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A86934 A brief exposition of the prophecies of Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk and Zephaniah. By George Hutcheson minister at Edenburgh. Imprimatur, Edm. Calamy Hutcheson, George, 1615-1674. 1654 (1654) Wing H3822; Thomason E1454_1; ESTC R209588 282,367 353

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endue them with excellent qualifications and give them safety v. 11 12 13. and would furnish them with ample matter of joy v. 14 15. and of serving God without fear v. 16. considering his power and love v. 17. and what he will do for recovering their broken and desperate estate v. 18.19 20. Vers 1. WO to her that is filthy and polluted to the oppressing City 2. She obeyed not the voice she received not correction she trusted not in the LORD she drew not neare to her God The Lord having by his Prophet used all the former meanes for reclaiming his people but in vain he comes now to pronounce his last sentence against the body of that nation and threatens Jerusalem with a wo the general causes whereof were her pollution through oppression and violence and her contempt of warnings from the Word her not being bettered by corrections her not trusting in God but in other things and her not entertaining communion with him who offered himself to her in the Covenant Doct. 1. As Gods anger declared against a people portends misery enough to them though there were no other evidences of it so he will not spare nor exempt his own people when they provoke him especially such as being most obliged to him yet do prove eminent in defection therefore as he threatens other Nations so also his own sinful people and names Jerusalem for all because she was chiefe in the defection who should have been holy and a Sanctuary to God and under this wo comprehends all the evils which afterward pursued that people 2. Injustice and oppression is an abominable and filthy sin especially in the Church and the riches gathered that way do not give any splendor but make men and places vile in Gods sight and obnoxious to his curse for the oppressing City is filthy and polluted as the crop or gorge of a ravenous bird where all unclean things are heaped together or as one made a publick spectacle of infamie as the word imports and therefore wo to her 3. As disobedience unto the Lord revealing his mind by his word is ground sufficient for a quarrel and as contempt of the authority of God in his word is the cause of mens boldnesse in sinne so it will be a great aggravation against sinners that warnings from the Word do not reclaim them for Wo to her that is filthy she obeyed not the voice 4. As rods sent upon the Church will either make her better by instructing and humbling her under Gods hand or ripen her yet more for Gods wo so obstinacy in sinne under corrections is a sad aggravation thereof for Wo to her that is filthy she received not correction or instruction by her correction as the word imports 5. God is so willing to be the stay and confidence of his people that it is a quarrel when they will not lean all their weight on him and as want of faith in God drives men to sinful and wrong courses so this is a great iniquity before him for Wo to her that is filthy and polluted to the oppressing City she trusted not in the Lord and this also is the cause why the word or rod works so little 6. As the neglect of keeping communion with God turneth the heart loose to all sinful wayes and snares so the cause of little dependance on God in straits is because men cannot be at paines to keep neer God that so they may reap the fruit of faith for Wo to her that is filthy she drew not neer to God and she trusted not in the Lord because she could not rake paines to draw neere to God 7. The Lords gracious condescendence and offering of himself to the visible Church to be approached unto in all cases and her profession of having an interest in him doth aggravate her sault in not making use of him nor taking hold of such an advantage for it is an addition to her sin that she drew not neer to her God that is to God who was hers in offer and visible covenant and in whom she gloried as hers Ver. 3. Her Princes within her are roaring lions her Iudges are evening wolves they gnaw not the bones till the morrow The Lord denounceth this wo upon Jerusalem more especially for the sins of her State-Rulers her Princes and superiour Magistrates who ought to have been for the praise of well-doers a comfort and Protectors to the Subjects were a terrour cruel as lions and that not against enemies but Subjects in the midst of the City and her Judges or inferiour Magistrates were no better then they but as cruel and unsatiably greedy as hungry wolves who coming out in the evening having fasted all day do not only eat the flesh of their prey but so do gnaw the very bones as they leave nothing till the morrow See Prov. 28.15 Doct. 1. As a land doth not ordinarily degenerate but when Mag strates of all ranks are also corrupt so the sins of Rulers have an especial hand in drawing judgements on a land for when the city is filthy and polluted c. v. 1. then Princes and Judges are lions and wolves and because of this wo is denounced 2. It is a great iniquity and abuse of Gods Ordinance of Magistracy when the hearts of men in power are lifted up above their brethren and when they employ all their power for their own ends and against those for whose good they should employ it this was the sin of Princes and Judges They are roaring lions within her and evening wolves 3. It is a judgement and a presage of ruine to come on a land wheu their Rulers are not men hating ●●vetousnesse but hungry greedy men are entrusted with affairs whereby they who in their private stations could not poorly bite and oppresse are enabled by their power and place to play the lion and wolfe such was Judahs case Her Judges were evening wolves they gnaw not the bones till the morrow or they leave not the bones to be gnawed or continue not to gnaw the bones till the morrow but presently devoure up all Ver. 4. Her Prophets are light and treacherous persons her Priests have polluted the Sanctuary they have done violence to the law The Lord subjoynes the sins of Church-officers as a further cause of this judgement and chargeth their false Prophets who pretended to an extraordinary calling with prophaneess and levity in their carriage and inconstancy in their doctrine fitting it to all humours and parties which was great perfidiousnesse and their Priests or ordinary Ministers with prophaning the Sanctuary and holy things in ministring unto the Lord and with perverting the true sense of the law in their ordinary doctrine and teaching of the people Doct. 1. When God reckons with a land for sin it is no strange thing to see them who should be meanes of reclaiming people that they may flee from the wrath to come accessory to the guilt of the land and partakers in
allowance of comfort but judgements full of bitternesse and calamity for here Strangers carry away their forces enter the gates by force and cast lote upon Jerusalem or divide their prey by lots as Joel 3.3 Nahum 3.10 2. However the Lord in great feverity punish his people yet he hath an eye upon the carriage of every instrument of their calamity to requite them accordingly and would have his humbled people comforted in believing that his love is such as to do so for whereas it might have been thought that the Lord when he was afflicting Judah had cast of all pity towards them yet afterwards he reckons with Edom for his behaviour as that which he had narrowly marked and revealeth this Doctrine to the Church for her comfort 3. An idle beholder or on-looker on the people of Gods distresse as not concerned or affected with it is in Gods account an enemy especially being one who is obliged to do otherwise for it is a part of Edom's violence and cruelty that He stood on the other side staid aloof looked on and came not near to condole as the same word in the Original is used Psal 38.11 4. It is horrible wickednesse before God and will be especially remarked by him when false brethren not only countenance but actively concur and partake with enemies in oppressing the Church of God Even thou wast as one of them in all their hostility and a remarkable one as being not only a brother and they but strangers and forreigners but a most active instrument setting on the rest Psal 137.7 Ver. 12. But thou shouldest not have looked on the day of thy brother in the day that he became a stranger neither shouldest thou have rejoiced over the children of Judah in the day of their destruction neither shouldest thou have spoken proudly in the day of distresse Ver. 13. Thou shouldst not have entred into the gate of my people in the day of their calamity yea thou shouldst not have looked on their affliction in the day of their calamity nor have laid hands on their substance in the day of their calamity Ver. 14. Neither shouldest thou have stood in the cross way to cut off those of his that did escape neither shouldest thou have delivered up those of his that