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A52807 A compleat history and mystery of the Old and New Testament logically discust and theologically improved : in four volumes ... the like undertaking (in such a manner and method) being never by any author attempted before : yet this is now approved and commended by grave divines, &c. / by Christopher Ness ... Ness, Christopher, 1621-1705. 1696 (1696) Wing N449; ESTC R40047 3,259,554 1,966

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and Votaries hereby hindring them of that mutual Help that God ordained them and of that Remedy against Sin If God thought it not good for Adam in his Pure state to be alone how much more for his Posterity in the Corrupt state who have more need of that Remedy This forbidding to marry to their Clergie at all times and to their Laity at some times of the year is one of Romes Doctrines of Devils 1 Tim. 4.1 3. and they are Devils rather than Divines that speak disgracefully of Marriage and call it a Defilement Though Paul saith it is not good to marry 1 Cor. 7.26 28. yet doth he neither contradict Moses here nor himself elsewhere Heb. 13.4 for the Apostle speaks not there of Moral good which onely is opposite to sin but of Expedient good or Secundum quid in respect of present Persecutions under the ten Heathen Emperours Therefore it was not expedient Had he spoke of Good simply he could not have said If he marry he sinneth not The 2 Note this holy Ordinance of God Marriage Prov. 2.17 how holy should it be contracted and accomplished Adam did not steal the Woman when formed but receives her from God when he brought her to him Alas how many entreth into God's holy Ordinance at the Devils Portal either by Theft or Fornication This is the way to bring a Curse upon them and not a Blessing As Adam did not snatch Eve by force so neither did Eve come running to Adam but is brought to him by God They be holy and happy Couples whom hearty Prayers and holy Means bring together The last Blessing partly external and partly internal was that of the Sabbath instituted in Paradise both before the Fall of Man and before the Promise of Christ as Mr. Perkins saith in his Cases of Conscience about the Sabbath even in the state of Innocency Therefore the History of the institution of the Sabbath is mentioned immediately after the finishing of the Creation as is expressed both in Gen. 2.1 3. and Exod. 20.11 before the History of Adams Fall 'T is true our first Parents did not stand in that state of Innocency to keep the first Sabbath therein but did fall upon the sixth day the very day of their creation yet God makes mention of his Sabbath Gen. 2.3 before he made mention of their Sin Gen. 3.1 c. to shew that they should have kept the Sabbath though they had never finned If Man had continued in the pure state seeing he was appointed to dress the Garden and not to live idly even in Paradise it self 't is enough probable that even then and there he should have kept the Sabbath as a Rest and Intermission from even such a labour as became that place and state and as a Symbol or Sign unto him of a more compleat Perfection to be attained unto in Heaven far beyond that Perfection and Happiness he had on Earth The first point to be Discussed is that the Sabbath was Instituted from the Creation as the Prophet Malachi gathers an everlasting Rule and Law from a Foundation grounded on the first Creation saying Did be not make one And wherefore one that be might seek a Seed for God Mal. 2.15 so may we argue accordingly Did not the Lord rest upon the Seventh day and why upon the Seventh day that he might sanctifie the Seventh day to himself and his Worship Indeed Tostatus and Pererius two Popish Writers do assert that the Sabbath was not Instituted till the time of Moses at Sinai and that the Sanctifying of the Sabbath spoken of in Gen. 2.2 is mentioned by Moses there by way of Anticipation onely But this must needs be a gross mistake in both those Popelings For 1 no such Anticipation can be exemplified in either Testament for so great a distance of time as was betwixt the Creation of the World and the giving of the Law by Moses See Phil. ● 5 2 Suarez another Popish Author doth grant that some observation of the Seventh day began from the beginning of the Creation Suarez De Diebus Festis and all the best Interpreters do unanimously affirm that the Seventh day was Sanctified from the beginning of the World 3 The ancient Jews never dreamed of any such Anticipation for it was their received opinion that the Feast of the Sabbath was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for all Nations from the beginning of the World Philo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 14. 4 It is also evident that the holy Patriarchs did keep the Sabbath by a godly Tradition before the Moral Law was given for 't is said Exod. 16.23 To morrow is the Rest of the holy Sabbath to the Lord. This was before the promulgation of the Law Exod. 20. and though here is the Sabbath first mentioned yet here it was not first instituted they had much neglected the Sabbath in Egypt and here a new Rule is given for its renewing and constant observation 5 The Creation of the World in six days and Gods resting on the Seventh was the cause of its Institution for a Sabbath as its effect Now to put off the Institution and Observation of the Sabbath until the promulgation of the Law at Sinai is to cast the Effect behind the Cause above 2544 years and to begin the Memorial that the World was made which certainly most concerned those of the first Age thereof to regard and remember not until above 888 years after the World was marr'd by Noahs Deluge which must needs be altogether improbable 6 The very words and Phrases the Holy Ghost uses Gen. 2.2 3. doth convince the contrary for there the compleating of the Creation is twice conjoyned with the Sanctification of the Seventh day and that in the same manner and phrase as the creation of Man and all other Creatures is conjoyned with their Benediction Gen. 1.21 22 27 28. 7 When the Law came to be given by Moses the fourth Commandment doth plainly intimate that the Sabbath was instituted when the Creation was finished for in six days the Lord made heaven and earth and res●ed the seventh day c. Exod. 20.11 where God proposes his own Example for mans imitation That which the Lord himself had done in person the same must man do at Gods Command Thus the Apostle to the Hebrews seemeth to argue 1. From the Sabbath or Rest upon the Seventh day whereof the godly are partakers in this life which he intimates was a Rest appointed from the Creation of the World 2. There is another Rest mentioned in the Old Testament to wit the Rest in Canaan unto which Joshua brought the people of God 3. There is yet a Sabbatism or Rest remaining for them This is 1 Spiritual here as God rests in his love to us Zeph. 3.17 so we rest in our enjoyment of him Psal 116.7 2. Eternal in Heaven where the Sabbath is everlasting Heb. 4.3 4 5 7 8 9. Thus also the Ancient and Orthodox Fathers do universally ground the Institution of the
respect of the Priest's Office and this Covering of the Altar with those Censers of polished splendid Brass was as a Looking-glass for all to behold that none might after as Korah presume to the Priesthood The second Consequent is The new notorious Rebellion of the whole People surviving those sad Judgments raised the very morning after which was pacified by a Plague begun but stopp'd by Moses sending Aaron in haste to stand betwixt the living and the dead with Incense a clear Type of Christ ver 41 to 50. Those Rebels after such a severe double Conviction so soon to murmure against Moses who had saved them by his prayer for them ver 22. for his killing the Lord's People seem to be acted and driven by the Devil into this prodigious contumacy Tho' the miraculous strangeness of both the Judgments did declare them to come from God yet Moses must be blamed for killing both ways even while the carkases of the late Rebels lay before their Eyes As the Devil had set the Sorcerers of Egypt against Moses Exod. 8. so he sets this People against him here to make their Rebellion as marvelous as were God's Judgments upon the Rebellious Some say such a furious Devil agitated the People that they offered to assault Moses and Aaron with violent hands whereupon they fled for their own safety as Vaiphenu in ver 43. is translated to the door of the Tabernacle Then Deus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God as out of an Engine appeareth to Relieve his Distressed Servants and threatned to consume the new and more formidable Rebels because more universal with a third deadly Plague which was in part executed ver 45.46 Moses was quick-sighted by his familiarity with God and early discerns Divine Wrath at its first setting forth He spies the Plague running on like fire in a Corn field he bids Aaron run to stop it by making an Atonement Aaron interposeth and therein exposeth himself to the Wrath of God for saving the People yet living God favourably accepts his Atonement Deut. 33.10 11. wherein he figured Christ who poured out his Soul an Offering for Sin and made Intercession for Transgressors Isa 53.12 Luke 22.34 The Hebrew Rabbins observe well how that Aaron made no Atonement for the dead for they cannot hope for any Portion Eccles 9.4 5 6 10 Psal 115.17 Isa 38.18 for after death cometh Judgment Heb. 9.27 therefore there was no estimation nor price of the dead who could not personally appear before the Priest for any Vow in Israel Levit. 27.8 as Maimonides in Erachin cap. 1 well observeth Aaron could not be so quick for staying the Plague but God was as quick in slaying the People fourteen thousand and seven hundred more died of this speedy Pestilence and tho' Incense was to be offered now only upon the Altar of Incense within the Tabernacle yet Aaron offers it betwixt the dead and the living without the Tabernacle in the open Wilderness and God accepts if as done upon an extraordinary occasion so by a Divine extraordinary Dispensation the Plague was stayed here by ver 47 48 49. All which not only sheweth how prevalent with God are the Prayers of his faithful and fervent Servants Jam. 5.16 1 John 5.14 c. but also fore-shewed the efficacy of Christ's Mediation whom the Father heareth always John 11.42 who is our Atonement 1 Joh. 2.2 our Paschal Lamb that stops the destroying Angel from touching us Exod. 12.23 Heb. 11.28 as also 2 Sam. 24.16 Thus the Smoke of Aaron's Incense figuring Christ's Intercession for us Psal 141.2 Rev. 8.4 stayed the Plague from the surviving Israelites for which Moses praised God at the Tent door ver 50. Lastly To prevent all such like Murmurings for the future Numb 17.5 10. God superadds a miraculous Approbation of Aaron's Priesthood by causing his Rod laid up in the Tent of the Testimony with the Rods of all the other Tribes to bud blossom and bear ripe Almonds all in one night's time ver 6 7 8 9. and Numb 20.9 Heb. 9.4 Here are three Miracles in one 1. That a dry Rod made of the Almond Tree should bring forth buds in a moment 2. That those buds should presently become blossoms and flowers 3. That these should immediately become ripe fruit and that all at once or at least in a little space Natura non facit saltum Nature makes no such leaps All this was supernatural to these ends 1. For a Testimony of God's calling Aaron to the Priesthood 2. For a Type of Christ the branch Isa 11.1 3. For a figure of the fruitfulness of a Gospel-Ministry And 4. For a lively representation of a glorious Resurrection N.B. This Kadesh Barnea where this Miracle was wrought was the more famous a Mansion of Isral there because they not only had their Station at this place many days Deut. 1.46 even a whole year as at Sinai as above for tho' they were commanded to remove their Tents the very next day of their murmuring upon the Return of the Spies and the ten reporting falsly of Canaan Numb 14 25. yet they obeyed not that Command but affaulted the Canaanites in the Mountains and were discomfited by them whereupon they returned to their Tents where they mourned as they had good cause many days and there were permitted to linger and loiter a long time wherein those occurrences afore-mentioned fell out For at their first Station here they received those Laws which are Recorded Numb 15. as also that they stoned him that gathered sticks on the Sabbath day ibidem Here it was likewise that Korah and his Complices for aspiring to the Priesthood of Aaron being of Levis Tribe and Dathan and Abiram c. for aspiring to the Principality of Moses being of Reuben the first-born all perished and that 14700 died of the Plague Numb 16. and that Aaron's Rod budded c. Numb 17. that divers Services for the Priests are appointed to save the People from perishing as they complained ver 12 13. Numb 18 and 19. After which Moses mentioneth no more occurrences from this beginning of their third year or the last six months of the second year after their Redemption from Egypt until the first day of their fortieth year Numb 20. where Israel is come after thirty seven or thirty eight years wandring in the Wilderness to this unhappy place Kadesh-Barnea again where they had received their doom of the Divine Decree that their Carcases should fall in the Wilderness and not enter into the Land of Promise accordingly that sad Decree was executed during their many Marches and Stations from this Kadesh towards the Red Sea Deut. 1.40 and back again to this Kadesh some seven or eight and thirty years after All those Wandrings during this tedious Time are barely mentioned by Moses Numb 33. from ver 18 to 36. having no remarkable occurrencies The first Remark concerning those intercurrent years 37 or 38. is That when Moses saw the old Generation fall so fast in this
