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A35535 An exposition with practicall observations continued upon the thirty second, the thirty third, and the thirty fourth chapters of the booke of Job being the substance of forty-nine lectures / delivered at Magnus neare the Bridge, London, by Joseph Caryl ... Caryl, Joseph, 1602-1673. 1661 (1661) Wing C774; ESTC R36275 783,217 917

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doing my Maker would soon take me away IN these two verses Elihu concludes in which he had continued long the Preface to his following discourse and procedure with Job Here also he acquaints us in what manner he meant to proceed with him about which we may consider two things First His resolvednesse or the setlednesse of his purpose what course to take Secondly the reasons which moved him to it The former he expresseth negatively in the 21th verse and that in two points First He would not accept any mans person Secondly He would not give flattering titles unto man These two negatives as the negative precepts in the Law of God are to be understood with their affirmatives I will not accept any mans person is I will have and give an equall or neither a more nor lesse to the best of my understanding then a due regard to every mans person And I will not give flattering titles that is I purpose to speak plainly I will not complement men but doe my best to accomplish the matter And as he assures us how he will proceed in this 11th verse so Secondly He gives us the reasons of this his intended impartiall plaine and down-right proceeding in the 22d. These reasons are two-fold First He would not doe otherwise because he could not with any content to himselfe It was against the very graine of his spirit to doe otherwise his disposition lay a quite contrary way he was a man of another genius or temper a man of another mould and make then to doe such low and unworthy things as accepting the persons of or giving flattering titles unto men He is expresse in this v. 22. I know not to give flattering titles Secondly He would not because he durst not give flattering titles nor accept the persons of men The danger and dammage he should incurre by doing so kept him from doing so as wel as his owne indisposition to it He should lay himselfe open and obnoxious to the wrath of God by such seeking the favour of men as appeares in the close of the verse In so doing my Maker would soon take me away Thus you have the parts and purpose of these words I shall now give a more distinct explication and account of them Vers 21. Let me not I pray you accept any mans person or let me not now So that particle is rendred Job 5.1 Call now 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 adverbium seu particula obsecrantis seu ad horiandi ut fades amabo latinis if there be any that will answer thee yet 't is an Adverb of beseeching or intreating and therefore we render wel Let me not I pray you which rendring seemes to have in it these two things As if Elihu had sayd First Expect not that I should nor believe that I will doe any such thing as the accepting of persons or the giving of flattering titles Secondly Be not offended if I doe not be not angry with me if I deale plainly with you pray give me leave to use my owne freedome and liberty when I am speaking for I am resolved to doe it and not to accept the persons of men nor to give them flattering titles The words may be rendred also in a direct negation Verily I will not accept any mans person Non accipiam ut sit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quae enallage insolens non est Drus But I shall keep to our reading Let me not I pray you accept any mans person The Hebrew is Let me not lift up any mans person or which the Apostle forbids Let me not have any mans person in admiration I will not over-reverence any man nor give him a respect beyond himselfe The word which we render person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is in Hebrew face Let me not lift up the face of a man or wonder at any mans face as the Septuagint often render this phrase And it is usuall to put the face or the countenance for the person because the face declares the person and shews who the mans is and it is elegantly expressed by the face because accepting of persons importeth a respect to others for their outside or in consideration of some externall glory Let me not accept the face of any man or person let him be who he will The originall word ish most properly signifieth an eminent or honourable man a learned or wise man As if Elihu had sayd I will not accept or lift up the face of a man though he be ish a man never so much lifted up and exalted above his brethren To accept the person of a man is not a fault in it selfe for as our persons are accepted of God so ought our persons to be accepted with one another yea it is a duty to accept the person of a man that is to give him favour honour and due respect Not only civility and humanity but religion it selfe calls us to give outward reverence to them who excell and are superior either to others of our selves God himselfe is sayd to accept the persons of his people first and th●● their sacrifices or services And we ought to accept the persons of men according to their differences in place and power especially according to those gifts and Graces which shine in them Therefore when Elihu saith Let me not I pray you accept any mans person his meaning is let me not doe it in prejudice to the cause or truth that is before us Then we are properly and strictly sayd to accept persons when in any matter businesse or poynt of controversie our eyes are so dazel'd or blinded by external appearances that we have respect rather to the person of the man then to the matter or the truth of the cause in hand So then this sin of accepting persons is alwayes committed when we are more swayed by or when there is more attributed to persons then to things that is when the mans worth is more looked to then the wo●th or merit of his cause or further when something in a person which hath no respect to the goodnes or badnes of his cause moves us to give him more or lesse then is meete this is sinfully to accept or respect a person Thus Elihu acquits himselfe from all those bonds and blinds which his respect to those worthy persons before him might lay upon him They were ancient and grave men they were wise and good men he had a great respect for them he owed much reverence to them considering their age and gravity their degree and dignity yet he owed a greater respect to God and to the truth then to their persons and was thereupon resolved though he had many and great temptations to doe it not to accept the persons of men Hence note To accept persons in prejudice to the cause or truth before us is a high offence both to God and good men 'T is so in a double notion First in the act of it