did remain in the day of distresse Edoms violence is yet further described by shewing negatively what he ought not to have done and yet did to wit that in the day of Judah's calamity by the Caldeans he a brother who is borne for adversity Prov. 17.17 ought not to have looked on their condition with delight nor insulted and spoken blasphemously against God and his people as this is expounded Ezek. 35.12 13. not entred the City with the enemies and spoiled them of their goods nor have laid wait for such of the Jewes as fled to cut them off or deliver them into the enemies hand Doct. 1. The houre of the Churches trial and conrection is a very sharp dark and violent blast It is a day of calamity destruction and distress a day wherein he becomes a stranger That is not dealt with as a priviledged people but as strangers and sent to a strange Country in exile and were exercised with strange lots The Churches heinous sins and Gods jealousie over his confederate people causeth this and withal the Lord mindeth to haste over the Churches affliction and therefore sends it thick on 2. The Church of God suffering much must not therefore think to be exempted from more trial but must by what they suffer be taught submission to yet further exercise if the Lord will For Judah in their distresse and calamity must yet have more from Edom. 3. However wicked men walk after the lusts and passions of their own hearts and stick at nothing which they will and have power to effect yet the Lord will let them know that they stand obliged by a Law to duty the violation whereof he will remark aggravate and punish For though Edom satisfied himself and his passion in what he did against Jacob yet the Lord tells him thou shouldest not have done thus and thus but wast obliged by the Law to do otherwise being both a brother and a neighbour 4. To adde affliction to the afflicted is great cruelty especially when it is done by those from whom comfort might in reason be expected Thou shouldest not have looked on the day of thy brother in the day that he became a stranger c. This adds to Edoms sin that he chose such a time wherein to let out his hatred 5. As a careless or greedy look on the affliction of the people of God as it were a pleasant spectacle is a further degree of their triall and affliction So it is Esau-like and the badge of a reprobate condition to take pleasure in such a sight For it is twice marked that hee looked on the day of his brother as an evidence of his cruelty in adding that to their affliction See Ps 22.17 6. As rejoycing of enemies and their blasphemies against God his truth and his peoples priviledges in him is an usuall and sore triall of the Church when she is in affliction So it is the badge of wicked men to become insolent with successe and a cause wherefore God will plead with them For it is another challenge as for great cruelty that Edom rejoyced over Judah in the day of their destruction and spoke proudly in the day of distresse 7. The Lord will not forget the least injures done by any to the Church even when greater wrongs are in doing to them which might seem to hide the lesser For albeit the Caldeans were now bringing all to ruine yet the Lord takes notice of an insolent eye proud looks entering into the gate and laying hands on substance 8. Apostates and false brethren are most cruel enemies and persecuters of those whom they desert For Edom the brother beside all his insulting and joyning with the enemy did yet more and stood in the crosse way to cut off those that did escape and delivers up the remnant when it seems the Caldeans had given over 9. Even when God is afflicting his Church and letting loose the reins to the fury of men against them yet he doth not quit his interest in them For in the midst of all this storm from the Chaldean and Edom the Lord gives them the Covenant-title My people as not onely standing unrepealed but forth-coming for much sympathie from God and a reason why he thus pleads their cause Sin may procure affliction but every provocation will not make void the Covenant Ver. 15. For the day of the LORD is neer upon all the heathen as thou hast done it shall be done unto thee thy reward shall returne upon thine own● head 16. For as ye have drunk upon mine holy mountain so shall all the heathen drink continually yea they shall drink and they shall swallow down and they shall be as though they had not been The
and it be alwayes true that sin is the root affliction springs from yet nature uses not to goe so far as to lead men to lay sin to heart in common and ordinary crosses or to look on common and ordinary sins as provocation sufficient to bring on saddest tryals for they must seek some singular cause here far lesse to look on afflictions as tryals of faith or for preventing of sin 2. Men in nature use not so much to take up and be sensible of sin from the law of God having authority in their heart as grope it in some tryal and difficulty Therefore they of whose sense of guilt we heare not before do now in their trial begin to think for whose cause this evil is 3. Prayer never so much essayed in a day of distresse will not availe till sin procuring it be searched out and taken with so much do these Pagans acknowledge while with the former meanes of prayer they set themselves to seek out the guilty and to knowe for whose cause this evill is upon them 4. Afflictions sharply pursuing may have such efficacy as to put men otherwise carelesse to it to seek out sin and not let them sleep on who gladly would and have been insensible of sin for these men are so put to it as they are willing to have the quarrel sought out and to submit themselves to a lot for that effect They said every one to his fellow Come and let us cast lots that we may know c. Afflictions will command men to turn from iniquity who would not hear such a charge in any other language Job 36.10 5. The Lords all-seeing eye perceives every secret sin and his providence over-rules most contingent and uncertain events and holily ordereth the rash actions of men so as to bring about his own purposes by them For these men acknowledg that the guilty is known though not to them and that the determination of a continge●● lot over-ruled by a Deity is a true evidence for whose cause this evil is And albeit it was a fault in them not to search every man himselfe or to consult by lots without special warrant yet God over-ruleth the lot to discover Jonah 6. The Lords controversie is sometime greater and more severely prosecuted against his own children for their miscarriages then against Pagans and gross Idolaters among whom they may be Therefore the lot guided by God fell upon Jonah signifying his rebellion to be the cause of all their danger rather then their Idolatry though openly practised in the height of their streight for 1. Rebellion is as Idolatry 1 Sam. 15.23 and so much the grosser as it is in a child 2. Albeit they worshipped that which was no god yet none of them had so behaved themselves toward a supposed Deity as he had done toward the true God Jer. 2.10 11. 3. God may wink at sin in Pagans but will not let his own child go on unreclaimed Amos 3.2 it being mercy to pursue them for their folly and amend them Ver. 8. Then said they unto him Tell us we pray thee for whose cause this evil is upon us What is thine Occupation and whence comest thou What is thy Country and of what people art thou The guilty man being now discovered by God is examined by the Mariners to find out the particular fact but very discreetly as supposing that possibly the sin might be somewhat whereof his Nation and people were guilty and not any particular guilt of his own And therefore concerning himselfe they enquire of his calling and journey if so be they might be unlawful and of his countrey and people if so be they were accursed Doct. 1. Men have need of full information before they give out sentence upon any for though Jonah was taken by a lot and these men not knowing him might in passion shortly have rid themselves of him who had been the occasion and cause of their trouble yet they will farther informe themselves and that very meekly tell us we pray thee c. 2. Charity even in refined nature doth not easily admit of an hard construction of any or without sure grounds Therefore they first enquire tell us for whose cause this evil is upon us as desiring to be more particularly informed and not being willing to hold him for a wicked man in his own person till they should heare further 3. As in mens callings employments country and people there is hazard of sin so by those circumstances much of mens faults may be found out Therefore is Jonah posed concerning all these For beside unlawful callings and places where it is not lawfull to haunt every particular countrey and people have their own tentations to particular sins from which sins of a generation or calling it is hard to keep free 4. Men do oftentimes following their own ends engage in courses without all consideration till a day of trouble set them to trace them back and make enquiry For these Mariners minding their own gain put none