for the other half thereof had their portion assigned them by Moses long before this on the other side of Jordan Josh 13.29 30. c. Then follows the Inheritance of Benjamin Josh 18. ver 11. to the end His Portion fell betwixt Judah and Joseph ver 11. which Divine Providence ordered being the only place in which that Prophecy Deut. 33.12 could have been accomplished What could God do more for Jacob's Darling than have his Temple built upon Mount Moriah which belonged unto this Tribe placed so near the place where God's honour dwelleth c. In the last place The possession of the Six lesser Tribes do follow Josh 19. 1. That of Simeon ver 1. to 10. 2. That of Zabulon ver 10. to 17. 3. That of Issachar ver 17. to 24. 4. That of Asher ver 24. to 32. 5. That of Napthali ver 32. to 40. 6. That of Dan ver 40. to 49. The Fourth General Remark is Still Levi is left out and yet there be Twelve Tribes without him because Joseph's double Portion maketh two Tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh yet this is not the Reason why the Tribe of Levi had no Inheritance that is no Regions or Parts of the Country distinct from other portions of the Land by which they might live by Tillage and Husbandry as the other Tribes were to do neither Moses nor Joshua gave Levi any such Inheritance but only some Cities to dwell in and the Suburbs belonging to them with some Circuit of ground for the feeding of their Cattel Josh 21. throughout and the Reason is rendred because the Lord himself was their Inheritance Josh 13.14.33 therefore God gave unto the Tribe of Levi all that Remained of the Sacrifices of the Lord to live upon Numb 18.8.10.23 Deut. 10.9 and 18.2 and this passage The Lord is their Inheritance his Sacrifice c. is so oft urged to prevent those Calumnies which God foresaw the Levites were likely to meet with from the Malice Envy or Covetousness of their Brethren And 't is oft repeated to oblige all the other Tribes that they might both conscientiously and cheerfully give to the Levites their Dues seeing they had as good a right and title to them as their Brethren had to their several possessions Besides this was done for the accomplishment of Jacob's Prophecy concerning Simeon and Levi they shall be scattered among the other Tribes Gen. 49.7 for the providence of God ordered so concerning Simeon that he had no distinct part of his own but became an Inmate to Judah Josh 19.1 As this was in part a fulfilling of Jacob's Threatning so there was this mercy in it to Simeon that his weak Tribe should be strengthned by the stronger Tribe of Judah and as to Levi tho' he had his habitation scattered among all the other Tribes yet this Curse was afterwards turn'd into a blessing when they were consecrated as Priests to preserve and present knowledge to their Brethren to teach Jacob God's Judgments and Israel his Law Deut. 33.9 10. Candles bound up in a pound give no light but when each of them is lighted and set up in distinct Rooms they give light unto all the Rooms of the House Thus did the scattered Levites give light unto all the Tribes of Israel on both sides of Jordan which they could not have done had they been bound up in one pound or portion as all the other Tribes were c. After the General Remarks upon the Division of Canaan among the Twelve Tribes in general Now the particular parts and portions of Caleb and Joshua do follow to make particular Remarks upon First upon Caleb The First Remark is His Petition to Joshua the General the subject matter of his Petition was extraordinary to wit the Mountainous Territories not to be given him by the common lot as the Land was dealt out to others but a special deed of gift to him and his and for promoting it the more the chief of his Tribe came along with him as his Advocates to Joshua Josh 14.6 7 8 9 10 11 12. wherein he urgeth his own faithfulness in the matter of the Twelve Spies Numb 13.31 32. and 14.24 He appeals to Joshua himself who then was his Copartner concerning the truth hereof and he alledgeth how he was still compleatly qualified for so great an undertaking so that this special gift was not like to be cast away upon a supernatural and unserviceable Person but above all he reminds Joshua of God's particular promise to him Numb 14.24 Deut. 1.36 By vertuē of which promise he was kept allve to that day as thou thy self art also to whom together with me God promis'd this Prerogative for a reward of our uprightness and sure I am God is no Austeer Lord but a liberal Pay-Master who never sends any of his Servants away having any just cause to complain of an Hard bargain in his service No he is an honourable Master who imploys his Servants in honourable work and will pay them most honourable wages As it is no Ambition in me to require so it can be no injustice in thee to bestow on me this Mountainous Country for as my feet have trodden upon so my Faith hath Triumph'd over it and over Hebron and all the frightful Giants about it The Second Remark is Joshua's Answer to Caleb's Petition Josh 14.13.14.15 wherein is related how Joshua granted his request and prayed God to bless him with good success acknowledging withal his praise-worthy carriage in the business of the Spies together with himself and therefore his Request was but reasonable and so might not be denied Joshua doth not here as some Generals in the like case would have done he doth not blame Caleb here for beeing too hasty saying let thy Betters be served before thee He bids him not stay until himself were first served but grants him Hebron helps him to gain it Josh 10.37 and when gained he wish'd him much joy and a comfortable fruition of it Caleb accordingly succeeded against the Anakims under Joshua his General Josh 11.21 and 15.13 and after Joshua's death also Judg. 1.9 10. to be spoke unto after Secondly The Grand Remark upon Joshua here is his Marvelous Modesty and Holy Humility in this that he who had deserved best and therefore should have been served first can be content to have his part and Portion last after all the Twelve Tribes had theirs assigned before him Josh 19.49 50 51. nor is this all held forth here that he was willing to be served last who had deserved most but that he could be content to chuse for his portion that he petition'd for among the Barren Mountains whereas he might have challeng'd the chiefest Lands in that Champian Country of those Conquered Kingdoms wherein he had been the chief Actor nor did he desire this small portion of barren Land that lay in his own Tribe because of any stately Palace that stood there or any Royal City adorned with Sumptuous Buildings contained therein
in doing his Duty with diligence● in waiting on his Master and not discouraged at his own double yea treble mistake and disappointment but readily rises out of his warm Bed and Runs to Eli every time that he was called upon N. B. Many Sluggish Apprentices would not have been so ready to Rise Three times c. But Modest Samuel was more Morigerous to his Dim-sighted Master fearing he might need his helping hand tho' weak in some duty which his own Debauched Sons would not do for him But also his Modesty most appeared both in his doing the former Office of a Door-keeper Opening the Doors in the Morning tho' he were now called of God to be a Prophet And likewise he was not forward but fearful to Reveal the Divine Oracle to Eli which yet he might not Conceal ver 15. 3. His Faithfulness also here is manifest in not hiding any thing of that which God had spoke to him from his Master Eli He told him every what ver 18. Tho' there was not one drachm of Comfort in the whole Oracle Had Samuel in this Case consulted with Flesh and Blood he might thus have Argued against a faithful discharge of his Errand God now sent him Oh what a piece of Confidence if not Impudence will it be in me a Pupil in daring to deliver such a direful Message to my Aged Tutor possibly he will look upon it as one of my Childish Dreams only But by this time Samel understood the meaning of that special Providence of God in letting him run three several times to Eli till Eli perceived that it was the Lord that called the Child v. 8. And that he had from God some Divine Revelation so Eli could not look upon it as a vain fancy in his sleep Yea and Samuel had learnt likewise that Gods Truths must faithfully be spoken however heinously they be taken N. B. Would to God all Ministers could learn both Old and Young this great lesson of faithfulness from Young Samuel The Fourth Remark is Eli's Reception of this rigid Revelation from God by Samuel in two Respects The First is Eli was conscious to himself of great guilt both in his Villanous Sons and in himself for indulging their Villany his Conscience was a sore Conscience but theirs were seared Consciences and therefore could he presage no good from God hereupon he advises his Pupil to hide nothing from him but to tell his Tutor all that God had told him v. 16 17. Secondly When Eli had heard God's severe Sentence he calmly cryeth it is the Lord let him do what seemeth him good v. 18. as if he had said the Lord Jehovah hath a Soveraign Absolute Power over all the Sons and Daughters of Men and may dispose of me and mine and of all Created Beings according to his good pleasure unto which I freely submit well knowing there be better things in Gods Will than in my own I resolve my Will shall be swallowed up and melted down into the Will of God and tho' I have been a bad Earthly Father to my Evil Sons yet would I be a good Son to my good Heavenly Father So I humbly accept of the punishment of mine Iniquity Levit. 26.41 The will of the Lord be done Act. 21.14 'T is true there be some that censure Eli for thus saying Thy Holy Will be done taking these Words in the worst Sense as spoken in Hypocrisie and not in Humility So S. Ephrem Gregory and Rupertus because he did not correct his own fault nor his Sons when reproved of God c. But alas he was now too Old and Dim-sighted to do it Therefore all Expositors do generally judge more Charitably that here is Eli's Holy submission to God's Heavenly Will Neither Excusing his own Iniquity nor Accusing God of Austerity but in Offering himself up thus to Gods Justice he humbly Confesseth his own Sin See much more of this Subject in my Church History in the 13th Plot pag. 111 112 113 c. To which I refer my Reader The Fifth and last Remark is The event of all these things Namely the Authority of Samuel over all Israel was Established hereby v. 19 20 21. All Israel now heard the report that the Lord was returning to them with the Spirit of Prophecy which the Iniquity of those times had quite extinguished and that the Lord was present with Young Samuel so That he grew in Wisdom and Stature and in favour with God and Man as our Saviour did Luk. 2.52 And how he had frequent Revelations after this first time from the Lord as he Ministred to him in Shiloh and how all his Oracles were infallible God suffering none of such precious Liquor to be lost by being spilt upon the ground All the People that resorted to this place from Dan to Bersheba That is from the North to the South part of Judea might hear all this from the Mouth both of Old Eli and of Young Samuel which must Influence them much to Establish Samuel in the stead of Superannuted Eli. 1 Samuel CHAP. IV. CHapter the Fourth Relateth how part of Samuel's Prophecy concerning Eli and his Sons was fulfilled here c. The Remarks upon it are First A new War ariseth betwixt the Philistines and Israel which was thus occasioned First The Philistines having by this time recruited themselves after their dreadful damage by Sampson Judg. 16.30 and now understanding that an Eminent Prophet was now arising in Israel by whom they might be both United and Assisted they thought fit Venienti occurrere morbò to suppress the Israelites in the beginning of their hopes of being rescued from their Tyrannical Dominion Hereupon they came forth to fight against Israel while their Judge Eli was Old and Feeble and Samuel was Young and Tender And Secondly On the other hand the Israelites had a word of command from God by Samuel to go forth and fight the Philistines that thereby they might first be punished for their sins and duly humbled before the Lord and so truly prepared for their future Victory Hereupon they Fight and the Philistines slew four thousand of them ver 1 2. The Second Remark is So Sottish and Blind was Israel in the beginning of Samuel's Day that they quite mistook the real cause of their present Calamity in falling before the Philistines v. 3. seeing they had so just a quarrel and in their own defence only they engaged in the Battle and that at Gods command by Samuel Therefore do they ascribe their present disaster to the absence of the Ark in the Army because its presence had been so successful to their Ancestors Numb 10.35 and 14.44 and 32.6 and Josh 6.4 But alas this was a meer fallacy now to take non causam pro causà For in those former instances Israel was then in a state of favour with God but now they were in a state of direful Defection to Apostacy and Idolatry Chap. 2.12 c and Chap. 7.3 and Psal 78.58 61 62 64.