because we doe that which in it selfe is not right nor according to the mind of God Secondly in the issue consequence or effects of it because by respecting persons we are endangered to many other sins While Solomon only saith Prov 28.21 To have respect of persons is not good his meaning is 't is very evill 't is starke naught And the reason which he gives of the evill of it is not only because the act in it selfe is evill but because the issue and consequence of it is worse For saith that Scripture for a piece of bread that man will transgresse That is he that respects persons will turn aside from Justice for his owne advantage though it be very small even for a piece of bread The Prophet complaines of those Amos 2.6 who sold the righteous for silver and the poore for a paire of shoes They who have sold or given up themselves to this crooked Spirit of respecting persons will not sticke to sell both the persons of the righteous and the most righteous causes not only as the Prophet saith for a paire of shoes but as we say for a paire of shoe-buckles They will soone judge amisse of things who have respect to persons and they alwayes looke beside the cause who looke too much upon the face nothing should weigh with us in judgement but truth or right and that in a five-fold opposition First Truth and right must weigh with us in opposition to relation When a Brother or a neere kinsman be in the cause we must not decline nor be biassed from the truth yea though it be on his side to whom we have no relation but that of man Secondly We must keep to the truth and doe justice in opposition to friendship Though he be my friend my old friend and my fathers friend I must not respect him if truth stand upon the other side upon the side of the meerest stranger It was anciently sayd Socrates is my friend and Plato is my friend Amicus Socrates Amicus Plato sed magis amica veritas but truth is more my friend and therefore I will stick to that Thirdly We must hold to truth in opposition to or notwithstanding the hatred of men suppose a man beares us ill will yea in other things hath wronged us yet if his present cause be righteous we must doe him right We may not bring in our particular wrongs or quarrells upon any cause but that about which the wrong or quarrel riseth They shew the purest love to righteousnesse who act righteously towards those that hate them and will not wrong those who have attempted to oppresse and ruine them A true lover of Justice will do to others as himselfe would have others doe to him yea though they have not done to him as they would be done to Fourthly We must stand to truth in opposition to riches and worldly aboundance riches usually find more friends and favourers then righteousnesse doth And 't is usuall to favour the rich more then the righteous How often is truth on the poore mans side over-ballanced by his adversaries purse But O how poore are they in spiritualls and morals who thus respect the persons of the rich Fifthly We must judge for truth in opposition to worldly greatness and power and that in a two-fold consideration First Though men have a power to reward and preferre us to doe great things for us yet this should not draw us aside woe to those who respect the greatnesse of the person instead of the goodnesse of the cause yet how many are there who care not how bad a great mans cause is if he will but engage to do them good yea some great men look upon themselves as much undervalued if they be not favoured in their cause how bad soever it be because they are able to doe them good who favour it Balak tooke it very ill at Balaams hands when he seemed unmoved by his ability to advance and reward him Did not I earnestly send for thee to call thee Wherefore camest thou not to me am I not able indeed to promote thee to honour Numb 22.37 And wilt not thou serve my interest when I have such a power to advance thine Thus also Saul thought all must cleave to him and forsake the cause of David because he was great and could preferre them 1 Sam 22.7 Will the son of Jesse give every one of you fields and vineyards and make you all Captains of thousands and Captains of hundreds Hath he any great places to bestow and honours to give Why then doe ye seeme to adhere to him and his party Hope of reward makes a great bias upon some mens spirits and carrieth them quite off from truth There is a second consideration prevailing much with many in this matter for though they are unmoved by rewards and will not bite at the bayte of selfe-advancement yet say they O he is a great man and hath great power he may do me a shrewd turne he may vex me and undoe me he may sit upon my skirts hereafter and ruine me Thus where hope doth not feare may carry a man from respect to right to the respect of persons But know That be a man never so great and able to doe me a mischiefe yet truth must be maintained and Justice be done though we should be quite undone by appearing for it It hath been sayd of old Let justice be done though heaven fall much more should it be done though we for doing and abetting it fall to the earth Moses gave that charge more then once Levit. 19.15 Deut. 1.16 17. Thou shalt not respect the person of the poore nor honour the mighty but in righteousnesse shalt thou judge thy neighbour Againe Ye shall not respect persons in Judgement but ye shall heare the small as well as the great you shall not be afraid of the face of man for the judgement is Gods neither undue pity to the poore nor carnal feare of the great which two often doe ought to put any check or stop to the execution of Justice So in that excellent model of instructions which Jehoshaphat gave his Judges 2 Chron 19.7 Wherefore now let the feare of the Lord be upon you take heed and doe it for there is no iniquity with the Lord our God nor respect of persons nor taking of gifts As if he had said Do not you respect persons for God respects no persons he is no gift-taker therefore be ye no gift-takers your duty is to give every one his due That which is right to one man is right to another either in the same or in any paralel case That which is the rich mans right in his cause is the right of the poore man in his cause Quod uni aequum est non debet alteri in eodem casu esse iniquum yea it is as sinfull not to have a due respect to the rich man in his case as not to have respect to the poore man
parable asserting there was no such reall thing But this one passage gives an undeniable proofe that this was a reall history and the matter really acted This person being described by his owne name and his fathers name and the next of his kindred From the consideration of the person who carried on so great a part in this businesse Elihu the son of Barachel the Buzite of the kindred of Ram who was of a strange Country and if allyed to Abraham yet at a great distance we may observe God did preserve a seed of religion and of holy men to maintaine his truth among those who lived in darke places and were wrapt up in many errors and superstitions This was also noted from the first words of this booke There was a man in the Land of Vz A man of gracious accomplishments and of a heavenly light Here also was Elihu the Buzite A man that had great knowledge about holy things as we shall see afterwards in those parts and times when and where abundance of darknesse blindnesse and ignorance reigned Having thus described Elihu The history proceeds Against Job was his wrath kindled because he justified himselfe rather then God In the former part of the verse it is said Then was kindled the wrath of Elihu Not specifying against whom nor the cause why here he doubles the same words with an addition first of the person with whom he was angry Against Job was his wrath kindled And as he tells us the marke or object of his wrath so he gives secondly the reason of it