of these questions to Jonah when they tooke him aboard till the storm led them to see their folly and rashnesse 5. The Lord in pursuing for sin knowes how to order challenges so as may make sin most bitter to the guilty Therefore doth he order the Mariners moving of these questions What is thine occupation c. every one of which might be a sting to Jonah's conscience that he a Prophet should be fleeing from God coming from the holy land and the Church should be rebellious and pursued rather then Pagans that he should be on a way and not have a warrant from God for it c. Ver. 9. And he said unto them I am an Hebrew and I feare the LORD the God of heaven which hath made the sea and the dry land 10. Then were the men exceedingly afraid and said unto him Why hast thou done this for the men knew that he fled from the presence of the LORD because he had told them Ionah's confession in answer to their question cleers up the matter of fact for which God was pursuing him whereat these Idolaters being dazled with the apprehension of the Majesty of God are astonished through fear admiring at and reproving his presumption Hence learn 1. God will not suffer iniquity how well soever concealed to lurk but will bring it out to light especially where he hath a purpose of mercy to the sinner Therefore is Jonah pursued till he confesse his sin even before Pagans He told them that he fled c. 2. Sin is not barely to be confessed but ought to be aggravated by every person that would be approved as sensible of it For so much doth this speech I am an Hebrew and I fear the Lord God of heaven c. implie and it was a great sin in him a member of the Church to dallie and that with such a great God 3. The true God is to be commended by all his children and set forth as they
wicked proud boasting and wicked enterprising far more wicked acting against the Lords people their land and rights but it will in due time be reckoned for for it is put upon these enemies score that they magnified themselves against the border threatning to possesse it Ver. 9. Therefore as I live saith the LORD of hostes the God of Israel Surely Moab shall be as Sodom and the children of Ammon as Gomorrah even the breeding of nettles and salt pits and a perpetual desolation the residue of my people shall spoile them and the remnant of my people shall possess them 10. This shall they have for their pride because they have reproached and magnified themselves against the people of the Lord of hostes Follows the judgement threatned for this sin and confirmed by an oath that these enemies should be made as Sodom and Gomorrah not for the way of their destruction but for Gods rooting them and their memory out and laying their land utterly desolate as a salted land which makes it barren to bear onely weeds and that for a long time if not for ever as to them though there be a promise of their restitution especially spiritual Jer. 48.47 49.6 And whereas they encroached upon Judah the Lord threatens to make Judah spoile and possesse their land v. 9 which is to be understood as that promise v. 7. is and that they may know the cause of this stroak the Lord repeats it againe that all this should come upon them for their proud insolency against and reproaching of his people v. 10. Doct. 1. The Lord is in great earnest that he will meer with the Churches enemies as having both power and reason so to do he being the Churches Protector in Covenant with her though it be little believed either by the Church or his enemies therefore he assures them of it by his oath and takes unto himself titles of power and interest As I live saith the Lord of Hosts the God of Israel 2. Though the Lord think is not fit to smite every sinful Nation with immediate judgements from heaven or to make their countreys utterly and for ever unuseful as Sodom and Gomorrah were yet his displeasure is no lesse against the enemies of his people then against those he hath so smitten and he will in due time evidence it by sore desolation and of long continuance being compared with the Churches lot therefore is the Lords wrath on these Nations compared with that which he let forth on Sodom and Gomorrah Surely Moab shall be as Sodom and the Children of Ammon as Gomorrah even the breeding of nettles and salt-pits and a perpetual desolation 3. Though the Church may oft times be exposed as a prey to her enemies yet the day may come when the Church will be employed to do that to enemies which they threatned to do to them and in part attempted to do for whereas Moab and Ammon magnified themselves against Israels border v. 8. now the Lord threatens that the residue of my people shall spoil them and the remnant of my people shall possesse them 4. In a time of judgements upon enemies there will be need of frequent inculcating of Gods controversie if they would have a blessed use of stroaks in turning to God and that so much the rather as they will be ready to see many things before they see their injuries done to the Church as a cause of their calamity tharefore is this quarrel again repeated This shall they have for their pride c. 5. Pride and insolency will not misse a fall and stroak in due time especially when pride leads men to act sin and wrong not out of infirmity or ignorance but with an high hand and that against the Church for This shall they have for their pride because they have reproached and magnified themselves against the people of the Lord. 6. A chiefe cause of the Lords appearing for his reproached and wronged people is that the wrongs done to them seem to reflect on him as if he were not keeping Covenant with them or not able to defend or redresse their wrongs and therefore as he affects them even in troubles so he will in due time by visible acts set out his power for them and his love to them therefore this stroak is threatned because they were infolent against the people of the Lord of hoasts where both his power and his interest in Israel are asserted as rubbed upon by them and to be cleared in the judgement to come upon them Vers 11. The LORD will be terrible unto them for he will famish all the gods of the earth and men shall worship him every one from his place even all the Isles of the Heathen This stroak is farther illustrated from an effect that when the Lord shall thus terribly plague enemies and vindicate the wrongs done to his Church he will consume the idols of the Nations also by blasting their reputation that could not help their worshippers whereas God helps his people and shal withdraw worship from them as useless things and so famish them of their food and oblations and make them lean whereby way shall be made for spreading of the knowledge of the true God especially in the dayes of the Gospel wherein without distinction of place John 4.21 or of Nations Acts 10.34 35. all the remotest Nations lying beyond the sea to Judea and the Iflanders shall serve him and yet more particularly in the day of the saving of all Israel which shall be life from the dead to the generality of the Gentiles Rom. 11.15 the fame of Gods doing for them inviting all Nations to renounce their idols and serve him Doct. 1. God is a dreadfull Party for weak man to provok and albeit he be oft times little regarded of the secure siuner yet in a day of anger he will be found terrible The Lord will be terrible unto them 2. As idolatry is a great cause of Gods anger against a people provoking him to smite them so people are ordinarily so addicted to idols that they are undone before they cease to esteem of them so much doth the conexion of these two import The Lord will be terrible unto them for he will famish all the gods of the earth he will terribly destroy them because he hath a mind to bring down their Idols 3. As it is a sweet fruit of judgements when they bring down Idols as well as lay other things waste so howsoever the Lord doth suffer idolatry for a time yet at last by judgments on idolaters and by mercies toward his people he will abolish idols and exalt himself as the only true God to be chosen and served by the world for He will famish all the gods of the earth and men shall worship him 4. It is the priviledge of the new Testament and a part of the glory of Christs Kingdome that the Lords worship is not confined to a Temple at Jerusalem nor to the Nation of Israel and such