Promise to Abraham was I will Bless those that Bless thee and I will Curse those that Curse thee Gen. 12.3 he knew that Causeless Curses would never come Prov. 26.2 and that his God would destroy Dagon and all the Idols of the Infidels and not suffer Dagon to Destroy him David can be content to Let him Curse so God will but Bless Nor could this Cursed Caitiff content himself with Cursing David by Dagon Baalim and Ashtaroth even by all His Gods v. 43. but he goes on like a proud Thraso to threaten him that he will make both Hawks-meat and Hounds-meat of his Flesh for Hungry Hawks and Hungry Hounds to devour v. 44. when he Saw him but a Youth and Ruddy and of a Fair Complexion v. 42. Where the three Causes of Goliah's Contempt of David are expressed As N. B. First His Youth which argued his weakness unable to grapple with a Grown up Gyant and his want of Experience in Martial Affairs N. B. The Second is His Ruddy Colour shewed his Rashness and Cholerick Indiscretion in undertaking to Combat with such an Overtopping and Over-matching Champion clad in Armour Cap-a-pee whom himself Addressed as a naked Stripling N. B. The Third Cause of his Contempt was His Fair Countenance and Beauty made him seem in his Eyes some Effeminate piece fitter for the Sports of Venus than for the Exploits of Mars that a Canopy would become him better than a Camp or feats of Chivalry saying to him Militia est operis altera digna tui thou art more apt to Woe a Woman than to War with a Man of War such an one as I am All these things flushed up this proud Champion to make such a Vain-glorious Triumph before the Victory v. 44. that he might strike a Terror into David's Spirit and cause him to flee before the Fight he would sell the Hide as we say before he had taken the Beast thus the Goliah of Rome doth at this Day c. N. B. Now come we to David's Answer in this Dialogue betwixt the two Duelists v. 45 46 47. wherein we may Observe First David declareth to Goliah saying Thou trustest in thy own strength in thy own Armour in an Arm of Flesh which will not only deceive thee but also bring God's Curse upon thee Jer. 17.5 6. but as for me I shall be blest of God because I put my trust in him v. 7. of Jer. 17. I place my Confidence in him I receive my Commission from him who hath given me assurance of his assistance in the Vindication of his Glorious Name which thou hast so prophanely Blasphemed v. 45. where David telleth him twice from whom he expected the Victory both from the Lord of Hosts which holds forth Omnipotency and the God of Israel which sheweth the Benevolency and good Will of God as well as his Power to protect David himself and all his People from him who had defied both Secondly David proceeds with his particular Faith for obtaining the Victory in God's Strength and not in his own saying This Day will the Lord deliver thee into my hand c. v. 46. grounding his Faith upon these solid Foundations 1. On the goodness of his Cause and the badness of Goliah's c. 2. On Goliah's Reproaching of God himself which he verily believed the Lord would revenge 3. On Goliah's Pride and presumption which he knew that God abhorred and would severely punish it 4. On Goliah's Confidence in Dagon whom he desired to destroy David v. 43. therefore he tells him Both thou and all the Earth shall know that there is a God in Israel v. 46. a God indeed able to help his Servants and not like thy Impotent Idols thy Dunghil Deities Dagon c. whom you serve yet cannot save c. Thirdly David still goeth on in Preaching the Power and Providence of God to this Uncircumcised Miscreant v. 47. which proved a Funeral Sermon both to him and to his People saying The Battle is the Lords who is not tyed to Tools but will give Victory by my weak Weapons which thou scornest We fight for God and you against God therefore his Honour is concerned to give us the Victory Here Josephus brings in David crying up Jehovah the Conquerour is my Armour c. All which he spake with confidence Psal 27.3 because he was assured by a special Revelation from God Having dispatch'd the Logomachia or Word-War betwixt these two Duelists now comes the Sword-War 2. which is related v. 48 49 50 51. wherein observe N. B. First As to the general though it be call'd a Sword-War yet find we but one Sword used in this Duel to wit that of Goliah's which David made use of to cut off his Antagonist's Head when foiled Secondly As to Particulars the two Combatants after their Word-War was done drew near each other but David hasted to sling at Goliah before he came too nigh him with his Spear and Sword for a due distance was necessary in slinging of a Stone to cause the cast of it far more forcible which David could not have done had he delayed till they had come close together here both David's Courage and Prudence appeared to give the first Blow fighting Eminùs at distance not Comminùs Hand to Hand before he came within the reach of Goliah's Sword or Spear Thirdly Observe the Providence of God that this proud Gyant had lift up that part of his Helmet which should have covered his Forehead out of a contempt of David whom he saw come against him unarmed so that he scorn'd to pull down the Beaver of his Helmet to cover his Face and Forehead that David might the better discern his foul frightful Frowns in their Discourse together Fourthly Observe what difficulty David had to hit his bare Forehead with the Sling-stone For though David and many other Israelites had most excellent skill in the Art of Slinging Stones and coming within an Hairs-breadth of hitting a fixed Mark that moved not out of its place as appeareth Judg. 20.16 Yet seeing the Forehead of this Philistine was in a continual motion and the more moved because David had moved his Mind and put him into a pelting chase as we say with his warm words to him insomuch that he hasted in great heat to have David's Heart out of his Body c. v. 44. All this would make it hard to hit Fifthly Observe notwithstanding all this difficulty yet David by a special direction and singular guidance of Divine Providence hit this moving Mark even at the first Hurl N. B. No doubt but God directed this Stone as he did that Stone which slew Abimelech Judg. 9 53. and the Arrow that slew Ahab 1 Kings 22.34 Things casual and contingent with Man become necessary an unavoidable by God whose over ruling Providence ordereth all chances Deut. 19 5. Exod. 21.13 1 Som. 19.10 c. Sixthly Observe this Wonderful Wor●● that this Stone should hit the Killing place of the Forehead so exactly the
Nature to be born live die and be buried for us as the Wife leaves all for her Husband goes to Prison with him for love c. CHAP. XXXV Of Christ's Resurrection HAving discoursed upon and dispatched the Burial of Christ which was the lowest step of his state of Humiliation and the very turning step as before so he descended not into Hell into the place of the Damned but only into the Grave for the Horrour of Hell had been before upon him both in his Agony and on the Cross in the three hours Darkness c. now come we to speak of his state of Exaltation 't is said Him hath God Exalted c. Phil. 2.7 8. The Degrees whereof be four First His Resurrection Secondly His Ascension Thirdly His sitting down at the Right Hand of God And Fourthly His Intercession there for us till he come to Judgment First of the First His Resurrection In the General this Excellent Truth Arises from the Connexion of these two States that as Christ had his time of Humiliation and then his time of Exaltation so also have Christians both in a Literal and in a Mystical sense a time of scattering and of casting down and a time of Gathering and of Listing up Job 22.29 There is a time for all things Eccles 3.1 2 3 to 9. and these seeming casualties and contingencies to Man are all over-ruled and ordered by the Wisdom and Providence of the only Wise God He hath set the one over against the other Eccles 7.14 that we may not surfeit of the one nor despond in the other as the Church has her time of Burial so she shall of her Resurrection Isa 55. ver 7.8 More particularly of Christ's Resurrection which hath also these three Grand Remarks 1. Its Antecedents 2. Its Concomitants And 3. Its Consequents and the effects thereof The First Grand Remark is The Antecedents of it the first whereof was the terrible Earth quake This is this second time that the Earth paid her Homage to her Lord and Creator as before at Christ's Death Mat. 27.51 52. so now again at his Resurrection Mat. 28.2 The former Earth quake was to declare what power there was in his Death though it seemed to be nothing else but weakness and so distinguish the extraordinary vertue of it While mighty Monarchs do live they may do great matters but when they die all their might dieth with them they can then do nothing they cannot command the Clouds to cover the Face of the Firmament the Earth trembles not the Stones stir not the Graves open not at their Deaths as all these did at the Death of Christ for All Power in Heaven and Earth was given to him Mat. 11.27 28.18 And He hath the Keys of Hell and Death Rev. 1.18 So that Death had not taken away any of the Power of Christ seeing when he gave up the Ghost he could cause the Earth to shake Rocks to Rend as well as the Vail and Graves to open But now when this Lord of Heaven and Earth had lain three nights and three days in the Bowels of the Earth there was greater cause of the Earth's Trembling again no wonder if there were strange Tormina and Horrible Concussions in her Belly by the Almighty Power of her Creator whom she had now inclosed Neither Death nor the Grave had abated or diminished the least part of the Power of Christ But he swallows up both these while they swallowed up him in Victory 1 Cor. 15.54.55 This should teach us poor lumps of Earth to tremble at his Presence especially at our Keeping Christ down as buried in our Earthly Hearts when he hath been Rising in our Hearts by the Motions of his Spirit and still we labour to suppress him and keep him at under Did the Dumb-Earth Tremble for keeping Christ under but three days How much more we for so doing not only for three but for many days yea many years The Second Antecedent is The Apparition and Operation of an Angel Those cruel Kill Christs thought it not enough to have Christ buried in a Grave and a great Stone rolled upon the Grave's Mouth but to keep him sure in his Sepulchre they put the Magistrate's Seal upon the Stone and set a guard of Souldiers to watch it Notwithstanding all those projects for securing their purpose and keeping him down in the Tomb. The Lord sends an Angel to Minister unto Christ the Lord of Angels this Angel rolls away the Stone frights away the Souldiers and comforts the Good Women who came to see the Sepulchre So foolish an undertaking it is either in Men or Devils to fight against God the Church is called Christ Mystical 1 Cor. 12.12 her Adversaries may think they have made sure work of her cut her down cast her into a Grave and roll'd a great Stone upon the Mouth of it so that they are Cock sure Religion shall never be able to rise any more Therefore they rejoice together with mad Merriments and send gifts one to another Rev. 11.10 13. yet for all this opposition so sure as Israel came out of the Thraldom of Egypt the Jews out of the Bondage of Babylon and Christ out of his confinement in the Grave so sure shall his Church and Gospel rise again maugre the Malice of Men and Devils though the great Gates of Hell lay upon it yet shall not prevail against it Mat. 16.18 This burdensome Stone will break their backs that would lift the Church out of her place Zech. 12.3 and no Weapon that is formed against Sion shall prosper Isa 54.17 And though the Bush may be burning yet is it not consumed Exod. 3.2.3 for the Good Will of God is in the midst of the Bush Deut. 33.16 either to consolidate the boughs or to restrain the flames or both The Good Will of God and a Flame of Fire from Man may consist together in the same subject This Text Behold there was an Earthquake for the Angel of the Lord descended from Heaven and Rolled back the Stone from the Door and sat upon it Mat. 28.2 may serve to comfort us sundry ways if well considered As 1st Suppose we have not an Holy Man on Earth to Roll away the Stone and raise us up with Salvation for it may be with us as with them Jer. 5.1 where not one Man was found to stand in the Gap yet hath God an Holy Angel in Heaven to send down to save us as he did Lot out of Sodom the Angel took Lot by one Hand and his Wife by the other and led them from the destroying Flames as he did Hezekiah from Senacherib's Army the Angel smote an hundred fourscore and five thousand of them As he did Daniel in the Den of Lions the Angel shut up their Mouths c. and as he did Peter out of Prison Acts 12. God sent his Angel at the Church's Prayer for Peter who brought him forth and set him in safety And should not God send his Angel now
