse the Sonne Psal. 2. 12. that is lovingly and gladly to submit unto and obey his commandements so the Church here prayeth first that the Sonne would kisse her that is in love and kindnesse teach and apply unto her the grace of his Gospell For herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Sonne to be the propitiation for our sinnes 1 Iohn 4. 10. Afterward we love him because he first loved us 1 Iohn 4. 19. and we kisse him Song 8. 1. The Hebrew expositors as the Chaldee Paraphrast and others doe for the most part apply these things to the giving of the Law by Moses For they being ignorant of the righteousnesse of God have gone about to establish their owne righteousnesse Rom. 10. 3. Howbeit some of them in ancient time saw better as appeiteth by their Midrash an Hebrew commentary on this booke which here saith Moses taught them the Law and whatsoever they learned they forgat againe Then they said unto Moses ô that God would shew himselfe againe and kisse us with the kisses of his mouth that his doctrine might be fastned in our hearts Moses said unto them This cannot be done now but it shall be in the dayes of Christ as it is said I will put my Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts Ier. 31. 33. kisses of his mouth his owne lovely and gracious doctrines As in Prov. 27. 6. the wounds of a friend signifie sharpe reproofes and are opposed to the deceitfull kisses that is the flattering speeches of an enemy so here the kisses desired of this friend are the comfortable words of the doctrine of salvation opposed to the severe rebukes which the Law giveth for our sinnes condemning and cursing every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the booke of the Law to doe them Gal. 3. 10. But Christ into whose lips grace is poured Psal. 45. 3. openeth his mouth and uttereth Blessings Matth. 5. 2. 3. c. for thy loves She turneth her speech unto Christ and sheweth a reason of her former desire By loves are meant graces and the fruits of them here first from Christ to his Church afterward from her unto Christ which he acknowledgeth saying How much better are thy loves then wine Song 4. 10. These shee perceiveth from Christ by the works of Adoption Redemption Iustification and Sanctification through Christ and his Spirit as in 1 Iohn 3. 1. 16 and 4. 9. 10. Iohn 15. 13. Rom. 5. 1 5. Ephes. 5. 25. 26. 27. So on the contrary Antichrists allurements to communion with his impiety are with these words Come let us take our fill of loves untill the morning Prov. 7. 18. and Israels communion with Babylons idolatry is thus sh●wed The sonnes of Babylon came to her into the bed of loves Ezek. 23. 17. better then wine or good more then wine The word good is of large use for profitable pleasing sweet comfortable joyfull c. as is noted on Gen. 1. 4. Wine is one of the most comfortable creatures rejoycing the heart of man Psal. 104. 15. and wine maketh the life or living joyfull Eccles. 10. 19. it causeth to forget affliction poverty misery Prov. 31. 6. 7. It was also used in the legall sacrifices and service of God Num. 15. 5. Hos. 9 4. But the graces of Christ and comforts of his Spirit wherewith the Saints are to be filled Ephes. 5. 18. doe farre excell all worldly pleasure and doe cause such as drinke of them to forget their bitternesse poverty sorrowes which by the terrors of the Law and guilt of conscience for sinne did before afflict them Rom. 7. 10. 15. 18. 24. 25. and 8. 2. And the service of God now in spirit and truth Iohn 4. 23. 24. and consolation which aboundeth by Christ 2 Cor. 1. 5. is much more comfortable then were all the ordinances of divine service in the worldly Sanctuary which could not make him that did the service perfect as partaining to the conscience Heb. 9. 1. 9. and 10. 1. 2. 3. 4. Vers. 3. For the favour or For thy odour swell of thy good ointments By savour or smell is meant knowledge understanding sense or feeling as the Apostle expoundeth it the savour of his knowledge 2 Cor. 2. 14. So a tree is said to bud through the smell or 〈…〉 of water Iob 14. 9. and towe is broken when it smelleth the fire that is feeleth it Iudg. 16. 9. Good ointments or good oiles are precious and sweet ointments wherewith speciall persons were anointed of old as the holy anointing oyle made of principall spices Exod. 30. 23. 25. is called the good ointment Psal. 133. 2. and of the precious things which King Hezekiah shewed to the Ambassadors of the King of Babylon the good ointment was one 2 King 20. 13. and with such they were wont to be anointed at feasts Amos 6. 6. Luke 7. 36. 46. and it was a signe of joy and cheerfulnesse Eccles. 9. 7. 8. for sweet odours revive and comfort the spirits in man when they are dulled with sorrow or much meditation wherefore it is said Ointment and perfume rejoyce the heart Prov. 27. 9. But in fasting or mourning they used not to anoint themselves Dan. 10. 3. 2 Sam. 14. 2. By this similitude the Church