will not tolerate for this stroak is for their transgressions or rebellions their sins and high places 3. In times of defection and controversie the Lord hath a special eye upon and a chief quarrel against such as have a leading hand in bringing on or carrying on the Apostasie for these questions What is the transgression of Iacob What are the high places of Iudah imports that God observes and would have the cause of all the defection and who began it sought out 4. In universal defections eminent places and persons are ordinarily most culpable as misleading others by their example and authority for the transrgession of Jacob is Samaria the high places of Judah are Jerusalem that is iniquity abounds most in these Cities and the sins of the Land have their rise and countenance from thence 5. The Lord hath an especial eye upon his own Church and people to whom he manifests himself and marks their declinings narrowly especially in the matter of his worship for Judahs high places are especially pointed at whereas all Israels desperate defection is named in a gen●●al of transgression Ver. 6. Therefore I will make Samaria as an heap of the field and as plantings of a vineyard and I wil poure down the stones thereof into the valley and I will discover the foundations thereof The Lord pronounceth a more particular sentence against Israel for their sins and particularly against Samaria that when theten Tribes should be led captive that City as being chief in the sin should have a remarkable stroak the buildings thereof should be rased to the very foundation the stones thereof cast down from the hill whereon it stood to the valley to lye as heaps of stones do which are gathered by Labourers of the ground and the place thereof should be only for planting of vineyards in it Doct. 1. Iniquity entertained will lay most eminent and strong places desolate for Therefore wil I make Samaria as an heap of the field c. although it endured a siege for three years 2 Kings 17.5 yet this threatning takes effect at last 2. Eminency in sin causeth eminency in judgements therefore Samaria is made an heap the stones poured down c. whereas other Cities of that Kingdom were not so ruined but there are some Cities of Samaria or of the Countrey about to bee inhabited 2 Kings 17.24 when it lyeth desolate 3. Wicked men prosecuting their wicked and ambitious ends may be made use of by God in an holy manner as instruments to execute his judgments upon his backsliding people and are so to be looked on by all who would have the use of their condition therefore the Lord for his peoples instruction and direction doth own the stroak to be inflicted by the Assyrians I will make Samaria as an heap of the field c. Ver. 7. And all the graven images thereof shall be beaten to pieces and all the hires thereof shall be burnt with the fire and all the Idols therof will I lay desolate for she gathered it of the hire of an harlot and they shall return to the hire of an harlot Samaria is threatned with further ruine in that not only her private things but her supposed sacred things should be destroyed her graven images broken that the mettal thereof might be carried away and her gifts given to Idols as harlots do to their Paramours or her riches out of which she gave these gifts and which she accounted to be the reward of her idolatry shall either be burnt by the furious soldiers or go as they came and perish as they are purchased and so her idols should be desolate Doct. 1. As it proves the vanity of idol-gods that they are obnoxious to destruction and desolation so in dayes of vengeance Gods speciall quarrel is against them to shew their frailty and the folly of all those who cleave unto them therefore all the graven images thereof shall be beaten in pieces and all the idols thereof wil I lay desolate by with-drawing respect worship and gifts from them 2. Idolatry is in Gods account spiritual harlotry and adultery for their gifts given to idols are hires such as are given unto or by harlots as the word signifieth and their riches the hire of an harlot Idolaters break that Covenant betwixt God as their Husband and them as his Spouse and doe poure out that affection due onely to God on idols and therefore provoke him in his jealousie to punish 3. As men may through Gods permission prosper in an ill way so are they ready to sacrifice their prosperity to a wrong cause and by their prospering to harden themselves in their way for Samaria's gifts bestowed on her idols or her great riches enabling her to offer she gathered it of the hire of an harlot that is shee acknowledged not God for her riches but conceived that they came to her for her unlawfull leagues and treaties with idolaters and as a reward of her idolatry and defection from the Tribe of Judah and the worship of God and therefore persevered in it See Hos 2.5 Ier. 44.17 18. 4. Riches purchased in a wrong way or abused to confirme men in a sinfull course shall come to nought for the hire thereof shal be burn● with fire and they shal return to the hires of an harlot Whereby wee are not so much to understand that the Assyrian Idolaters should take the riches and gifts of Samaria and abuse them as Israel had done in putting these gifts in the Temple of their Idols and acknowledging the riches as given them by their god as that it is a proverbial speech signifying that as these riches were ill purchased by Israel so they should go as they came and do them no good but vanish for an harlot purchaseth her hire ill and ordinarily it is as ill spent Ver. 8. Therefore I will wail and howle I will go stript and naked I will make a wailing like the dragons and mourning as the owls The sentence being pronounced the Prophet proceeds to set forth the greatnesse of the judgment together with that which was to come on Judah that they may be stirred up to lay it more seriously to heart in time And first hee declares what their calamity shall be by his own sorrow for it which was extreamly bitter as of dragons and owles whose horrible howlings in desert places is made use of in Scripture to expresse the condition of men sensible of great calamities I●h 30.29 Psa 102.6 and by his going naked and stript of his upper garments as a signe of totall desolation Isa 20.2 3. By all which the Lord doth not declare his allowance of any bitter carnal mourning in trouble but by the Prophets practice the Lord would teach 1. When his people provoke him he can send affliction beyond expression and such sorrows as no outward signes can sufficiently vent for this bowling wailing and going naked doth import so much in the Prophet foreseeing the storme and doth foretell that
it shall be so with the people when they feele it 2. It is the duty of faithfull Ministers not onely to denounce judgement against sinne and sinners but so to doe it as may make them most sensible of their danger before they feele it in reality therefore doth Micah waile and howle c. that they might thereby read the reality and weight of the threatning and study to prevent the execution 3. A most effectuall way of making people sensible of threatnings is when the messengers themselves are affected with them when they deliver them for therefore doth Micah who carried this message waile and howle 4. Threatnings from the Lord ought to be denounced with great affection and sympathie in the Messengers that so they may evidence that it is no revengefull and bitter spirit in them that maketh them speak so sharp and withall that their affection thus evidenced may make way for an unpleasant message Therefore will I waile and howle c. saith he as a sympathizer with the people of God however as his messenger I carry the hard tidings Ver. 9. For her wound is incurable for it is come unto Judah he is come unto the gate of my people even to Jerusalem In giving a reason of his sorrow he yet further describes the calamity from the universality of it that Samaria as shee is desperately sick of provocations without any hope that ever shee should amend so her stroak was incurable and that the Assyrian having destroyed them that fire should burn through all Judah even to Jerusalem the mother-City and seat of justice to all the Jewes of whom he was one and whom hee loved dearly And so hee comes to the second branch of the Threatning which is against Judah and Jerusalem as was likewise foretold by Isaiah chap. 8.7 8. and accomplished 2 Kings 18.13 c. Doct. 1. It is a bitter cause of complaint when stroaks inflicted by God are irremediable whereas a stroak is easie wherein there is hope of deliverance therefore doth Micah waile for her wound is incurable 2. Albeit the Lord begin his punishments for sin where it pleased him yet when hee lifts up his hand such as are guilty of the same sinnes may think not to escape for when the wound is begun at Samaria it comes unto Judah he is come to the gate of my people c. Jerusalem being so called because it was the seate of justice which used to be administred publickly in the gate 3. The Lord may suspend his corrections upon his Church for her backsliding untill a time of reformation and then inflict them for however Ahaz had his own fears from Rezin King of Syria Isa 7. 