strictest observations c. So 't is expresly said They returned together to the place from whence they Ran John 20.3 10. Therefore Peter was never alone here either in his Egress or Regress to have any such appearance of Christ apart from John concerning whom we read not any thing of the Lord 's appearing to him alone Hereupon other famous Writers do think this appearance to Peter alone mentioned both in Luke 24.34 1 Cor. 15.5 was in his going into Galilee which he immediately say they undertook when he heard that message Behold he goeth before you and Peter into Galilee there shall ye see him Mark 16.7 Now Peter recovering his convulsion and fall and having most fervent affections to be reconciled to his Lord must needs make the most haste his old Leggs would permit to meet him c. This Third opinion is likewise but an Unscriptuar Coniecture and this is also to be wise above what is written for we read expresly that Peter's first hasty race was to the Sepulchre and not into Galilee and that the Lord appeared to him with the rest in the City but when he was alone we read not Nevertheless though neither the time when nor the place where Christ appeared to Simon can be known yet the reasons why he did so may be better resolved The 1st Reason of Christ's appearing to Simon was that he might thereby be assured his Lord had pardoning mercy for his filthy falling from the Faith in his Threefold denying of him whom he had before professed to be the proper object and Author yea finisher of Faith as he was the Son of God Matth. 16.16 Therefore the Lord appeared to him with his converting and comforting presence that he might not be swallowed up of over much sorrow nor sink into the Pit of Despair 2dly That when poor faln Peter was through the power of Christ's prayer for him got out again our of Satan's Steve wherein he had been so tossed and shaken to and fro as almost this Wheat was made Chaff he might learn the better to strengthen his Brethren Luke 22.31 32. that is to be tender towards the penitent as the Lord had been to him and to restore them with the Spirit of meekness Gal. 6.1 using a soft hand for a sore heart to heal it 3dly That the Lord might give a specimen hereby to the worst of sinners concerning some hope of mercy for them upon their Repentance because he despised not Magdalen nor Peter therein As these Reasons for Christ's appearance to Peter are plain obvious and perspicuous though neither the time when nor the place where no nor the manner how as in his other appearances be not mentioned in Scripture and hereby are left dark and obscure so the reasons why our Lord appeared five several times upon the very day of his Resurrection this being the Fourth and the Introduction of the Fifth the same first day are as conspicuous to a Right contemplative mind also The reason why Christ appeared five times on that day was not only to prove the reality of his own Resurrection nor to comfort his disconsolate Friends and Followers who were Universally mourning for the loft of him c. But especially to dedicate and institute the New Christian Sabbath as he was the Lord both of the old Legal and of this new Evangelical Sabbath Mark 1● 8 Therefore did he appear so many times on that day and spent the whole day from Morning to Evening in gracious Appearances and Religious Conferences All the day long he was in some holy service or other beginning betimes in the Morning to appear unto Mary Magdalen and to have sacred discourse with her and then to the Godly Women as they went from the Sepulchre to the City with whom also he had Godly Conferences after that with the two Disciples Travelling to Emmaus which could not but take up a great part of that first day especially If they set out from the City soon in that day and he fell into a Confabulation with them soon also this was a Divine Discourse that lasted the Journey of seven miles and a half long towards the Evening the Argument they used to constrain his turning in with them so their Lodgings as above indeed when and where this Godly Conference began the Holy Scripture is silent as it likewise is what part of that day and how much thereof was spent in his Conferring with and comforting poor penitent Peter without all doubt which notwithstanding the Scripture's silence must take up some considerable time because Peter had committed grosser sins so stood in more need of greater comfort 'T is therefore not at all improbable that compassionate Samaritan spent some considerable time of that day though what part thereof be not Revealed to pour in Wine to search and Oil to supple his wounded conscience and stay with him some time not because he was the most worthy person of all the Apostles as the Romanists say but because he had been the worst sinner next to Judas of them all and therefore he stood in the most need of longest care for his lasting cure However this is plainly expressed in the Gospel that in the Evening of that first day our Lord appeared to the whole Colledg of the Apostles only Thomas was absent Luke 24.36 and had a long discourse with them verse 37. to 49. John 20.19 c. Saying Peace be to you c. Now for what cause was all this done by Christ in spending this whole day thus Religiously all the day long appearing to one or other at one place or another and entertaing them with sacred discourses and holy Exercises what better reason can be rendered for it but that he hereby ordained and sanctified this his Resurrection day for the New Christian Sabbath day distinct from and next following that of the Jewish It is therefore safer to say that this new Sabbath was not so much any bare Apostolical Institution or any mere Tradition of the Church for all the Churches in the World have no Original or Organical Authority to alter any Divine Institution but it must be Christ and Christ alone who was Lord of the Sabbath Matth. 12.8 into whose hands all these things were delivered by the Father Mat. 11.27 And to whom all power both in Heaven and on Earth was given Matth. 28.18 He only had power to alter it This our Lord did by his own holy example leaving his own personal practice so far as it is Imitable for a pious pattern unto all Christians that they might set apart that day for all holy services and Divine duties Accordingly his Apostles are found in their following practice proportionable to their pattern shewed them to a due observation of this same day For 't is expresly recorded how they usually Assembled together for religious exercises upon the first day of the Week Acts 20.7 and 1 Cor. 16.2 which day is likewise plainly styled the Lord's-day Revel 1.10
was the common stock out of which the following days works were deduced having its Original from God alone without any concurring power or foregoing Matter as the word God created noteth Whatever is or existeth besides God must proceed from God who is the Original of all All Creatures were in God before the Creation as effects are in the cause as the Rose before the Summer when it is neither spread nor sprung is in the Root the Idaea of all was in his understanding and will Thus David saith Thine Eyes did see my substance yet being imperfect and in thy books all my members were written which in continuance were fashioned when as yet there was none of them Psal 139.15 16. God had all the Names and Number of every part of the Creation as it were writ down in his Common-place-book like a curious workman that works all by the book and by a Model set before him he draws first a rude Draught then polisheth and perfecteth all The Third Enquiry is What is the Form of the Creation Answ God having made this rude Mass or first Matter of nothing by his Almighty Creating power in process of time and by degrees this Tohu Vabohu or Material Mass without form and void hitherto the Lord gave every part a proper and particular Form and perfection both in the higher and lower world beautifying Heaven with two great Lights and bespangling it with a numberless number of Stars so it became a stately Star-chamber for glorious Angels and glorified Saints to dwell in though that stupendious Arch-work of Heaven be not born up by props and pillars yet falls not upon our heads to the earth and clothing the earth with grass garnishing it with Flowers and furnishing it with Fruits This is called Creation-Mediate because her Matter praeexisted as Plants and Animals were Created out of the earth and out of the waters Gen. 1.20 24 25. but the production of that Matter out of which they were Created is called Creation-Immediate as it was made of nothing simply yet inasmuch as this Matter was a subject that had no Hability in it self to produce any thing the earth a dead lump had no power of it self to produce Plants or living Creatures no more than the Rock in the Wilderness had power to produce Water Exod. 17.6 Hence Gods producing all sorts of Creatures out of the first Matter is call'd Creatio Mediata as Gods making the first Matter out of nothing is call'd Creatio Immediata These two are call'd the primary and secundary Creation The form of the Creation is twofold 1. That which is common to all Created things was the Existency of all things which Existed not before that God gave to them in one moment by his Almighty Word and All-working command yea a most perfect Existency all his Creatures were very good Dei dicere est efficere God spake the Word and it was done so that Creation was no Motion but a simple and bare Emanation which is when without any Repugnancy of the Patient or toilsome labour of the Agent the work doth freely flow from the action of the Working Cause as the shadow doth from the Body This wonderful work of the great World made by Gods Irresistible Word is the shadow and obscure Representation of his unsearchable Wisdom Power and Goodness 2. That which is proper and peculiar To each Creature both Coelestial and Terrestrial God gave a distinct and differing Form making the Stars above and all things below to differ in their kind one from another This Formation of all things in differing Species out of the first Matter without either Successive Motion preceding Mutation or gradual Alteration no Created Being could possibly effect but God the Father alone by his Eternal Word and Spirit made all out of the first Matter and gave to all their several Form which was not in the first Matter but was Created out of nothing perfection was the Form and Beauty of the World and of every Creature in the World All the works of God are perfect works Deut. 32.4 Nothing could have been made more perfect essentially though God could have made some things better than he made them accidentally as he could have made Worms to be Angels and he could have given more excellent endowments to every Creature respecting the parts of the world but in respect of the whole the World was perfect both in respect of Degrees and Parts Every days Work was good Gen. 1.4 10 18 21 25. in respect of the parts severally but when the whole is spoke of all together 't is said They were all very good v. 31. The Fourth Enquiry is What was the Final Cause or End of it Answ The End of the Creation is twofold 1. The Supreme End 2. The Subordinate The first is the Manifestation of Gods Glory the second is the Instruction and Comfort of Man Gods Master-piece 1. Of the first God who is the most pure Act as before may be considered under a twofold Act. 1. Internal 2. External 1. The Internal or inward Act was not onely his actual enjoying of himself and solacing himself in himself from all Eternity thus God was happy in himself and was an Heaven to himself and needed no Created thing to make him more happy he was God blessed for ever without and before the Creation but also his Decree which was one eternal voluntary constant Act of God absolutely determining the Infallible future Being of whatsoever is beside himself unto the praise of his own glory Eternity is an Everlasting Now. whatever God thinketh or willeth he always thought and willed and always doth and will both think and will there can no more be a new thought or a new purpose in God than there can be a new God Gods thinking or determining is God himself whatever is in God is God as before God decreed the Futurition of the Creatures freely not from any necessity of Nature but only from his meer good pleasure Psal 115.3 Isa 49.3 Dan. 4.25 Eph. 1.11 c. God had no need of the things decreed had he so pleased they had never been but continued for ever in their Nothing-state yet God might have been without them and happy without them though they had never been he being Eternal All-blessed All-glorious light life and love all in himself This Divine Decree gave not only a possibility that all Creatures may be but also a futurition or certainty that they all shall be they shall have an Existence an actual being in time according to Gods determination before time 2. The External or outward act of God is his Efficiency or working all that he decreed according to his Decree Gods Decree was the great design of future Action and Gods Efficiency is the execution of that design those two answer each other as the pattern and Tabernacle Exod. 25.40 and as the pattern and Temple 1 Chron. 28.12 As the actual framing of Davids Body answered the Idaea or Platform thereof