Because he justified himself rather then God Before I come to the explication of this latter branch take these two brief notes First A godly man in maintaining a good cause may give just reason of anothers passion or anger Job was a good man and his cause was good yet you see a wise and a good mans wrath is kindled Paul and Barnabas were two good men yet a difference arose between them Acts 15.39 And the contention was so sharp between them that they departed asunder Secondly Considering the cause of this anger in generall Because he justified himselfe rather then God we see it was an anger for Gods cause Hence note Anger for God or in the cause of God is holy anger Though for the most part the flesh or our carnall corruption is the cause of anger and it begins at selfe yet sometimes it is stirr'd in the cause of God It is said of Moses the meekest man on earth Numb 12.3 that when he saw the idolatry of the people Exod. 32.19 His anger waxed hot He was so angry that he cast the Tables of the Law which God had written with his own hand out of his hand and broke them It is said Mar. 3.5 Jesus Christ looked about on them with anger being grieved for the hardnesse of their hearts He also exprest a great deale of zealous anger Joh. 2.15 When he made a whip of small cords and drove the buyers and sellers out of the Temple 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 id genus irae notat quo fertur quis ad abolitionem peccati cum quo si sit veritas justissimus effectus est Coc Some of the Hebrews tell us that the word here used for anger signifieth anger carried out to the destruction of sin and that is a very gracious anger There are two things which exceedingly declare the holinesse of a mans spirit First when he can patiently beare loads of evills and wrongs in his owne cause or which have but a private respect Secondly When he is ready to take fire in the cause of God many dull and sluggish soules can heare God abused Hoc probes abnegationem tui mundi si injuriarum ferens sis peccatum autem ferre non possiis idque ita ut non ad vindicandum sed ad emendandum exstimulares and their spirits stirre no more then a stone Elihu was angry but it was in the cause of God or Because Job Justified himselfe rather then God When we are angry with sin we are angry as the Apostle adviseth us to be and sin not That 's anger without sin when we are angry with sin and are stirred up to oppose and suppresse the pride and insolency of mans spirit or speeches against God To be angry for our owne honour and interest or Gourd is an argument of undue love to selfe When God spared Nineveh the Prophet was exceeding angry Jon. 4.1 But his was sinfull anger because he was angry for his owne sake fearing to be called a false Prophet He set himselfe downe to see what would become of the City that he might have a personall glory and be cryed up for a Prophet indeed And when God had smitten his Gourd he was angry and angry unto the death ver 8. and all because he missed that which pleased himselfe Many can be angry when they themselves are discredited but when dishonour is cast upon God or his interest slighted how quiet and tame how cold and dull are their spirits The anger of this man was a noble anger as to the occasion and rise of it Jobs selfe-justification or Because he justified himselfe rather then God This is a high poynt and may justly provoke our anger Elihu was not angry with Job because he justified himselfe against his friends but because he justified himselfe rather then God Here a question will arise and it will ask some paines to determine it Was this true did Job justifie himselfe rather then God Was it possible Job should do so I shall give only a generall answer to this question Job did not justifie himself rather then God either explicitely or intentionally but by consequents he did And though it be granted that Job gave just occasion of this sharp reproofe by his rash and passionate speeches uttered in the heate of dispute and in the grief of his heart yet it cannot be denied that Elihu did somewhat strain Jobs words though not beyond their sence yet beyond his sence and gave them the hardest interpretation somewhat beside the rule of charity which they could beare nor did he observe that meeknesse and moderation which might well have become him to a man in that case O how hard is it not to offend or doe ill while we are doing well To cleare this a little further consider There is a twofold straining of words First beyond the sence of the words spoken Secondly beyond the sence of the speaker I doe not say Elihu in affirming this of Job strained his words beyond their sence but he strained them beyond Jobs sence Job spake words which might lay him under this censure that he justified himselfe rather then God But this was far from his intention For doubtlesse he had rather a thousand times his tongue should have been cut out of his mouth then to justifie himselfe with it rather then God or to speak a word to the disparagement of Gods Justice So then
for an answer but could not attaine it they pumpt hard but the water would not come God hid the thing from their eyes so then they had not found any answer because after all their search they could not nor should it seeme strange to us that they could not At best we know but in part here and till God by his Spirit teach us we know nothing at all So that I say it should not seeme strange to us that these wise and good men could find no answer for Job but that which follows seemes strange even to amazement that though they could not yet which how also could they answer to their owne consciences had condemned Job What condemne a man and not answer him 't is worse then to condemne a man and not heare him Possibly he that is condemned unheard may yet deserve a condemnation But if we condemne a man unanswered he certainly as to us is condemned undeservedly And therefore this course of proceeding if any is liable not only to suspition whether it be right but to condemnation as utterly unrighteous Though it may be a good mans case not to find an answer yet surely a good man will not condemne when he cannot answer But it may be demanded Did Jobs friends indeed find no answer before they condemned him we have heard of their answers all along No sooner had Job ended his former speeches but they presently answered Chap. 4.1 Then Eliphaz the Temanite answered and said Chap. 8 1. Then answered Bildad the Shuhite and said Chap. 11.1 Then answered Zophar the Naamathite and said yea they all three answered Job a second time and two of them a Third how then could Elihu justly say they found no answer and yet had condemned Job For answer to this objection I say They answered Job but they did not answer sufficiently The vulgar latine translation puts this glosse which is more then the rules of translation allow into the text rendring the originall thus Ed quòd non invenissent responsionem rationalem Vulg Because they had found no rationall answer and yet had condemned Job They did not find out nor hit upon the right answer Improper and insufficient answers how many soever of them we heape up against any mans argument are no answers they are not worthy to be called answers That only is an answer which carrieth a conviction in it which reacheth the state and strength of the question or removeth the objection In this sence