2 Kings 16. yet the correction for the high places of Judah of which ver 5. is by the Assyrian who destroyed Samaria and that in the dayes of Hezekiah the Reformer 2 Kings 18. It is come to wit from Samaria into Judah The reason of which is partly because Reformation being not set about sincerely and cordially as it was in the body of Judah in Josiah's time Jer. 3.6 10. doth so much the more provoke the Lord to punish for former Apostasie partly the Lord chuseth a time of Reformation to punish in that a people being at such a time sensible of the sinne procuring the stroak the affliction may be blessed to make them reform the more throughly and partly the Lord chuseth this time that the stroak may be the more moderate there being some standing in the gap and no totall backsliding and accordingly we finde Jerusalem preserved though threatned 4. The affections of the Lords servants in a time of distresse ought to be set on work to sympathize chiefly with such as are most dear to God therefore saith Micah He is come to the gate of my people Not so much his because hee was their countrey-man which ought not to sway with Ministers in publick administrations Deut. 33.8 9. though otherwise to be tender even in that respect is commendable as because they were more upright in Religion then Samaria and therefore the enemies coming even to Jerusalem where the Temple stood is most bitter Ver. 10. Declare yee it not at Gath weepe yee not at all in the house of Aphrah roll thy self in the dust In the next place the calamity of the people and cause of the Prophets sorrow is held forth to be so great that it were to be wished that their enemies such as the Philistims in Gath never knew of it and so might not insult over them in their misery to add to their affliction and therefore in a figurative way usuall in Lamentations and borrowed from 2 Sam. 1.20 they are injoyned to conceal their affliction from such by suppressing their weeping lest they should hear it Whence learn 1. There are still some in the world waiting for matter of joy in the Churches calamities whose gladdest day will be to see her in trouble For so much doth this prohibition to declare it in Gath import 2. Of all enemies such are among the most inveterate as being neerest unto the people of God yet partake not of their mercies for such were these at Gath lying hard upon the borders of Judah from whom especially they would conceale their grief 3. It is a new grief and great addition to the afflictions of the godly that enemies by reason of their calamities take occasion to reproach them their God and Religion And it would be a deliverance in part to have their case concealed from such and an ease to smother their grief if that could conceal it for this charge Declare ye it not at Gath weep ye not at all doth import the Churches wish that such knew it not and her ease if it were so 4. The Church of God must resolve not onely to have afflictions but also to have them noted and observed by enemies and to lie under all their insolencies and reproaches because of them till their triall be perfected for while in a figurative way the Prophet thus prohibits it intimates that it could not be hid and that the Church had this added to her triall In the rest of this Chapter to the last verse the greatnesse of this stroak and the cause of the Prophets sorrow is yet further set forth in a particular and pathetick enumeration of such places especially as would appear in Judah as should feele the calamity of Warr and what their calamity should be and albeit we find no mention elsewhere of divers places named here especially these ver 11 12. yet we are to conceive that they are either proper names of places though unknowne to us chosen out from among other places in regard the signification of their names doth illustrate their condition by the War or that they are appellative and borrowed names given to some places from their qualities properties or condition to illustrate their calamity in the ensuing tempest as may be seen in the particulars And so here by Aphrah
leasure offices c. enabled with advantages and bound to know more then others and to put their knowledge in practice that they may be examples to others O heads of Jacob and ye princes of the house of Israel is it not for you to know judgment 7. It is a good evidence that a man is one who delights to know and obey the revealed Will of God in all things when hee is carefull in the matter of his particular station to walk by that rule therefore he puts them to tryal in the matter of knowing judgement or justice and equity which belonged to them in their particular station as being Judges to the people 8. Whatever men may oppose to the challenges of Ministers in the matter of affected ignorance or wilful neglect of knowne duties yet these excuses will not satisfie their owne consciences when they are seriously put to it therefore the Prophet poseth them with a question which they could not deny Is it not for you to know judgement Ver. 2. Who hate the good and love the evill who pluck off their skin from off them and their flesh from off their bones 3. Who also eate the flesh of my people and flay their skin from off them and they break their bones and chop them in pieces as for the pot and as flesh within the cauldron In opposition to what they ought to be hee sets forth their contrary disposition and practise that they were abhorrers of what was good and lovers of ill and they did so cruelly oppresse and undo the Lords people by taking away the very means of their subsistence and livelihood as if they had flayed their skin from off them eaten their flesh and broken their bones to boyle them for meat as Butchers and Cookes doe with beasts for mans food Doct. 1. The Lord doth not reckon that men know ought when the truth being knowne is not affected nor any endeavours used to put it in practise for so doth he cleare here their not knowing of judgement in that they hated the good and oppressed 2. The Lord respects chiefly the disposition and affection of mens hearts towards good or ill it being a desperate condition when not onely practise is out of course but affection also is alienated from God and inclined to evil Who hate the good and love the evil 3. Whatever oppressors may pretend to be the cause of their cruelty toward their inferiours as if they stood in need and behooved to live of their owne c. yet the Lord seeth it to flow from their perverse and corrupt affections Therefore saith he of oppressors Ye hate the good and love the evil 4. Greatest perversity is usually found in such as ought and may and will not or neglect to make use of such meanes as might promote piety and justice for all this pervesitie is in the heads of Jacob who had meanes and occasion to set them on to do otherwise Ye are they saith he who hate the good c. 5. Oppression is in Gods account inhumane butchery and murther in a degree far above simple slaughter while the oppressed pine for want and the oppressours as barbarians or wilde beasts eate that which is the poores very life and flesh so much doth this description of oppression teach us Who pluck off their skins from off them and their flesh from off their bones who also eate the flesh of my people c. 6. Albeit Magistrates and great men thinke themselves to be above all law yet they have no power to oppresse a people especially if they be Gods people and deale with them as they will but must bee accountable for their carriage toward them and howsoever the oppressed or others dare not challenge them for their injurious dealing yet there is a God who will lay it to their charge for here they are challenged by God for their oppressing his people Ver. 4. Then shall they cry unto the LORD but hee will not heare them he will even hide his face from them at that time as they have behaved themselves ill in their doings Followeth their particular sentence and judgement by way of retaliation that as they oppressing the poore had a deafe eare to their cryes so they would meet with judgement without mercy or compassion and should not be owned of God though out of feeeling of their trouble they seeke unto him Doct. 1. The greatest of men and they who most wickedly forget God shall at one time or other be sensibly in Gods reverence and their errand come in his way for so doth this threatning import that they shall be put to seek God whom otherwise they misregarded Then shall they cry 2. Natural men may make some shew of seeking God in trouble not in faith or out of love but out of sense of trouble Then that is when the common calamities formerly threatned or their owne particular corrections for their sin are lying on shall they cry 3. It is righteous with God not to owne this crying of the wicked in their trouble because of their former wickednesse and present unsoundnesse and particularly that he may recompence them for not hearkening to the cry of the poore oppressed by them They shal cry unto the LORD but he will not heare them 4. It is extreame misery to bee deserted totally of God in trouble and to want his favour and sense of reconciliation which might support them in any extromity for it is here the extremity of misery that in their trouble he will even hide his face from them as that time 5. God by not owning of a man in trouble would have wickednesse seen and lamented as the cause of it however he seem also to do this sometime that he may try the faith of his children for so doth this reason import As they have behaved themselves ill in their doings Ver. 5. Thus saith the LORD concerning the Prophets that make my poople erre that bite with their teeth and cry Peace and he that putteth not into their mouthes they even prepare warre against him In the next place he accuseth the false Prophets who by false doctrine deceived the people and who by preaching peace did in effect destroy peoples soules with delusion as if these dogs had devoured the Lords sheep with their teeth or they flatter'd the people in sin that they might get somewhat to eate and devoure their substance wherein if they were not satisfied and humoured according to their owne desire they turned bitter enemies and denounced judgements though they formerly flattered them Doct. 1. False teachers are not the least among the sad companions of a declining time nor will the Lord forget to reckon with them for here the Lord hath such to deale with Thus saith the Lord and not one Prophet envying another concerning the Prophets c. See Lam. 2.14 2. An unfaithfull Ministry is a most effectual meanes to prevaile with people and carry them out of the way of God for the