not man for the Sabbath Mat. 2.27 that we might sanctifie it and keep it holy unto God and to all those that truly sanctifie it the Lord makes it a Blessing indeed to them 3 God gave the Sabbath as a most Royal and Soveraign gift to Man he made the Sabbath for Man not Man for the Sabbath as before and bestowed it as a peculiar favour and Prerogative on Man as appeareth by three Scriptures the first is Exod. 16.29 The Lord hath given you his Sabbath This was Gods gift to man from the Creation for seeing from that very time there was a solemn Worship of God as is evident in Cain and Abel's Sacrifices to God so there must be a solemn time set apart for that Worship and what time could be more fi● than that day which God had sanctified by his own Example For the godly Posterity of Seth did publickly and in solemn Assemblies serve the Lord Gen. 4.26 separating themselves from the wicked Off-spring of Cain and they must have a prefixed time for their publick and external Worship which must be the Sabbath that the Lord their God had given them The second Scripture is Neh. 9.13 14. The Lord gave them right Judgements good Commandments whereof the fourth was one All good in respect 1. of the Author 2. Of the Matter 3. Of the Effect inasmuch as they make those good that observe them And above all these godly Levites doth instance that as a most special favour in Gods making known his holy Sabbath to them v. 14. which they reckon up with Gods raining down Manna from Heaven upon them v. 15. and his broaching the flinty Rock to give them Water that this ancient Church might give no warrant to a dry Communion And well may the Sabbath be thus ranked inasmuch as 't is the day whereon God gives his Church Angels food and Living waters out of Wells of Salvation Though God rained down no Manna upon the Jewish Sabbath Exod. 16.27 yet he doth upon the Christian and upon that more especially yea most of all upon the Supper-Sabbaths whereon we all eat the same Spiritual Meat and drink the same Spiritual Drink with them Sacramentally at the Lords Table 1 Cor. 10.2 3 4. The third Scripture is Ezek. 20.12 which comes in with a Moreover as an high remark upon this divine Gift Moreover also I gave them my Sabbaths The Relatives My and His God adjoyns with the Sabbath so frequently doth much advance the greatness of the Gift for whatsoever is Gods or of God must needs be great and excellent the Stream is like the Fountain and the Effect like the Cause This divine Donative the Sabbath was a most precious Dowry and Endowment both to our first Parents and to all their Posterity without which even the best would run wild and forget God were it not that a Weekly-Sabbath walls in our wild Natures The Sabbath was made for Man as a sweet Mercy to him It was made for Mans safety and advantage both to his Soul and Body which the superstitious Jews formerly great neglecters of it mistaking would not defend themselves on that day and therefore their City was taken once by Ptolomy and again by Pompey on the Sabbath-day If it stands in the way of Mans Safety 't is not to be observed The Third point to be handled is Why did God give this great Gift to Man in the beginning of time Answ For Divine Contemplation as well as for Divine Invocation and Action When God had compleated his Creation having made all very good Gen. 1.31 So good as caused Complaisancy in God himself and commanded Contemplation in man also That this latter might be done as well as the former as God had given Man a Soul to contemplate with it being the proper act thereof so he gave him a Sabbath to contemplate in which was a day set apart wherein Man might regard the Works of the Lord and the Operations of his hands Psal 28.5 When Man beholds a great Garden rich stored with Fruits and Flowers this calls his Eyes on every side of it besides there is a general Itch in mans Nature to be taken with Pageants Plays strange Sights and rare Shows which oft are sinful or however vain and at the best imperfect and unsatisfactory How much more ought man upon the Sabbath-day to admire the curious and glorious Frame and Fabrick of the World which in all its parts is so admirably accomplish'd with Curiosity Variety and Suitableness both to the Need and Nature of Man This the Psalmist sheweth in his Psalm or Song for the Sabbath-day Psal 92.1 2 3 4 5. which Psalm was set on purpose as a Canon to the Church for Sanctifying that Queen of Days all being an admiration of Gods mighty Works The Sidonians agreed among themselves to chuse him for their King who first discovered the Sun the next morning and while others gazed upon the East one onely wiser than the rest looked Westward who though scoffed at by his Competitors first saw the Sun-shine upon the tops of the Mountains So we may behold God Per Species Creaturae in the Creature as in a Mirrour or on a Theatre Vt Solem in Aquis ita Deum in operibus Contemplamur God is seen in his Works as the Sun is seen in the Waters and therefore we should study not onely the Book of Gods Word but also the Book of Gods Works even that great Folio of the World that Book with three Leaves Heaven Earth and Sea See my Crown of a Christian from page 125 to page 145. this Book leaves the Heathens 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inexcusable Rom. 1.19 20. who may behold God the Creator though not God the Redeemer in it either by way of Negative Causality or Eminence And we have but half the benefit of the Creature for which it was created if we get not Spiritual as well as Temporal good by it How the Jewish was was changed into the Christian Sabbath I refer the Reader to my Christian walk on the Lords day Whatever clearness there seems to some to be wanting as to the change of the day yet sure I am there is no want of clearness as to the choice of the day seeing both Christ and his Apostles did chuse this First day for religious Assemblies and Exercises which I have at large discussed in a distinct Discourse on this Subject All I shall say here is onely that the change of the Day from the Last to the First of the Seven was one of those things that Christ taught his Apostles betwixt his Resurrection and Ascention those Forty days he conversed with them Acts 1.2 3. and his Apostles were guided by Christs Spirit he gave them Joh. 16.13 Hence I infer 1 If a Seventh day be such a divine Gift to Man why should any man jear as the Heathens did who said Sabbatizing was a losing of the seventh part of precious time or as our late Anti-sabbatarians who call'd
is Mans own Concupiscence always finds him dry Tinder 3. This Lust is the Mother of Sin and Death is the Merit of it at last 4. Sin gradually incroacheth upon the Soul 1. This 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Seed plot of sin by Satans over shadowing begets Thoughts 2. Thoughts irritate desires 3. Then arises an inward Titillation or Contemplative Delight 4. This produces Consent 5. Then comes Action 6. Action causes Custom 7. And Custom Necessity .. Lastly comes in Death which is but a modest word for Damnation the first and second Death being implied in it Thus sin never stands still at a stay but from Concupiscence or corrupt Nature is all along in Motion yea in quick Motion till it conclude in Death or Damnation if the Grace of God prevent is not Now follows the fourth Branch of the Distribution to wit the sad consequences upon the Sinners The Lord 1. Serves a Terrible Citation upon the Tempted before he came to the censure of the Tempter so 't is said those first sinners heard the Voice of the Lord c. Gen. 3.8 to wit either in a mighty Thunder which is call'd Gods Voice Psal 29. often as he spake to Pharaoh Exod. 9.28 or in an Horrible Whirl-wind as he spake to Job Job 38.1 or the Lord comming as a just Judge to judge them for their Sin might form such Articulate words in the Air as these yea have they served me thus Have they made a conspiracy with the Devil against me their Maker Indeed So some Interpret Leruach Haiom ad Spiritum seu ventum Diei Gods presence did Demonstrate it self either by a Thunder or by a Whirl-wind or by a dreadfuly angry Articulate Voice though we translate the words in the cool of the Day This struck such a terrour into both the Offenders that they both ran to hide themselves for fear of Gods Majesty their sinful Consciences sought to shun Gods presence with as much folly as faultiness for he that formed the eye shall he not see Psal 94 9. and 139.2 7. They ran with their fig-leaf Aprons into the Thickets there to hide themselves from an All-seeing God Oh how many do so to this day which Job saying If I cover my transgression as Adam then let this and that evil come upon me Job 31.33 c. durst not do neither ought we to do it Prov. 28.13 Besides suppose what is not to be supposed that they could have run from God yet this would not do unless they could run from themselves too for Haeret lateri lethalis Arundo the wounded Deer whither ever he runs carries with him the fatal Arrow sticking fast in his sides The Guilt of their Souls and the terror of their Consciences went along with them whither ever they went So would onely have been like the Angled and Entangled fish with the Hook of the Fisherman that may indeed swim away all the length of the line but the Hook in her mouth hales her back again So God summons in sinful man saying Adam where art thou v. 9. not as if God knew not where he was for he knoweth all things Joh. 21.17 but to proceed against him after a judiciary manner therefore is he brought from behind the Bush at the Voice of the Lord will he nill he he must appear and answer for himself which he did but untowardly in the words following v. 10. God would not condemn Adam before he heard him and therefore asks him three Questions The first was as before where art thou to which Adam Answers not directly confessing his Sin but indirectly excusing his flight for three reasons all along hiding the true cause thereof Adam's first reason or shuffle was that he heard Gods Voice This he had heard before his fall and feared not but rejoic'd therein with greatest joy his second shift or shuffle was I was afraid as if he had not feared God before yes with a filial fear for his goodness Psal 31.19 Hos 3.5 as he was blessed for blessed are they that fear the Lord Psal 128.1 but now being a sinner he had turned it into a slavish fear of Gods wrath the joyful sound of God Psal 89.15 Mic. 2.7 was now become frightful to him his third excuse was I was naked Here also is now causa pro causâ for before sin they were both naked and were not ashamed Gen. 2.25 Pure nakedness was Gods Creature wherein he had appeared before in Gods presence without fear or shame thus he would have transferred his flight to God because he had made him naked and frighted him with his Thundering Voice but alas there was another pad in the straw which Adam studiously concealed to wit the Conscience of his Sin Hic murus Aheneus esto nil conscire sibi nulla pallescere culpâ The second Question God asks Adam was c. VVho told thee thou art naked And the Third Hast thou Eaten c. thereby to convince him of his sin and to make him confess it oh the wonderful condescension and kindness of God to man thus to dispute with him whom he might justly destroy Here still God's asking and arguing with man saying thy shameful nakedness could not come upon thee but by a Violation of my law because it is the punishment of Sin doth it not demonstrate that thou hast broke my precept and strip'd thy self of the Garment of Innocency Why dost thou not candidly confess the Truth Why dost thou not blame thy self but thy M●●●● for making thee Naked Thus the Lord most tenderly presseth hard upon him to convince his Conscience of his Sin when he might in the rigour of his Justice have confounded his person ipso facto according to the Divine Menace In the Day thou Eatost thereof thou shalt surely die Gen. 2.17 Hereupon Adam puts in his Answer a sorry one Gen. 3.12 wherein He makes indeed a confession of his Eating but it was only a cold confession and accompanied with transferring the cause of his Eating from himself both to the Woman and to God too for he sophistically argued from that common maxim causa causae 〈◊〉 causa causati The Woman was the cause of my Eating and God was the cause of my having a Woman therefore my Eating is caused by thy self Thus as he had blamed God before for making him naked So now again for giving him the Woman implying thus much If God had not given me a Woman I had never sin'd against God whereas had Adam argued aright he would have discerned that the Woman much less God who forbad it was no essential cause of his Eating whereof that Maxim is meant but by accident onely And had Adam acted as an Husband ought to do in the like Temptation he could not have been caused by his Wife to Sin against God but he should as Job did his Wife have rebuked her for her Sin and for Tempting him to her transgression It was the duty of his place to reprove her for it