Jobs three friends had found no answer and yet had condemned Job The Hebrew is they made him wicked 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept posuerunt eum esse impium or condemned him as a wicked man So the Septuagint they had no answer for him and yet concluded him wicked we say they had condemned Job and the reason of it is because to condemne a man is to leave him under a supposal of wickednesse and to stigmatize or brand him for a wicked man All the wicked shall at last be condemned and none ought to be condemned nor are any condemned justly now but the wicked He that justifieth the wicked and he that condemneth the just even they both are an abomination to the Lord Pro. 17.15 There is a very elegant transposition of the words in the Hebrew we may render the text thus He that justifieth the wicked and wickedeth the just c. The law of Moses gave an expresse rule against this perversion of Judgement in termes quite crosse to those in Solomon Deut 25.1 If there be any controversie between men and they come unto Judgement that the Judges may Judge them then they shall justifie the righteous and condemne the wicked Which you may render thus They shall justifie the just and wickedise the wicked that is they shall declare the just man just and the wicked man to be wicked That man either really is or is accounted wicked who is cast in his cause and condemned That was a dreadfull sentence the Scripture Acts 1.20 shewes it fulfilled upon the traytor Judas when he is judged let him be condemned Psal 109.7 we put in the margen let him goe out guilty or wicked In this sence Jobs three friends when they condemned him cast him as a wicked man though they had nothing to answer the plea which he made for his owne integrity We must not conceive any such wickednesse in them Damnarunt pro impio etsi nulla in eum crimina probare possent quibus ille suam vitam contaminassent Merc that they were resolved to condemne him right or wrong yet they held their conclusion against the light and reason of all his premises and though they could prove no ill against him yet vehemently suspecting him they concluded he was an ill man and so condemned him Hence note first Some will proceed to condemne both persons and opinions though they can give no reasonable account why they condemne either We read Isa 56.10 of dumbe doggs that cannot barke that is who know not what to speake o● say to purpose There are many who in this sence cannot barke yet they will bite and when they have no answer they will condemne and usually dumbe do●gs that cannot barke have the sharpest teeth and are best at biting or they are better at condemning then at answering As some finde an answer where there is none that is when such reasons are layd before them as are unanswerable yet they will not give over answering but still seek a knott in a rush and draw the saw of contention a●well without end as without cause so others cannot find an answer where it is yet when they cannot answer they can censure and condemne him for wicked or perverse whom they cannot prove so 'T is much easier to say a man is faulty then to find ●●●ault yet they who have a mind to find faults are seldome to seeke for somewhat or other which they call so Note secondly To condemne opinions or persons when we cannot answer them is a practise justly condemnable 'T is unjust as was intimated before to condemne a man before he is heard For though possibly a man unheard may have justice when he is condemned yet all agree 't is injustice to condemne him when he is not heard Now if it be injustice to condemne a wicked man before he is heard how unjust is it to condemne a man in whom we can find no wickednesse after we have heard him Thirdly From the manner of the phrase here used Note To condemne a man is to render him wicked Condemnation as was shewed is due only to the wicked and if an innocent be condemned he is reputed wicked and receives punishment as guilty As that sentence of condemnation which proceeds out of the mouth of God against impenitent sinners and evill doers bindes the guilt of their evill deeds upon them and delivers them up to punishment so he that condemnes his brother fastneth guilt upon him and speakes him deserving
the poynt The aged speak like children when they speak foolishly or unfruitfully He only is a good speaker who speaks that which may doe others good or make them better We say proverbially and truly both of saying and doing As good never a whit as never the better I said dayes should speak and multitude of yeares should teach wisdome Elihu reckons the age of aged men by multitude of yeares this he doth only to highten the matter what wisdome might he not expect from a multitude of yeares that is from such as had lived a multitude of yeares Certainly thought Elihu they will Teach wisdome There is a twofold wisdome First that which is meerely rational Secondly that which is spirituall or there is first a common secondly an holy wisdome Elihu expected wisdome of both sorts but chiefely of the latter from multitude of yeares He expected they would teach the wisdome which the Spirit of God had taught them Sapientiam intelligit quae in vera dei nostri cognitione sita est cujus author sit spiritus dei non hominis animus non anni non usus non experientia Merl that wisdome which consists in the true knowledge of God and of our selves that wisdome which is from above that which man hath not from himselfe nor is taught him by dayes or yeares by use or experience only And it was very probable that they who from their youth had been instructed in the things of God being growne old should also be growne further in this wisdome and riper in this sort of knowledge And therefore Elihu spake according to the rule of right reason when he judged that those three aged men had attained to a very high degree of divine light Such is the goodnesse of God to his people that usually they grow in grace and knowledge as they grow in yeares For though God is Debror to no man but Creditor to all men and though old age in it selfe considered deserves nothing of God yea is not only undeserving but because sin multiplyes as our dayes doe ill deserving yet as Christ saith To him that hath that is who useth and improveth what he hath more shall be given And therefore though true wisdome be a free gift and is infused and wrought by the Spirit of God yet we may in probability and ought according to charity judge that they who have most dayes have also most wisdome Though wisdome be not entayled upon old age yet there we are most likely to finde it I sayd multitude of yeares should teach wisdome Hence observe first We may well expect they should be very wise and knowing who have had much meanes and many opportunities of obtaining knowledge and wisdome And therefore we have reason to expect much wisdome from those who have had a multitude of yeares past over their heads It is a common rule in Logick Causis sufficientibus positis in a●tu necessario sequitur effectus When sufficient causes are put in act the effect must needs follow And so where probable causes are in act probably the effect will follow Old men having been well brought up in youth and having had faire opportunities to attaine knowledge and wisdome are rightly presumed and judged well stor'd and stockt with both Where shall we finde wisdome if not among