make him famous and precious as an ointment poured out to invite others to come under his yoke and it is his prerogative to have an universal Government and Kingdom over Jewes and Gentiles throughout the earth which he will still prosecute till he obtain all that is in his Charter for He shall be great to the ends of the earth imports all these See Zech. 8.23 7. The Conversion of souls unto Christ and bringing them under his yoke tends to the setting forth of the greatnesse of Christ and the conversion of many doth set out his greatnesse the more who doth draw all these doth care for them and to whose fulness they flow and depend upon and it should be the care of all who are converted in their expressions and carriage to commend and set him forth as great and superexcellent therefore is the enlargement of his Kingdome described from this effect of it He shall be great to the ends of the earth 8. Whatever is promised in the Word is to faith so certain as if it were then performed and ought to be looked on as coming speedily the Lords choosing of times and seasons for performing his promise being no delay in a believers eyes nor impediment unto his faith to feed upon it as present for this cause it is said now shall he be great Gods keeping his appointed time is great haste to the believing man Isa 60.22 and the promise apprehended by faith giveth the thing promised a present subsistence to his use and comfort Vers 5. And this man shall be the peace when the Assyrian shall come into our land and when he shall tread in our palaces then shall we raise against him seven shepherds and eight principal men 6. And they shall waste the land of Assyria with the sword and the land of Nimrod in the entrances thereof thus shall he deliver us from the Assyrian when he cometh into our land and when he treadeth within our borders Followes some special fruits of Christs governing his Church such as peace and means sufficient not only to oppose the disturbers thereof such as the Assyrians were to Israel of old but to offend them also and so they shall be delivered However this promise spiritually considered belong to the whole Church and literally also in so far as is for her good yet it seems to have a special relation to the Church of Israel when they shall be converted and restored to their land Doct. 1. Christ is the only Author and Maintainer of the Churches Peace for this man or this one the word implying a demonstrating of him to others as one remarkable shall be the peace He pacifies Gods anger towards us establisheth our hearts in the faith thereof in him only have we true peace among our selves for luke-warmnesse breeds divisions and he it is that maketh peace in his Churches borders and creates a cloud over he● 2. The Church will not want enemies of her peace and such as will study to disturb it and may seem to prevail much at some times for the Assyrians or such enemies as the Assyrians were of old and the Babylonians or the land of Nimrod v. 6 shall come into our land and tread in our palaces she must resolve to have peace with continual ba●tels 3. The Church hath her peace secured in Christ in the midst of trouble and through him will have means sufficient to oppose her enemies and maintain her peace for he shall be the peace when the Assyrian shall come and there are seven shepherds and eight principal men to raise against him or a sufficient number of leaders seven being a number of perfection and eight yet more with armies to oppose him 4. It is a great blessing upon a land when the Lord furnisheth them with able men for government and rule in all exigents for that is Israels mercy to have such to employ and they are the means of their peace and safety We say they shall raise or call and send out she herds and principal men where their Princes are called shepherds with relation to the people as a flock 5. The enemies of the Church do oppose her alwayes to their own great disadvantage in the end for the Church shall not only defend themselves but they shall waste the land of Assyria with the sword and the land of Nimrod in the entrances thereof or their borders or with their own swords Babylon is here called the land of Nimrod because he founded that Kingdome Gen. 10.9 10 11. and was a great oppressor as his successors were 6. The inconveniencies which the Church sustains by her troubles do not prove so great as they may seem to be for however he tread in our palaces ver 5. yet ver 6. it is but treading within our land and borders See 2 Cor 4. 8 9. and 6.9 7. As the Church is sure to be delivered from her enemies so the glory of all he● enterprises and victories by them are to be ascribed to Christ only whatever be the part of instruments in bringing them about therefore albeit they raise up shepherds c. ver 5. yet ver 6. Thus shall he deliver us Ver. 7. And the remnant of Jacob shall be in the midst of many people as a dew from the LORD as the showres upon the grasse that tarrieth not for man nor waiteth for the sons of men The similitude of Dew made use of here leads us to a two-fold interpretation of this passage 1. That the Lords blessing of the rest given by these deliverances to the Church of Israel shall make her to multiply and flourish marvellously as the dew and rain fals down in great abundance suddenly and unexpectedly without humane industry and thus the similitude is used 2 Sam. 17.12 Psal 110.3 2. That the Church of Israel shall not only flourish themselves but be instruments of the flourishing and increase of the Church among the Nations as the Lord is the principal refresher and fructifier of his Church and therefore his operations are compared to dew and raine Hos 14.5 Psal 72.6 So they shall be instrumentally as dew and raine to many Nations that is being furnished with the Spirit from above and with refreshing doctrine they shall water them therewith as dew and raine doth the ground and so conquer them to the Kingdom of Christ and be instruments of their fruitfulnesse and blessings to them Both these interpretations agree in one to hold forth the miraculous increase of the Church either of Israel her self or of the Gentiles also by her means as another fruit of the government of Christ over them and may safely be taken both in here From the first interpretation Learn 1. That afflictions may make many sad and sore breaches on a Church before they recover out of them for they are now brought to the remnant of Jacob. 2. The Lord can easily when he pleaseth restore his broken people and make them increase as admirably and incredibly as
which he proves by purging himself of any wrong done to them shewing that they had nothing to say against his dispensation toward them and nothing to lay to his charge wherefore they should have forsaken him charging their consciences that as he had called the mountaines to witnesse against them so they would declare if they had any injury on his part to complain of and would bring out any thing they had to say to clear themselves of that crime of ingratitude Dect 1. It is the Lords love to his people that maketh him challenge them for forsaking him and this should make the challenge affect their hearts and will aggravate their guilt if it do not So much doth this stile O my people prefixed to the challenge teach us 2. The Church of God by her backsliding doth raise an evil report on God as if he dealt not well with his people and as if he were not easie to serve for his enquiring what have I done unto thee wherein have I wearied thee imports that their backsliding said in effect he had done them injury and wearied them with rigorous service 3. However our corruptions do snuffe and weary in Gods service as Mal. 1.13 yet there can be no true cause shewed why any should choose to forsake God but rather should cleave unto him seeing his commands are not grievous his yoke easie trials sent by him not above measure punishments not above deserving and a Mediator ready to undertake for his people in all exigents Therefore the Lord will have it disputed and will have the consciences of backsliders to clear him wherein have I wearied thee testifie against me See Jer. 2.5 3. 