taught not only to commemorate her glorious Deliverance from Slavery but also to expect that acceptable year of the Lord which Christ Preached Luke 4.19 This first Month in the Spring time was the time for Israel's eating the Passeover also to teach us there ought to be a fresh Spring of Grace as there is of Grass then on the Earth in our Hearts when we come to the Lords Supper for then Christ calls us The Flowers appear c. Arise my Love my Fair one and come away this is Christs double Call Cant. 2.10 to ver 13. God chuseth the fittest Season for his Churches Deliverance for this Month call'd Abib Hebr. Exod. 13.4 and by the Caldees Nisan Neh. 2.1 and Esth 3.7 began the most temperate time of the year for Israel's Marching neither too hot nor too cold hence they began their account at it in Sacred not in Secular Affairs Jubil●e Releases be reckon'd from September Exod. 23.16 and 34.22 Levit. 25.9 c. The Second Concomitant is the Institution of the Passeover the Command whereof God gave to Moses before the Plague of Darkness came which lasted three Days and as soon as ever any Egyptian hath light to move out of his place Pharaoh sends for Moses Exod. 10.24 who after some smart Repartees telleth the King of the Slaughter of the First-born to be the very next Night Exod. 11.4 8. so that the Darkness was upon the Egyptians all the Eleventh Twelfth and Thirteenth days of this Month call'd Ross chodashim the head of Months the March-Moon after the Spring-Aequinoctial and the Passeover was upon the Fourteenth at Evening and at Midnight all the First-born of Egypt were Slain c. but during these Three days Darkness as the Egyptians were frighted with Apparitions of Evil Spirits so the Israelites were then Circumcised for no uncircumcised Person was to partake of the Passeover Exod. 12.48 while their Adversaries lay under the Arrest of Darkness c. Thus 't is apparent as the Institution of the Passeover was before the Plague of Darkness so its Celebration was before the Slaughter of the First-born which happen'd at the very Midnight after that Paschal Evening and when God had now struck thus home in this last Plague Pharaoh and his People pack Israel out hastily looking upon themselves no better than all dead men should they detain them Captives any longer Exod. 12 31.33 and were willing to be rid of them at any Rate yea hired them with their Jewels c. to be gone that their own lives might be redeemed How may we cry here with Ezekiel Oh wheel Ezek. 10.13 The Case was well changed the same God that had turned the Egyptians hearts to hate the Hebrews as before to love them in Joseph's days so now again he gave them favour in the eyes of the Egyptians Exod. 11.3 and 12.36 Psal 106.45 46. Egypt was glad at their Departure Psal 105. Ver. 38. Herein 1. God's Promise of bringing them out with great Wealth was fulfilled Gen. 15.14 2. They had spoil'd the Hebrews before now made to refund Ezek. 39.10 3. Israel is furnish'd for a Wilderness And 4. This made them pursue Israel to their Ruin Before the Third Concomitant be mentioned take some Remarks upon this great subject of the first Passeover prescribed by God proclaimed by Moses and performed by this great People the like whereof had not been done for above two Thousand years from the foundation of the World Seven famous Passeovers are Recorded in Scripture 1. This in Egypt 2. That in the Wilderness Num. 9. 3. That of Joshua Josh 5.10 4. That of Hezekiah 2 Chron. 30. 5. That of Josiah 2 Chron. 35. 6. That of Ezra after the return from Babylon Ezr. 6.19 7. That of our Dear Jesus which he so earnestly desired to eat c. Luk. 22.15 c. at which time that legal Passeover was put to its Period and our Lord's Supper instituted in its stead the Memorial of Christ our Passeover Sacrificed for us 1 Cor. 5.7 In this first Extraordinary Sacramental Service these Circumstances admit of several Remarks 1. The Time when 2. The place where 3. The Matter what 4. The Manner how 5. The End why 6. The Persons by whom this Sacrament was celebrated The First Remark is concerning the Time when as to the Month thereof this was done in the first Month honoured above all other Months as singled out for the most suitable Season wherein the Lord works Israel's Deliverance out of some hundreds of years continued Bondage this is discours'd upon before in the first Concomitant but as to the day of this Month this is variously expressed As 1. The day of the Paschal Lambs Separation from the Flock was the tenth day Exod. 12.3 which Typified that Christ the true Paschal Lamb was separate from sinners Heb. 7.26 who also upon this tenth day Rode into Jerusalem where he was received with Hosannahs in order to be Sacrificed John 12.1 12 13 c. And likewise on this very day the Israelites after did pass through Jordan and made their entrance upon the Borders of Canaan Josh 4.19 2. The days of the Lambs Preparation and they were four days Exod. 12.6 not only that it might be duely prepared to become a sit Sacrifice throughly emptied of all its uncleannesses c. but also that the people more especially might be truly prepared to become fit partakers of that Sacrament for this cause it was a received Tradition among the Jews that during these four days this separated Lamb was tyed to their Bed-posts that the continual sight of the Lamb might the more effectually stir their Hearts up to sanctifie themselves for the Passeover Thus we read at Hezekiah's Passeover weak but willing preparations were accepted 2 Chron. 30.18 20. and at good Josiah's Passeover that they santify'd themselves and prepar'd themselves and their Brethren 2 Chron. 35.4 6 7. No doubt but this tyed-up Lamb did oft beat and batter the Families Ears with its frequent Bleatings It was the Speech of Samuel to Saul What meaneth the Bleating of these Sheep c. 1 Sam. 15.14 which discovered his lurking Hypocrisie while he pretended his Universal Obedience Thus our frailties Bleat in our Ears and our Hearts art privy to them as Solomon told Shimei 1 King 2.44 Oh that we may cleanse our selves c. 2 Cor. 7.1 Can we prepare some days before and trim our selves when Invited to a Feast How much more when we are bidden Guests to a Gospel-Passeover 3. The day of Israel's participation of it this Lamb was to be kill'd and eaten upon the fourteenth day Exod. 12.6 8 c. All this was but the Type our Lord Jesus was the Antitype in whom all was fulfilled As this Paschal Lamb lived four days after its Consecration and then was Sacrificed c. so Christ after he was Consecrated by his Baptism to his Office continued therein about four years and then was Crucified and became Food to his Redeemed
prize Directors in unknown paths at a very great price so Moses did Hobab who could best look about for best conveniences for them For though they had the Cloud as their general Conduct yet that stood fixed chiefly upon the Tabernacle if not only Numb 9.15 but Hobab must give particular Directions in what part of that wild waste Wilderness Israel should pitch their Tents which vastly extended about ten or twelve Miles round about and Hobab best knew how to accommodate the Camp in all its parts with places where to pitch both nighest Springs of Water best for pasturing their Flocks c. and most secure from the Enemy Gods Cloud excluded not humane help and seeing Hobab holds his peace it seems his silence gave consent to the request c. Numb 10.32 c. The Third Guide to Israel was the Ark of God Numb 10.33 34. even this also is said to go before them to search out a Resting-place for them that which is there spoken of the Ark Moses speaks of God himself Deut. 1.33 and so doth the Prophet God espyed out a Land for them Ezek. 20.6 This is a Metaphorical Speech for Searching implies either Knowledge which could not be in the Ark made up of lifeless and senseless Materials or uncertainty of finding which could not be in God who knew all places uno Intuitu at one glance and so no doubtfulness could have place in him Nor may we imagine that the Ark could be a fit Guide while it was seated in the midst of the Camp which was only while they Encamped but when they Marched forward then was it born by the Levites in the Front of the Army and because but few of that vast Multitude could behold it in its so low a situation the Eyes of all Israel beheld the Cloudy Pillar that always remained upon the Ark after they removed from Mount Sinai and so the Ark under the Cloud went before them the Third three days Journey from Sinai as their first three days Journey was from Egypt Exod. 13.18 and the second was from the Red Sea Exod. 15.22 an hard task to travel so long without resting which some suppose was the Cause that made them murmur Num. 11.1 yet others are of opinion that when Israel went all those forementioned thrice three days Journeys the Cloud made intermitting Pauses in that time for their necessary Rest by Sleep and Refreshment by Food If not the greater was God's Power manifested in Enabling as well as Directing them However they had a new Incouragement in this last three days Journey which they had not before namely the Ark of the Covenant which was a figure of Christ who as a Learned Rabbi of our own Countrymen observeth walk'd before his Redeemed three days Journey in the state of the dead to his Resurrection upon the third day 1 Cor. 15.4 which was his seeking and searching for Rest and Peace unto our Souls in our Justification the●●by Rom. 4.25 and 5.1 2 3 and 8.34 and Matth. 11.29 Heb. 4.3 10 11. and who said of himself Behold I cast out Devils and do Cures to day and to morrow an● the third day I shall be perfected c. Luk. 13.32 33. the Mystery whereof was pref●gured by Abraham's Journeying three days to Mount Moriah where he offer'd up his Son Isaac Gen. 22.4 c. But those murmuring Israelites had less Cause to murmur at those three days Journey all together not only presupposing those Pauses aforesaid which the Cloud made for Israel's necessary Rest and Refreshment Thus Travellers are said to travel three days Journey notwithstanding their Baits in the way and Night Lodgings in their Inns before they come to their Journeys end but more especially if the Pillar of Glory as the Jewish Rabbies conceive did for facilitating Israel's way level the Mountains raise the Valleys and lay all on a flat by burning up the Bushes smoothing the Rocks and making all a plain Path-way before them c. Moreover above all this If the Son of God cloathed with this Cloud as Rev. 10.1 and is said to come in the Clouds according to this Ancient Resemblance Dan. 7.13 Rev. 1.7 c. did take Israel by the Arms and taught him to go Hos 11.3 having his left hand under his Church's head and his right hand embracing her Cant. 2.6 as the Chaldee Paraphrast applieth that place to this Cloud and the effects thereof All these Auxiliaries in this happy Conjunction made Israel's Journey more easie and the less to be murmured at In this blessed posture is the Church now Marching in the Wilderness which after two days Christ will revive and on the Third day she shall live in his sight Hos 6.2 having three Guides 1. The Cloud of the Holy Scriptures 2. The Hobabs of a Gospel-Ministry And 3. The Ark of the Covenant yea the Covenant it self As God in Christ was the original Cause of all Motion and Rest so he is still the Guide of his Church in the way she should go leading his Flock in and out Psal 80.1 2. Joh. 10.9 under whose Conduct they feed in the way c. Isa 49.9 10. Rev. 7.16 and 12.6 14. and when there is a failure appearing the Church desires to be told where he feeds his Flock and makes them rest at Noon c. Cant. 1.7 As Moses sanctify'd both their journeyings and restings by Prayer Numb 10.35 36. so ought we to do Psal 68.1 2 c. in this Day The Eleventh General Remark from Israel's Removings from place to place is this The Instability of the Church's State under Moses's Law otherwise than under the Messiah's Gospel for then she was not come unto her Rest Deut. 12.9 as she did under Christ The Old Testament Church in the Wilderness sought Resting-places there Numb 10.35 but found none for she was then in Viâ only and not in Patriâ in her way to her Country so found no Rest but such as the Angels had in Abraham's Tent Gen. 18.4 and as the Ark had in the midst of Jordan Josh 3.13 but the New Testament Church believed in Christ and so did enter into Rest Heb. 4.3 c. Thus it is Prophecied of Sion's stayed State under the Gospel It shall be a quiet Habitation a Tabernacle that shall not be taken down not one of the stakes thereof shall be removed nor any of the Cords thereof shall be broken Isa 33.20 The Accomplishment whereof is shewed by the Apostle that the Law-Dispensation was to be shaken and remov'd that the Gospel-state which cannot be shaken might remain as an unremoveable Kingdom c. Heb. 12.27 28. As it was Joshua and not Moses that led Israel into Rest in Canaan so 't is Jesus that gives Rest Matth. 11 28. The Twelfth General Remark is as Israel moved or removed not either from or to any place but as the glorious cloud moved and removed therefore did they diligently watch its Motion with a watchful eye always upon it both Night and