the Ancients where if not among a multitude or throng of yeares and dayes where else should we look for it shall we goe and enquire among the greene heads and young beginners for it shall we goe to novices and children for it We may say surely they who have been long taught have learned much surely they who have heard many soule-searching Sermons and continued from day to day under the droppings of divine truths are full of fruit and very fruitfull whether shall we goe for fruit else if not to these shall we goe to those that live as upon the mountaines of Gilboa where David prayed no raine might fall shall we goe for Gospel-fruit to the wild naked untaught Indians and Barbarians or to the rightly instituted and plentifully instructed Churches of Christ may we not more then say conclude surely these are wise and full of spirituall understanding Quanquam te Marce Fili Annum jam audientem Cratippum idque Athenis abundare oportet praeceptis institutisque philosophiae c. Cic de Offi lib. t. The Roman Orator Cicero took it for granted that his son Marcus was well grounded in and plentifully furnished with the principles of Philosophy because he had been at Athens a whole yeare and there heard Cratippus a famous Philosopher read many excellent Lectures about things natural and morall And may we not say to many thousands of Gospel-hearers and professors what you that have heard such and such able Ministers you that have had the word so long preached and that at London more famous for Gospel knowledge then Athens for philosophy surely you are filled with all knowledge in the mystery of Christ and with all goodnesse in the practice of go●linesse And doubtlesse the Lord will argue it with those that have had time and opportunities as a rich price in their hand to get wisdome as Elihu did with his friends being aged men Who can imagine but that they are full of wisdome that they abound in knowledge and spirituall understanding who abounding in dayes and yeares have abounded also in meanes of knowledge Note Secondly As old men should abound in knowledge so they should approve themselves ready to teach the ignorant I said dayes should speak and multitude of yeares should teach wisdome 'T is a duty incumbent upon them who have learned much to teach much To conveigh wisdome and knowledge to others is most proper to such as well as most ornamental and honourable To be knowing our selves is a great mercy and to helpe others to the knowledge of what we know is a great duty we loose one speciall end of knowing if we know only for our selves To communicate and diffuse our knowledge to others is the noblest way of using it and the best way of improving it and that in a double respect First it is the best way of improving it as to encrease Secondly it is the best way of improving it as to reward The more we give out our knowledge the more we shall have of it and the more we shall have for it both from God and men The Apostle saith of a Gospel Minister 1 Tim. 3.2 He must be apt to teach not only able but apt that is ready and willing to teach now what the Apostle speaks there of an Elder by office is true of those that are elders in time they also should be apt to teach not only able but ready and willing to teach in and according to their spheare and power I said dayes should speak c. Thirdly Note 'T is a reproach to old age not to be knowing and w●se not to be able and apt to teach wisdome That old age
Spirit of his mouth that is Jehovah by his Eternall Son and Spirit made all things The heavens and their host are there expressed by a Synecdoche of the part for the whole creation or for all creatures both in heaven and in earth Againe Psal 104.30 Thou sendest forth thy Spirit they are created The Spirit of God creates every day what is it that continueth things in their created being but providence That 's a true axiome in Divinity Providence is creation continued Now the Spirit of God who created at first creates to this day Thou sendest forth thy Spirit they are created The work of creation was finished in the first six dayes of the world but the work of creation is renewed every day and so continued to the end of the world Successive providentiall creation as well as originall creation is ascribed to the Spirit The Scripture is full of arguments to prove that the holy Ghost is God Which because this fundamentall truth is blasphemously spoken against I shall a little touch upon First As the Spirit createth and makes the naturall man consisting of body and soule so he regenerateth which is a greater creation the whole into a spirituall man therefore he is God John 3.5 Except a man be borne againe of water and of the Spirit that is of the Spirit who is as water he cannot enter into the kingdome of God The holy Ghost is also call'd The sanctifier sanctification is regeneration in progress and motion regeneration is sanctification begun and sanctification is regeneration perfecting from day to day 2 Thes 2.13 We are bound to give thanks to God for you brethren beloved of the Lord because God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation through sanctification of the Spirit and beliefe of the truth And the Apostle Peter writes to the Elect 1 Pet 1 2. according to the foreknowledge of God the father through sanctification of the Spirit Now who can doe these great things but God who can regenerate or give a new nature who can sanctifie or perfect that new nature but God alone Men and Angels must let these workes alone for ever or as we translate Psal 49.8 these acts cease for ever from men and Angels as much as the redemption of man from the grave or from hell from corruption or condemnation Secondly The Spirit is omniscient He knoweth all things 1 Cor 1.12 2 10.19 The Spirit knoweth all things yea the deep things of God He is not only acquainted with and privie to the surface and outside of things but he searcheth things to the bottom of them Nor doth he search only the deepe or bottome things of common men or of the chiefest of men Kings and Princes whose hearts are usually as much deeper then other mens as their persons and places are higher but the Spirit searcheth the deep things the bottome things of God the things of God that lye lowest and most out of sight the Spirit understandeth therefore the Spirit is God For as the Apostle argueth 1 Cor 2.11 No man knoweth the things of a man save the spirit of a man that is in him even so the things of God knoweth no man but the Spirit of God or he that is God if the spirit that is in man were not man or the intellectuall power in man it could never know the things of man and if the Spirit of God were not God he could never search and know the deep the deepest things of God Thirdly As the Spirit of God knoweth all things as he searcheth the deep things even all the secrets and mysteries of God so he teacheth all things even all those secrets and mysteries of God which 't is needful or useful for man to know The Spirit is a teacher and he teacheth effectually Joh 16.13 When the Spirit of truth is come he will guide you into all truth for he shall not speak of himselfe that is he shall not teach you a private doctrine or that which is contrary to what ye have learned of me but whatsoever he shall heare that shall he speake and he will shew you things to come Which last words are A fourth argument that he is