4. To forsake the Lord without cause and when men have nothing to lay to his charge wherefore they do it is great ingratitude for this is the scope of the challenge that fince they could lay nothing to his charge and yet turned away from him they could not shun the crime of ingratitude Vers 4. For I brought thee up out of the land of Egypt and redeemed thee out of the house of servants and I sent before thee Moses Aaron and Miriam A further proof of his challenge for their ingratitude is taken from his mercies towards them whereby he further vindicates himself and proves that they were so far from having any harsh usage to lay to his charge wherefore they did forsake him that on the contrary he had manifested many rare and singular favours toward them which did aggravate their fault This proof he cleares from several instances The first instance is his redeeming them from Egypt and that when Egypt dealt most hardly with them and had made them bond-men although the Egyptians themselves ought rather to have been slaves as coming of cursed Cham Gen. 9.25 A second instance is taken from his conducting them through the wildernesse giving unto them a well-setled government and faithful Governours such as Moses in the State to give laws from Gods mouth and to conduct the people Aaron to be Priest and Meriam their sister to instruct the women in that extraordinary time Exod. 15.20 Doct. 1. Mercies received do contribute much to aggravate the defection of a people so much doth this instancing of mercies in a time of defection teach See 1 Sam. 15.17 c. 2. Our delivery from bondage spiritual or temporal inward or outward that we may serve the Lord ought to be an eternal bond upon the delivered to be for God therefore their bringing out of the land of Egypt a shadow of spiritual deliverance by Jesus Christ wherein God had manifested himself gloriously is brought to remembrance though past and done long ago as yet obliging if it were well considered I brought them up out of the land of Egypt c. 3. The Lords conducting and guiding of his people in this world under a sweet and orderly government and honest governours in Church and State working to others hands for advancing Gods honour and the good of a people is a singular and obliging mercy though the people enjoying it were otherwise in a wildernesse for it aggravates their ingratitude that he sent before them Moses who received Gods minde in Lawes to them Psal 103.7 who was singularly meek Numb 12.3 and vehement in his affection to that people Exodus 32.31 c. Numb 14.13 Aaron who was the Saint of the Lord Psal 106.16 and Miriam though a weak woman and extraordinarily employed and not to be imitated in ordinary yet the sense of the mercy should not have died with her Verse 5. O my people remember now what Balak King of Moab consulted and what Balaam the son of B●●r answered him from Shittim unto Gilgal that ye may know the righteousnesse of the LORD A third instance of mercy is taken from a particular passage of his goodnesse in the wildernesse turning Balaks intended curse into a blessing and causing Balaam against his own inclination to blesse the people and publish Gods good will toward them See Numb 22.5 and 23.7 and 24.1 14. Deut. 23.4 5. This instance is yet further enlarged that when Balaam had counselled Balak to tempt Israel to whoredom and idolatry at Shittim that so God might turn their party Rev. 2.14 Num. 25.1 yet the Lord spared them and justly brought Balaam to a violent death Josh 13.22 Numb 31.8 He gave them victories over Og and Sihon Numb 21. he brought them unto the promised land and in Gilgal renewed the Covenant by circumcision and the Passeover Josh 3.1 and 5.2 c. By all which they might be sufficiently convinced of his fidelity in keeping promise in every thing Doct. 1. Forgetfulnesse of mercies is the cause why they take so little effect and produce so small fruit Therefore he calls them to remember now 2. The Lord in assuring his people that he takes pleasure in their prosperity is pleased so far to condescend to our capacity as to expresse himself as one whose heart warmed at the remembrance of wonted familiarity and consequently would be content to have it renewed therefore upon rehearsal of this benefit he repeats again O my people as if his affection were kindled and revived by the rehearsal See Jer. 2.2 much more should it so work upon us 3. As the Lord hath the power of cursing and blessing in his own hand however men be disposed so doth he turn intended curses against his people into blessings he can when he will protect them against the fraud as well as the violence of enemies yea and make their very enemies befriend them for so much doth that history of Balaam and Balak here pointed at teach us 4. The Lords sparing mercies his goodnesse striving with his peoples wickednesse and his keeping and renewing of a Covenant when their sins deserve that it should he broken and his just judgements upon their violent and fraudulent enemies ought to convince and engage his peoples hearts much to him therefore ought they to remember for their
most part in general denunciation of Gods vengeance upon gross and impenitent sinners such as the Chaldeans were wherein the Lord threatneth wrath and sad judgments to come upon them for the grosse abominations such as ambition covetousnesse oppression sensuality carnal policie idolatry c. which abounded amongst them This controversie the Lord layeth out in several branches sometimes repeating the same things in substance and amplifying them from several considerations to the end there may be a more distinct clear sight of the sinfulnesse of their sin of the vanity of the pretences they founded their courses on and of the equity of God judgments subjoyned to every branch The first branch of the controversie is that the Chaldeans and in special their King being given to sensuality and ambition or drunk with pride and ambition as with wine was insatiable in his Conquests like death and hell or the grave of which Pro. 30.15.16 Isa 5.14 and not being content with his own portion did labour to adde one Kingdom after another to his dominions Doct. 1. As the godlies honest wrestling through an evil time by faith is an evidence that God wil reckon with their oppressors so the Lords reproving and punishing the Apostasie of any within the Church may assure men that he will not spare wicked enemies for this is subjoyned to what was said ver 4. with a Yea also or How much more importing that when he made the just to live by faith he would also reckon with the Chaldeans and if he discovered and punished the listed up soul how much more the Chaldeans See Jer. 25.29 1 Pet. 4.17 18 2. The most part of unrenewed great mens actions and enterprises are consecrated to the service of their vile lusts For Because he transgresseth by wine and is proud he keeps not at home his great enterprises are undertaken to satisfie sensuality and ambition 3. Men once inslaved to the service of their lusts do become brutish and in a manner renounce their very reason for so may the words also be read The proud man transgresseth as through wine he is drunk with ambition as with wine which depriveth men of the use of sense and reason 4. It is a sin flowing from ambition a violence offered to nature which is content with little when men cannot acquisce in their lot and portion assigned them by God especially when it is competent but doe by all means hunt after more for it was the Chaldeans sin and ambition that having a Kingdom yet he keeps not at home 5. It is the Lords judgement upon ambitious men that the more they go beyond bounds to satisfie their lusts they become the more insatiable the more they drink they are the more thirsty for such an one enlargeth his desire as hell and is as death and cannot be satisfied but gathereth unto him all Nations and heapeth to him all people Vers 6. Shall not all these take up a parable against him and a taunting Proverb against him and say Wo to him that encreaseth that which is not his how long and to him that ladeth himself with thick clay The Lord threateneth that because of these their sins his judgments should make them contemptible and matter of derision insomuch that even those whom they had oppressed should insult over them and mock them and declare them accursed in their unlawful Conquests which however they had groaned under them could not endure long and in their overcharging and burdening themselves with the dross of this world Doct. 1. Even the consciences of wicked men if they were awake or suffered to speak would give out doom and sentence upon them and subscribe to the righteousnesse of Gods judgements for here he appeals to themselves Shall not all these take up a parable c. So also v. 7.2 When men sinfully endeavour to satisfie their pride and ambition it is right●ous with God to make them most contemptible and ignominious for the proud man v. 5 meets with a parable and taunting proverb or becomes a matter of publick derision 3. However the oppressed and subdued may seem to be far behinde with Conquerors and Oppressors yet the Lord will in due time cleare that there is but little cause for such an apprehension and greatest oppressors wil meet with their own stroak wherein the lowest may insult over them and they shall be rather the object of pitty then of envy or on whom any would wish more cruelty for All these to wit the nations subdued by him v. 5. even all of them and those who were sorest smitten shall take up a parable against him and a taunting proverb against him and say Wo to him See Isa 14.4 12. 