exercised with Thirst whereas Hagar had been under the same Tryal Gen. 21.15 and the Three Kings that warr'd against Moab 2 Kings 3.10 yet were all relieved in season This was their renouncing of all Religion at once and a denying of the Deity of God There is no Divine Essence where there is not a Divine Omnipresence God is most present when he afflicts He knows our Souls in adversity Psal 31.7 8. Another wonder was this That the same Water out of this Rock was Drink for their Souls as well as for their Bodies therefore the Apostle saith They all drank of that Spiritual Rock 1 Cor. 10.3 4. They had not only Manna the Bread of Angels but also Water out of the Rock Christ They had no dry Communion as is practised in the Romish Church The Water was Spiritual Drink in the same respect that the Manna was Spiritual Meat being both of them miraculously produced and prefiguring Christ who is call'd a Spiritual Rock 9. And lastly This Rock was a figure of Christ in many respects holding most apt Congruity yet some Disparity First The Congruity betwixt them As 1. A Rock is a firm and sure Foundation for any Fabrick to stand upon Soft Stones will not bear a Superstructure but waste with stormy weather and washes away with the fluctuating Waters So Christ is a firm and unmoveable Foundation for his Church and Children to rest upon Matth. 7.24 and 16.18 1 Cor. 3.11 Isa 28. 16 c. Waves break themselves upon this Rock of Ages 2. A Rock is a dry craggy uncomely thing so is Christ to a carnal Eye having no form nor comeliness to be desired Isa 52.14 and 53.2 3. Yet as this Rock had Water within it tho' it seemed dry to Thirsty Israel so Christ hath the Water of Life within him Believe for Comfort when thou canst not behold it c. 3. A Rock is of great Relief for a shadow and shady Harbour in an hot Season and a weary Land Isa 32.2 and 25.4 So Christ shades us from the Curse of the Law and the Wrath of God from being Sun-burnt Sin-burnt or Hell-burnt as the Spouse Cant. 2.3 4. This Rock affords no Water for Refreshing Israel under Thirst till smitten with Moses's Rod So Christ was smitten of God Isa 53.4 bearing the Curse of the Law for our sins Gal. 3.13 from whence flows healing Waters for thirsty and troubled Souls Christ's side smote with a Spear gushed out in blood and water John 19.34 35. 5. The Water out of the Rock served for both cleansing of Garments from filth contracted and for sustaining of life in satisfying Thirst So the Water of Life from Christ both washes away the guilt and filth of sin and upholds Spiritual Life in Believers Joh. 4.13 14. and 7.37 38 39. 6. The Water out of this Rock followed Israel from one station to another till they came to the Land of Promise So the Water of Life follows Believers in all Ages till they come to the heavenly Canaan Secondly The Disparity 1. This Rock was but course condensed Earth Christ was Heaven-made 2. It was without motion stirr'd not out of its place but Christ came down from Heaven went about doing good Acts 10.38 and ascended thither again 3. His Water of Life perishes not with using as that did and now is not Note here 1. Israel asked water of Moses 'T is the Rock Christ must give waterings not Moses's Law 2. As this Rock was turned into water so wrath is turned into mercy by our Mediator 3. Wo to whom this Rock is a stone of stumbling Rom. 9.23 1 Pet. 2.6 such shall be broken nay grinded to powder Mat. 21.44 4. 'T is the emblem of an hard heart softened by the Law in the hand of a Mediator standing on it mollifies 5. As God led to the Rock so he draws us to Christ John 6.44 The second distress and danger Israel met with at their 11th station was War with Amalek Exod. 17.8 c. teaching us That no sooner is one Tryal over but we must expect another following at its heels while we are in the Wilderness of this lower World Velut unda super venit undae one wave of the Sea pursueth another till we come to the happy Shore and Rest in the Coelestial Canaan Acts 14.22 Heb. 4.9 God tryed Israel's Faith with penury of Food and Water and with the peril of War before from Pharaoh and now from Amalek who indeed was a Scourge from God for the unishment of their four times murmuring and repining against his Conduct of them The Remarks in this VVar are 1. The Persons waging war against Israel were the Amalekites who were the Off-spring of Esau Jacob's Brother so near allied to Israel Gen. 36.12 15 16. whereupon they should have met their near Kinsmen with Bread and VVater by the way but they met them with Fire and Sword Deut. 25.18 being Heirs of that old Hatred of Esau against Jacob and reviving likely the remembrance of that old Quarrel about the loss of both the Birth-right and of the Blessing and now beholding Jacob's Off-spring become so notably numerous and marching towards the Land of Promise they had more cause to be afraid that Isaac's blessing of Jacob was now in a way of its Accomplishment and that the elder should serve the younger N.B. Amalek signifies a licking People licking up the hindmost of Israel Deut. 25.17 18. assaulting them more by Treachery than true Valour As Pharaoh pursued Israel to reduce them back to Egypt so Amalek intercepts them in the way to hinder them from Canaan and were the first of the Nations that warred against them for which Act Balaam himself foretold their destruction Numb 24.20 in whose days Amalek and their King Agag ver 7. ruffled among other Nations in formidable Grandeur as his expression there imports who by this primary and insolent Attempt procured his own utter Ruine God permitted this VVar for other causes beside that aformentioned for punishing their former Murmurings But 2. That they should not wax wanton by Ease and Idleness 3. That they might have more experience of God's delivering Mercy 4. And grow more expert in VVar Yea 5. And better furnished with weapons and other necessaries c. The second Remark is concerning the Manner of managing the Military matters on Israel's part Moses the chief Magistrate calls Joshua to be his General in this War whom he knew should be his Successor and General in all the Wars of Canaan He must fight with his Army the Lord's Battel against Amalek below which Moses Aaron and Hur prayed together above upon the top of the Hill Moses holding up the Rod of God in his hand where the Army might behold this Ensign and be confirmed in their good Fight of Faith ver 9 10. This Hur say the Jewish Doctors and Josephus was the Husband of Miriam Moses's Sister and being an old wise and experienc'd States-man was made Moses's Deputy in his absence
for Righteousness from the Law God saith to them as to Israel here Ye have dwelt long enough about that Mountain press to Sion that lays in the Land of Promise the Gospel-Canaan Deut. 1.6 7 8. Be not saith that Father like Oxen that toil a long time and draw in the Yoke and when they have done their labour are fatted for Slaughter The Law is not for Men to continue under but for a time only till they be fitted for and brought unto Christ Gal. 3.16 17 18 24. and 4.1 to 5. Heb. 3.18 19. and 4.6 to 11. We lay too long naturally at the Mount of Legal Righteousness desiring to be our own Saviours and not to make Christ our All Col. 3.11 The fifth Remark is As the place they went from was Sinai and that which they went to in general is call'd Paran Numb 10.12 the name of a great Wilderness of the length of eleven days Journey whereof the Wilderness of Sinai is one part but 't is taken here for the last part of it next to the Land of Promise This Wilderness was a most barren place which made God's maintaining so vast a multitude for so many years together the more miraculous in this Wilderness Ishimael that wild Man dwelt Gen. 21.21 and in it there was a Mountain mentioned Deut. 1.1 and 33.2 but the particular place God brought Israel to after three days Journey in this Wilderness was call'd Taberah because of the burning there Numb 10.33 and 11.3 Deut. 9.22 and Kibroth-Hattavah that is Graves of Lust Numb 11.34 and 33.16 Deut. 9 12. Moses calling them thus that the very names of that place might leave a memorial both of their sin and punishment which Moses makes mention of to imprint it the more in their hearts Deut. 9.24 The sixth Remark is Tho' God's great kindness to Israel had been all along manifested both in marshalling and in marching them towards their promised Land from Numb chap. 1. to the last of chap. 10. Yet chap. 11 c. gives an account of Israel's gross unkindness and unthankfulness to God in their many Mumurings among so many and great Mercies whereby the Rebellious Nature of Man and the Impossibility of the Law to bring Men to God is evidently declared 'T is supposed that their travelling three days together without Resting from Sinai as they had done Exod. 13.18 And again Exod. 15.22 so now again Numb 10.33 this made them murmure Now is Israel led by the Pillar of Glory to their 13th Station Numb 11. where that one place as some suppose hath two several names Taberah and Kibroth-Hattavah by which latter name it is called in Numb 33.16 upon two several occasions In respect of the punishment for their Murmuring it was called Taberah that is Burning and in respect of the cause and the effect Kibroth-Hattavah that is Graves of Concupiscence Tho' others say That this Taberah or Burning was in their three days Journey before they came to Kibroth-Hattavab yet seeing the Psalmist summs up both those supposed sins of Murmurings into one Psal 78.19 20 21. it is not improbable that both those were names of but one place for these Reasons 1. 'T is not likely that those Hebrews should be slain by an extraordinary Fire from Heaven and for dropping a few muttering and murmuring words at a tedious March wherein the Lord strengthened them from all feebleness Psal 105.37 or that after such a signal punishment and Divine Vengeance on them they durst again murmure by lusting for flesh ver 4. Numb 11. The 2d Reason is Their murmuring for flesh is expresly said to be punished by fire Psal 78.21 3ly The Plague mentioned Numb 11.33 is not specified what it was 't is indeed hinted to be a pining away by leanness Psal 106.15 but it might be done by that fire of God spoken of Numb 11.1 2. where by a Prolepsis 't is briefly touched but in the following verses of the chapter 't is more largely explained This Plague might be as the burning of an Hectick Fever yet dispatching with more expedition being rather the burning of the Pestilence So that want of flesh as well as wearisomness of their way in marching three days with their little ones without any intermission in a barren Wilderness was their cause of murmuring ver 1. tho' particularly set down afterwards ver 4 c. But grant this latter be no Recapitulation of the former because there is nothing to distinguish them but probable conjecture however it was a wickedness which God who had pardoned past murmurings Exod. 14.11 15. and 15.24 26. and 16.2 to 28. and 17.2 5. punishmeth here severely For 1. They were pinched with Penury before but now they had Manna 2. They were Rude for want of the Law which was now given to teach better manners 3. They loathed Manna and desired flesh not for necessity but to gratifie their lusts Psal 78.18 30. Beside these general Notes upon the 13th Station take a few more particular Remarks it being so famous for its two names and so famously circumstantiated in Numb 11. The first particular Remark is Israel had many Impediments in their march to the Land of Promise not only from without as from Pharaoh pursuing from Amalek intercepting as before c. but also from within among themselves by their manifold murmurings as here one or as some suppose two at this Station Even so it is with all those true Travellers toward Heaven many Impediments in the way so that the Righteous are scarcely saved 1 Pet. 4.18 it is with much ado The second is God writes our Sin upon our Punishment as 't is said Per quod quis peccat per idem punitur ipse As Nadab and Abihu sinned by Fire and they perished by Fire Lev. 10.2 so those Murmurers here sinned against the fiery Law so called Deut. 32.2 that was spoken out of the Fire Deut. 5.22 Therefore were they punished by Fire out of the Pillar of Fire from whence the fiery Law was given and published Their Perdition is our Caution we may not be Murmurers 1 Cor. 10.5 11. The third is Evil Company is Infectious and catching as the Plague to converse with bad Companions and not to learn their Manners is marvelous Rare and Difficult 1 Cor. 15.33 This mixt Multitude the Egyptians and Strangers that join'd to Israel in their coming out of Egypt hearing of their going to Canaan c. Exod. 12.38 perceiving by these tedious Stations c. that it would be long ere they could come to the promised Land began the murmuring which yet ran like Wild-fire into the Camp of Israel who thereupon are said to weep again ver 4. which might have Relation to the like murmuring a Year before this Exod. 16.2 now they return to their old Vomit and express their wicked Complaints with salt Tears as well as with bitter Words The fourth is where ever there it sinning again on Man's part there will be punishing again on God's part