God As the Spirit teacheth so he foretelleth all things 1 Tim 4.1 Now the Spirit speaketh expressely that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith giving heed to seducing spirits and doctrines of devills The Spirit of God clearly foreseeth and infallibly foretelleth what shall be before it is therefore he is God The Lord by his holy Prophet Isa 41.23 challengeth all the false Idol gods of the Heathen to give that proofe of their Divinity Shew the things that are to come hereafter that we may know that ye are Gods As if he had sayd Doe that and we will yield the cause Men and Devills may guesse at but none can indeed shew things to come but God Fifthly The Spirit appoints to himselfe officers and ministers in the Church therefore he is God Acts 13.2 The holy Ghost said separate me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have called them Sixthly The holy Ghost furnisheth those Officers whom he calleth with power and gifts as he pleaseth that they may be fit for the work or ministery of the Gospel 1 Cor 12.8.11 To one is given by the Spirit the word of wisdome to another the word of knowledge by the same Spirit c. But all these worketh that one and the selfe-same Spirit dividing to every man severally as he will Now who can give wisdome and knowledge who can give them prerogatively following in this distribution or division of gifts no rule nor giving any other reason of it but his owne will except God only Seventhly The holy Ghost is sinned against therefore he is God Some possibly may object and say This is not a convincing or demonstrative argument that the holy Ghost is God because he is sinned against For man may sin against man All second table sins are sins against our Neighbour and the Apostle tells the Corinthians 1 Ep 8.12 that while they used their lawfull liberty in eating with offence they sinned against the Brethren I answer Whosoever is properly sinned against is God because God is the Law-giver And though many actions of men are direct wrongs to man yet in every wrong done to man God also is wronged and in strict sence he only is sinned against by man For the reason why any action is a wrong to man is because it is against some Law of God And if to be sinned against in strict sence be proper to God only then the argument stands good that the Holy Spirit is God because he is sinned against especially if we consider that there is such an Emphasis put upon sinning against the holy Ghost in the holy Scripture more if possible then upon sinning against the Father or the Son Math 12.31 Wherefore I say unto you saith Christ All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto
incorruptible it hath naturally no seedes of dissolution in it because no contrariety no contrary qualities in it as all bodyes or corporeall substances have I know the Apostle saith 1 Tim 6.16 God only hath immortality it 's true he only hath it in himselfe independently originally but he derives and gives it as a talent to some creatures in a way of dependance upon himselfe Secondly Observe The soule brings in the life of the body The life of man What is the body without the soule but a lumpe of clay As soone as ever the soule departs life departs man dyeth and becomes a putrifying carkasse yet such is the folly of most men that all their care is for the life of the body which is at best a dying life they utterly neglect the soule which as it is the life of the body so it selfe never dyeth The soule is the Jewell the body is but the Cabinet the soule is the kernel the body is but the shell Will you be sollicitous about a Cabinet and a shell and slight the Jewel or throw away the kernel Will you take care of that which liveth the body and will you not take care of that which holds your life the soule Againe Note Life is the gift of God If the soule which is the cause of life in man be of God then the life of man is of God also The cause of the cause is the cause of the effect or thing caused But we need not argue it from Logick rules Scripture testimony being so aboundant in this thing Acts 17.25 He giveth to all life and breath and all things And v. 28. In him we live and move and have our being Spirituall and eternall life are the gift of God so also is naturall life And if so Then First Live to God Secondly Seeing God gives us life we should be willing to give our lives to God Yea Thirdly We should therefore be ready to give up or rather to lay downe our lives for God And as we should give up our lives to God when he calls for them by natural death so we should give up our lives for God when he calls us to beare witness to his name and truth by violent death I shall yet take notice of one thing further before I passe from this verse The Spirit of God hath made me and the breath of the Almighty hath given me life Some upon good grounds referre the first clause The Spirit of God hath made me to the creation both of soule and body and the second or latter clause the breath of the Almighty hath given me life to that quickning which we receive by the Spirit to the duties whereinto we are called in this life The breath of the Almighty hath given me life that is hath fitted and prepared me for the severall offices and services of life As if Elihu had sayd The Spirit of God hath not only made me a man but a man for worke yea the Spirit of God hath quickned me to the present worke and businesse I am come about Thus life imports not only spirituall life in the being of it but all the furniture ornaments and abilities of a spirituall life The Septuagint render this profession made by Elihu expressely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Spiratio omnipotentis est quae docet me Sept Haud me latet non a meipso sed a deo hunc prudentiae sensum me accepisse Nicet to this sence holding out a strong assurance which Elihu had that God had both called and prepared him for the service he was come about and engaged in The Spirit of God hath made me and the breath of the Almighty hath instructed me Another of the Greek Interpreters speaks as much I am not ignorant that of my selfe I am able to doe nothing but I have received this power from God As if Elihu had said The Spirit of the Almighty hath quickned me to this worke I am now upon and taught me what both to say and doe in thy case O Job Hence note God giveth not only the life of nature unto men but he fits them for all the duties and services of this life We indeed are scarcely to be reckoned among the living if we have no more but a naturall life what is it to be able to eate and drinke to heare and see and speake unlesse we have more then this we deserve not to be numbred or written among the living we are upon the matter but dead lumps and clods of clay It is the breath of the Almighty that quickens us and superadds ability to doe good that frames fashions and fits us for every good word and worke This is the life of man when a man is fitted for duty and service when he is furnished for imployment to stand God and his Brethren in some stead while he is in this world then he lives The motions impulses and influences the teachings and guidings of the Spirit of God are the life of our lives We can doe nothing of our selves till the Almighty bestows a new life upon us and as we can doe nothing at all in spiritualls till he gives us a new life so we can do nothing to purpose