4. As unjust Conquest gives a man no right to his Purchase so it brings on Gods curse and at last makes the Purchaser an object of derision Wo here may be taken both for an insulting expression a declaration of a curse upon him Wo to him or Wo he by way of triumphing over him and laughing at him that encreaseth that which is not his 5. Though the oppressed ordinarily groan under the oppressor and wish his end admiring at Gods patience toward him yet it may be concluded that oppression shall not continue so long as either the oppressed or oppressor might expect and that disappointment of the oppressors hopes of continuance in his way shal be matter of derision for all this is imported in that part of the proverb How long 6. Albeit oppressors promise to themselves much ease contentment pleasure and happinesse in their great enjoyments yet they are iniserably disappointed for riches are in themselves but base and great abundance of them beyond that which is needful is to the ambitious but a burden and matter of vexation drawing down the soul from God and intangling and polluting it and this may point out the misery of those who hunt so much after these things Wo to him that ladeth himself with thick clay that is base riches which do but burden pollute and intangle him Ver. 7. Shall they not rise up suddenly that shall bite thee and awake that shall vex thee and thou shalt be for booties unto them 8. Because thou hast spoiled many nations all the remnant of the people shall spoile thee because of mens blood and for the violence of the land of the City and all that dwell-therein The Lord yet declareth his mind concerning these sins and threatens yet farther that he will pay them home as they had served others for as the Chaldeans had ranged up and down the world like ravenous beasts so he would suddenly raise up the Medes and Persians who for present were little dream't of to trouble and devour and prey upon them v. 7. And as they had robbed and spoiled many nations so he would stir up the remnant of the nations either such nations as had been reserved from their sury or the remainder of the nations which they had ruined who should
make their rich men and Merchants to howle v. 11 and spoile Epicures of their wealth v. 12 13. 2. He sets that sad approaching day yet before them in its terriblenesse making the stoutest to cry v. 14. the wrath of God bringing men in distresse without any comfort v. 15. affrighting them with the alarms and assaults of their enemies v. 16. leaving them void of counsel in their greatest calamities v. 17. and destitute of all reliefe wherein they trusted to be suddenly consumed v. 18. Ver. 1. THe word of the Lord which came to Zephaniah the sonne of Cushi the sonne of Gedaliah the sonne of Amariah the sonne of Hizkiah in the dayes of Iosiah the son of Amon King of Iudah The Inscription holds forth 1. The messenger employed in this service who is described from divers of his Progenitors who were either Prophets themselves or men of note in their time for so is generally conceived when the Progenitors of the Prophets are recorded 2. His commission from God and the authority of his doctrine which he devised not of his own head nor learned by ordinary meanes but received it by immediate inspiration And 3. The time when he was employed Whence learn 1. Though the persons of men adde nothing to a divine message but God can employ the meanest and make them honourable by employing them yet sometime it pleaseth him to make choice of men of eminency to clear that it is the honour of the greatest to be his Ambassadours to his people yet further to make them inexcusable who contemn his message for the meannesse of the messenger therefore he employeth this Prophet Zephaniah the sonne of Cushi the sonne of Gedaliah c. whose Parents in many generations had been of eminent note amongst that people and consequently himself famous for descent and pedigree 2. People through long obduration in sin may come to that height as no endeavours of pious rulers will bring them to repentance whereby they might prevent sad threatnings judgments for this word of sad denunciations is sent in the dayes of Josiah a pious King and zealous reformer but the son of Amon who by his corrupt wayes following his father Manasseh had made that people incorrigible 3. In a time of general and continued defection the Lords long-suffering is so great as to multiply messengers and warnings before he strike that so men may be reclaimed or made inexcusable for this end was the Prophet sent out with many others about the time of the approaching captivity See 2 Chro. 26.15 16.4 As the divine authority of God is alwayes to be studied and seen in messages in the mouth of his servants so especially when the Word speaks sad things it is good to see God our party and how little cause we have to fix on messengers or their humours as the cause of such unpleasing doctrine therefore when the Prophet brings out this message it is avowed and held out to be the Word of the Lord which came unto Zephaniah Ver. 2. I will utterly consume all things from off the land saith the Lord. 3. I will consume man and beast I will consume the fowles of the Heaven and the fishes of the Sea and the stumbling blocks with the wicked and I will cut off man from off the land saith the Lord. The Lord begins here as with a closed processe that needs no more but to pronounce the sentence and therefore this people having been abundantly warned and convinced by former Prophets he threatens them with a general desolation of the land by the destruction and taking away of all things in it not only of men who had sinned but of the creatures which they had abused to satisfie their lusts insomuch as the beasts should be cut off and destroyed yea the very fowles should be driven away and the fish exhausted from their ponds lakes or rivers as it is usual in countries infested with wars By which judgment the Lord threatens to make short work with the sinner his abused riches or his Idolatry which no reformation could purge from him Doct. 1. The Lords spirit will not alwayes strive with his sinful people but will at last give out his sentence according to their ways so much doth this abrupt falling on threatning without any previous dealing import 2. A publike reformation never so piously intended and zealously prosecuted by Rulers after much defection will be so far from keeping off wrath when the people are not cordial and thorough in the reformation as by the contrary it may ripen a people faster for a stroak for though Josiah was a pious and approved reformer yet considering that the people did but dissemble in the matter and dally with God as is marked Jer. 3.6 10. and appeared suddenly upon Josiahs death in that in three moneths they went all wrong with the succeeding King 2 Kings 23.31 32. therefore the Lord gives them up as desperate and begins I will utterly consume all things c. 3. When men will not read the greatnesse and dreadfulnesse of divine displeasure against them from the greatnesse of their sin or from the threatnings of the Word it is righteous with God to write it in legible characters of extreame desolation as here he threatens to do to this incorrigible people by utterly consuming all things from off the land man and beast c. 4. Sinful man is a great burden to the Creation in his abusing of the creatures to fight against God with them and provoking God against them not for any fault of their own but that he may punish man for whose use they were created by smiting them for Judahs sins make all things be utterly consumed from off the land and bring stroaks on beasts fowles of the heaven and fishes of the sea where by the sea we may understand any gathering of waters in ponds rivers or lakes for in Scripture the very Laver in the Temple is called A Sea because it conteined much water 1 Kings 7.23 so also the lake of Generazeth and Tiberius Matth. 8.24.27 John 6.1 See for this doctrine Jer. 4.25 and 12.4 Hos 4.3 5. As wicked mens prosperity proveth the neck break of their souls by their abusing of it and hardening themselves in sin thereby and as Idolatry will certainty end in the eternal ruine of the impenitent Idolater so these sins are oft-times so rooted in the heart and estimation of sinners that there is no ceasing to sin that way till the sinner cease to be and in this case the Lord will not spare seeing there is no remedy so here after that reformation had essayed them in vain either as to removing their Idols from them or making them to cease from abusing the creatures to sin in which case they are stumbling blocks as well as Idols God threatens to cut off the stumbling blocks with the wicked and so put an end to their sin by destroying themselves 6. In a time of general calamity on all the