till the Spirit acts stirres up that life in us It is the Spirit who first bestows Secondly encreaseth Thirdly excites our spirituall life puts the new creature into motion All our good thoughts and holy actings all our uprightnesse and sincerity all our strength and ability flow from the Spirit untill the holy Spirit workes in us we sit still and when the Spirit worketh we must not sit still I saith the Apostle Rom 15.18 will not dare to speak of any of those things which Christ hath not wrought by me to make the Gentiles obedient by word and deed As if he had sayd My owne workes are not worth the naming I will not so much as mention any thing that Christ hath not wrought in me by the Spirit That was a mighty worke which he was enabled to doe to make the Gentiles obedient in word and deed Christ did not leave him to doe it in his owne power The breath of the Almighty enabled him and so he doth all those that are able and willing ready for and successefull in any such holy worke Let us therefore ascribe all to his working and quickening let us set down our severall Items of receit in our account-books confessing that we have nothing of our own This gift that grace that ability to doe to speake to suffer to act we have received from him Let the whole Inventory of our soules riches have Gods name written upon it and ascribed to his praise alone And if we thus uncloath our selves by giving God the glory of all we shall loose nothing by it for God will apparrell and furnish us deck and adorne us better every day The poorer we are in our selves the richer will he make us To be thus diminish't is the best way to
is distorted by giving the same or a-like award to those who are unlike or in their acts or deserts whether good or bad not the same To doe any of these perverse or crooked things is the doing of iniquity or the perverting of Justice All these Elihu removeth farre from God while he saith Farre be it from the Almighty that he should commit iniquity God will not cannot commit iniquity either by denying or delaying justice either by not punishing or rewarding where there is cause or by dealing out alike to those in whose doing and dispositions there is an utter unlikeness Farre be it from the Almighty that he should commit any of these iniquities Hence note First To doe any act of injustice is wickednesse Elihu taxed Job for complaining of Gods Justice v. 9. And here he saith Far be it from God that he should doe wickednesse Injustice is wickednesse against God who commandeth us to be just and it is wickednesse against man who is alwayes wronged by injustice Secondly As to that particular which Elihu chargeth Job with Note If the Lord should not reward those that serve him and delight in him he were uxrighteous Heb 6.10 God is not unrighteous to forget your labour of love He is not unrighteous to forget it that is not to recompence it by forgetting it he doth not meane the letting of it slip out of his mind but the not making a due returne to it or the not giving it a just reward It is unrighteousnesse in God not to reward those who serve him because he hath promised to reward them Say to the righteous it shall be well with him Isa 3.10 The promises run to it all the Scripture over and as it would be unrighteousnesse in God not to reward those that do well so not to pardon them that have done ill when they confesse their evill deeds because he hath promised to pardon them and therefore the Scripture saith 1 John 1.9 If we confesse our sins he is faithfull and just to forgive us our sins The Scripture doth not say he is mercifull to forgive us our sins though mercy act to the highest in the forgiveness of sin but he is faithfull and just to forgive us our sins and the reason why the Scripture saith so is because forgiveness of sin in case of confession is under a promise To come short of our promises is to be unrighteous promises are bonds upon the promiser and oblige to performance Thirdly Note The strong God the mighty God neither doth nor can doe any unrighteousnesse or iniquity I say he neither doth nor can doe iniquity God can doe no iniquity because in him there is none He is my rocke saith David Psal 92.15 and there is no unrighteousnesse in him As none can doe righteousnesse but they that are righteous so he that neither is nor can be unrighteous cannot doe any unrighteousnesse That in the Psalme is very considerable that while he saith There is no unrighteousnesse in God he immediately before said He is my rocke implying that God can no more be moved or removed from doing righteously then a rocke can be removed out of its place We find Moses also giving God the same attribute when he spake of his indeclinableness in justice Deut 32.4 He is a rocke his worke is perfect all his wayes are Judgement The wayes of God are not all judgement as Judgement is opposed to mercy some of his wayes are mercy and others of them are Judgement but all his wayes are judgement as Judgement is opposed to injustice or unrighteousnesse that 's the signification of Judgement when Moses saith All his wayes are Judgement he is a God of truth and without iniquity just and right is he The Apostle puts this denying question with much vehemency Rom 9.14 What shall we say then is there unrighteousnesse with God God forbid And 't is very considerable that the Apostle put this question with so much abhorrence presently after he had spoken of that Act of God which is so much quarrelled at by the sons of men as unrighteous and unjust Esau have I hated and Jacob have I loved and that when they had done neither good nor evill v. 11. What say some will God doe thus will he hate or love before ever men doe good or evill yeas such acts of love and hatred of election and rejection are gone out from God And because Paul foresaw that men according to their narrow apprehension would be ready to say surely God is not right in this therefore he subjoynes What shall we say then is there unrighteousnesse in God As if he had sayd I know some men will be ready enough to say so and thinke they have reason enough to say so They all must needs say so who measure God by their shallow braines such are the deepest braines compared with God and therefore Arminius with his followers that they may avoyd this difficulty carry the interpretation of this Scripture to another poynt as if it had nothing to doe with the eternall purpose of God concerning man but only respected his dealings with them about temporalls or his dealing out temporalls to them I urge that text because it hath occasion'd through mans corruption great contending and quarrelling about the righteousness of God yea some have presumed there can be no maintaining that opinion of the absolute decree without fastening unrighteousnesse upon God But the Apostle by the Spirit foreseeing this fleshly objection hath forelayed and prevented it concluding O man who art thou that replyest against God shall the clay contend with the potter c. Now as in this act of eternal Election so in all providentiall acts the Lord is infinitely unmoveably and unspottedly just and righteous he not only doth righteous things but he cannot doe any thing that is unrighteous And this seeming impotency is the reall power of God and his most glorious perfection For as 't is from the weaknesse of man that he can doe iniquity so 't is from the power of God that he cannot That God cannot lye that he cannot doe any unworthy thing is an argument of his omnipotence God can no more doe iniquity then he can cease to be God his righteousnesse his justice is himselfe the Justice of God is the just God the righteousnesse of God is the righteous God he hath not only a principle of righteousnesse in him as man may have and every Godly man truely hath but he is righteousnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Homer A Heathen Poet had this apprehension of his Idol Gods They love not unrighteousnesse but honour Justice But Jehovah the true the living God doth more then affectionately love and honour Justice He is is essentially Just That man who is in a state of righteousnesse loves to be doing and will doe righteous acts things and persons are in their working as they are in their being He that doth righteousnesse is righteous 1 John 3.7 God is righteous
they that are really wicked shall be dealt with as wicked men though they make a high profession of godliness in the Church even them will God strike also as wicked men Christ speakes of some Math 7.22 who made a l●●d profession of religion with whom yet he dealt as with wicked men Depart from me saith he I know ye not ye workers of iniquity Though God doth not deal alike with all wicked men yet he deales with them all like wicked men There is not one wicked man in the world but he shall be dealt with according to his kind that is as a wicked man and shall have that for his portion which is the portion of their Cup who are wicked As the Godly so the wicked whether prophane or false and hypocriticall shall be esteemed and handled by God like themselves or as they are Secondly From the first word as it is taken causally upon which many insist Note The reason why wicked men ●ne stricken is because they are wicked Were not men wicked they should never feele such stroakes from the hand or rather iron rod of God If any smart and are ruin'd they may thank themselves for it that is their sins for it their sufferings are the fruits of their sin The Prophet told the sinfull Jewes so Jer 4.18 they had an affliction upon them which did reach even to the heart God made their hearts ake he struck them to the heart but why did he so the answer is Thy sin and thy doings have procured those things to thee c. He striketh them as wicked men In the open sight of others Locus videntium locus patens frequens celebris omnium oculis expositus Par Importat visionem paradigmaticam et exemplarem Merc These words are a further description of the manner how God strikes the wicked he doth it openly or as we put in the margin In the place of beholders that is in such a place and in such a manner that all may behold it we say He strikes them in the open sight of others that is he punisheth them in an exemplary way or that they may be an example of warning unto others For The place of seers or of beholders is some open and eminent place oppos'd to a Corner as Paul sayd pleading his cause before king Agrippa Acts 26.26 This thing was not done in a Corner no it was done as upon the house-top even in the place of beholders The Lord will not have to doe with wicked men only in a Corner He will have witnesses of his doings with them There shall be enow to take notice how he handles them therefore he often takes open vengeance on them in the frequent assembly and concourse of many beholders both approving and reverencing yea adoring the impartiall equity of the supreame Judge and his care of humane affaires So then the words are an allusion to the execution of Common malefactors who dye by the Judgement of the Magistrate such being condemned and sentenced by the Judge are not put to death in the prison or in a hole but are taken out and carried to some noted place of execution or a Scaffold is purposely erected where a multitude of spectators are admitted to come and behold the Tragedy When our Lord Jesus Christ who to deliver us from our transgressions was numbred with transgressors when he I say was crucified The Evangelist saith Luke 23.35 The people stood beholding and the Rulers also with them derided him Christ himselfe was strucken as a wicked man in the place of Beholders And so have many thousands of his faithfull witnesses The wicked deale with them often as the Lord dealeth sometimes with wicked men they are brought forth from prison to death and executed in the open sight of others All things in this world come alike to all no man knoweth love or hatred by all that is before them Eccl 9.1 2. The Apostle Paul speaking of himselfe and his fellow-Apostles to shew the publick disgrace which they were put to saith We are made a spectacle to the world to Angels and to men 1 Cor 4 9. The Greeke is we are a Theater to the world c. As if he had sayd all see how we are used And as bloody persecuters make the faithfull servants of Christ a spectacle so Christ will at last make wicked men a spectacle to the world to Angels and to men Thus it is prophecied Isa 66.24 that all flesh who come to worship before the Lord shall goe forth and looke upon the carcasses of the men that have transgressed against him c. They shall be stricken in the place of Beholders or Seers Some expound that word Seers Videre saepe significat cum voluptate aliquid spectare Scult as implying more then ordinary seers or more then barely such as see what is done namely such as are delighted and pleased with what is done yet not as it is a suffering of paine by man but as it is an act of Justice from God Hence note God oftentimes doth Justice upon sinners openly The Judgements of God are of two sorts Some are secret others are manifest he can doe execution upon men when none see it nay he doth the severest executions upon some men when they themselves doe not see it that 's the sting and severity of the Judgement that they have not so much as any sence of the wrath of God when the full vialls of his wrath are powring out upon them But many of the Judgements of God are open As he striketh some so secretly that none can see it so others so visibly that all may see it Thus the Lord commanded Moses Numb 25.4 when Israel had joyned themselves unto Baal-peor Take all the heads of the people and hang them up before the Lord against the Sun By the heads of the people we may understand either the capitall offenders those who were most active and ready in that wickednesse or their principall Rulers who in stead of stopping them from or punishing them for those offences gave way to them or at least wincked at them These must be hanged against the Sun that is as Elihu speakes here in the open sight of others or in the place of seers Thus they were made an example of caution that all might see and feare and doe no more presumptuously Read the like executions of divine Judgement threatned 2 Sam 12.11 12. Isa 26.11 John in the Revelation Chap 15.4 prophecyeth of the Saints triumphing at the fall of Babylon and singing the song of Moses and the song of the Lambe saying Great and marvellous are thy workes c. for thy Judgements are made manifest God hath now stricken Babylon his great enemy in the open sight of others his Judgements were right before they are alwayes right but till then not manifest David saith Psal 9.16 The Lord is knowne by the Judgement which he executeth now if the Lord be knowne by the Judgement which