if his pardoning Mercy prevent it not Therefore our Lord saith Sin no more Joh. 8.11 Lest a worse thing come unto thee Joh. 5.14 Here Israel sinned again and that with a double Sin 1. In desiring Flesh which they wanted ver 4. And 2. In disdaining Manna which they enjoyed ver 6. and the vehemence of their concupiscence was the more inflamed by remembring their former Egyptian Diet yet forgetting withal their Egyptian Drudgery ver 5. this made them so wickedly discomposed that they prefer such gross Meats as Garlick Onions c. before the Corn of Heaven Psal 78.24 which was both wholesome and Toothsome ver 7 8 9. and easily both obtained and prepared for Food yea this their Lust for Flesh made them fret and and pine away as Amnon's for Tamar did making him Lean from Day to Day 2 Sam. 13.4 this is punish'd with the Plague of Leanness and Surfeit v. 33. Psal 106.15 c. The fifth Remark is The People's prophane deploring their Penury when they had little cause to do so while fed with the Food of Angels doth not only make God angry with them ver 10. but also putteth meek Moses into a pang of Passion and Impatience as appeareth by his Pathetical Expostulation ver 11 12 13 14 15. wherein he sadly complaineth to God of the intolerable Burden of his governing such an ungovernable Company and that God had not heard his Prayer presented Exod. 3.11 and 4.10 c. Wherein he begs to be excused from that great undertaking and here ver 15. comparing Evils together He chuseth rather to undergo the Pains of Death it self than be continued in bearing this unbearable Burden In the like pang of Passion was Elijah's Speech 1 King 19.4 This and his Whence should I have Flesh c. ver 13. do all shew the insufficiency of the Law though it be Holy c. Rom. 7.5 12. to satisfie or restrain the Lusts that do Reign in our Members or bring Men to God yet what the Law could not do in supplying our wants in governing and guiding us through this Wilderness and in carrying us to Canaan it being weak through the Flesh God hath done by sending his Son Rom. 8.3 Who gives us not Flesh to satisfie our Carnal Lusts but his own Flesh to be Food for our Souls which he hath given for the Life of the World and which whoso eateth hath Eternal Life Joh. 6 51 54. The Rabbins here say that God had shewed Moses all the Evils he would bring upon this stiff-necked People which put him into so great a Perturbation that he could not Complere Vocem utter his whole Speech using Hebr. At thou in the Foeminine Gender spoken to God for Attah thou the Masculine contrary to common Rule of Grammatical Construction of Speech The sixth Remark is The Divine Remedy to all this Humane Malady both as to Moses's Impatience and as to Israel's Intemperance To the 1. Moses must not bear the burden alone but shall be assisted with the Sanhedrim or great Council of the Jews consisting of seventy Seniors answerable to the seventy Souls that descended with Jacob into Egypt whereof Moses sat President all endowed with the Gifts of the Spirit of Moses who was as a Candle that lighteth others yet hath not less either heat or light than it had before ver 16 17 24 25 30. of which number were Eldad and Medad who humbly hid themselves as Saul did 1 Sam. 10.22 but the Spirit found them ver 26. at which Joshua envies suspecting some Schism or the Diminution of Moses's Dignity and the prejudice of his Master 's Right and Reputation not yet knowing they were of the chosen Sanhedrim seeing they staid in the Camp still notwithstanding the call of Moses to the Door of the Tabernacle out of a Sense of their own Insufficiency Thus the Spirit in us lusteth to envy Jam. 4.5 Mar. 9.38 Luk. 9.49 Joh. 3.26 This Evil Moses who had the greatest cause of Emulation rebukes in Joshua ver 27 28 29. being wholly the Lord's 2ly As to the People's Intemperance as God promised and performed Plenty of Flesh to those fleshly-minded Multitude so he punished their Impiety with an horrible Plague at the close thereof ver 18 19 20 31 32 33 34. Wherein we may observe 1. That when God had promised a whole Month's provision of Flesh Moses thought that verily God had out promised his own Power of performing and prays him to consider that the People whom he had promised to feed with Flesh were six hundred thousand Soldiers beside Women Children and Strangers which amounted say the Rabbins to three hundred thousand more and it could not be a little Flesh that would feed so vast an Host for a whole Month hereupon he makes this Objection Shall all our Flocks reserved for a breed in Canaan be slain or shall all the Fishes in the Sea be gathered together to suffice them ver 21 22. here Moses had quite forgot God's third Storehouse the fulness of the Firmament though not the fulness of the Earth and that of the Sea all which are God's three Treasuries out of which he supplies Man's Necessities for he had forgot the Fowls of the Air whereof he had large Experience the Year before Exod. 16.13 c. Yet God sent them such a drift of Quails as Moses never dreamt of As a little before Moses's Passion was too strong ver 15. in desiring his own Death so here his Faith was too weak in distrusting the Power and Providence of God The best of Men are but Men at the best and the worthiest of God's Servants are subject to faults and failings in this Life God himself answers Moses's Objection of unbelief bearing with his Diffidence here which he would not pardon afterwards Numb 20.12 This was a private failing betwixt God and Moses but that was a publick Act before all the People God will not pass by the scandalous practices of his own People without some sensible check That his Omnipotency is never Non-plust ver 23. Thou shalt see that my Hand or Power is not shortened as Isa 50.2 and 59.1 Thus Christ knew what he had to do when Philip said Two hundred Penny worth of Bread is not sufficient for so great a Multitude Joh. 6.5 6 7 9 10 c. God's Almighty hand is not more lessened in its Power now than when it created all things out of nothing I know saith Job to God that thou canst do every thing Job 42.2 And God here bids Moses never trouble himself about the Manner He should soon see the Matter done Observe 2. Discontent is ever harping upon wants even while good Things are present and plentifully enjoyed as if it enjoyed nothing thus it was with Haman who accounted he had no Honour while he wanted a bow from Mordecai's over stiff and not bending Knee Esth 5.11 And Ahab had no Comfort in his Kingdom though the Glory of all Lands Ezek. 20.6 while he longed for a
his Beast which ought not to be smitten without cause for a far less fault than his v. 33. In which words the Lord intimates to him that the Ass was wiser and honester than her Rider because she only turned out of the literal High-Way for saving her own life and the life of her Master also yet did he smite her and would have killed her for so doing Whereas himself had turned out of the Metaphorical way of the Lord contrary to God's will first revealed to him v. 12. and followed his own crooked ways with a purpose to destroy the lives of God's people therefore he more deserved to be smitten yea and killed than his Ass The Third Remark is If the Lord be thus tender in saving the lives of innocent Beasts vindicating their innocency against their over austere and hard-hearted Masters how much more will he protect the cause of his innocent Servants against their wrongful Oppressors Exod. 22.23 God is the Preserver of Man and Beast Psal 36.7 and takes care that our very Beasts should be delivered from servile toil upon the Sabbath Day Deut 5.14 He also saved alive that innocent Ass whereon the disobedient Prophet rode when the Lion tore the nocent Master 1 King 13.23 24 26 28. And here the Lord declareth that had not the Ass turn'd aside out of the way as v. 23. and faln down under him he had killed the Rider and saved the Ass alive v. 33. The Jewish Cabbalists do indeed say reading the words here and she should have lived that the Ass dyed so soon as she had spoken lest the Heathens should Worship her for an Idol But this is to be wise above what is written in Sacred Record However this is certain not that the words import her death but because she by her Rider's misusing her in his mad frantick fit might have despaired of her own life had not God held the hands of this mad Prophet and this is more certain that a dreadful woe is denounced against those that ran greedily after Balaam's perverse way for reward Jude v. 11. And much more God will defend his innocent Saints that would live quiet in the Land Psal 35.20 The Fourth Remark is Hypocrites make fair but faint offers of obedience to God as did Blaam v. 34. Frigidè hoc offert c. He faintly offers to turn back with an if it were evil to go on speaking of his outward actions only but de malo in corde latenti tacet his inward intentions he concealed I have sinned he acknowledgeth namely in misusing my Beast c. This is the whole of his Confession as his Reason following For I knew not thou stood'st in the way intimateth but his wicked purpose and avarice which lay lurking in his breast the true cause of those external extravagant actings he dissembled and prosecuteth still unto the end Si displicet If it please thee not as the Septuagint translateth it Ishubah li revertar mihi meaning if it displease thee that I should go on my journey I will return back to my own house whereas he could not be ignorant that his wicked intent to curse God's People for his own promotion was a most wicked design in God's all-seeing eyes and was the very reason why the Angel came out against him Full fain would he have gone through his ardent desire to the wages of wickedness yet thus he complements with the Angel that if necessity constrain him he must and would turn back The Fifth Remark is God sometimes Answers Men according to the Idols of their own heart Ezek. 14.3.4 as here seeing Balaam was set upon going and neither the first words of God who forbad him to go v. 12 nor the dangers he met with in his way could hinder his mischievous design As God had bid him go v. 20. which was o grant in wrath not in mercy because he stood not in the Lord's first Counsel v. 12 13 32. therefore the Lord met him with a drawn Sword in his going v. 22. so now again v. 35. he is bid to go wherein God gave him up to his own hearts lusts as Psal 81.12.13 when he would not hearken to the first Counsel of God then God lets him walk in his own Counsels as Solomon saith to his wild youngster Walk on in the wide ways of thine own Heart but at thy peril there is a stinging but followeth after Eccl. 11.9 the Lord left him herein to fall by his own Counsels Psal 5.10 and thus Sol. Jarchi explains these words ver 35. Go with the Men for thy Portion is with them and thine end is to perish out of the World as he did for though he escaped now the Sword of the Angel ver 33. yet afterwards He was slain by the Sword of Israel Josh 13.22 The Sixth Remark is False Prophets are always most highly respected of wicked Rulers as Balaam was of Balak here ver 36. because they only have the knack to gratifie Royal Lusts Balak went out to meet Balaam at Moses did Jethro Exod. 18.7 as Joseph did Jacob Gen. 46.29 and the Kings did to Abraham Gen 14.17 18. and Heb. 7.1 this was high respect and yet higher Balak went to the very utmost borders of his Kingdom to welcome Balaam and to entertain him with Honour who was but a Soothsayer c. The Seventh Remark is Wicked Princes do proudly proffer Promotion to false Prophets and Parasites out of their vain Presumption which oftentimes the great God permits them not to perform This they learn from their Father the Devil Joh. 8.44 who presumptuously offered our Lord himself The Kingdoms of the World and the Glories of them to Him as to Others for falling down to worship him Mat. 4.8 9. Thus Balak vainly boasted to Balaam Have not I earnestly sent for thee and am not I able to Honour thee ver 37. whereas indeed he was not able to promote him to Honour but in the end sent him away with displeasure and disgrace acknowledging at the last that the Lord had kept Him back from Honour Numb 24.10 11. and suppose Balaam had not been disappointed of Balak's Honour what had he got but a magnum nihil just a great nothing as the Tempter would have cheated Christ with bare shews and shadows like our Raree-shows which he only shewed him resemblances of worldly Glory The Eighth Remark is Wicked Princes with the help of their wicked Parasites are not able to act any thing against God and his People without Divine Permission Habemus hìc reum consitentem Balaam himself here confesseth it in his cunning Can I ver 38. the Hebrew word is doubled for more vehemency signifying Surely I am not able in any wise c. for the Redeemer of God's People frustrateth the Tokens of the Lyars and maketh Diviners Mad he turns wise Men backward and maketh their Knowledge foolish Isa 44.25 as he did in Balaam's Case here his Curse to a Blessing The Ninth Remark is How contrary
neglect of such Lawful Means as may be subservient to his Providence Hence we may learn the difference betwixt true Faith and vain presumption the latter is bold grounded upon Humane Strength and Natural Abilities which makes it so oft precipitant and rushing headlong upon such weak and false grounds thinking the end may be accomplish'd without the use of those Means that should advance it N. B. Thus the Devil tempted Christ to leap from the Pinacle of the Temple when there was an ordinary way at hand to descend by Stairs down to the ground this our Lord flatly calleth a Tempting of God Matth. 4.5 6 7. and is the sin of a vain presumption whereas true Faith when it hath God's Promise to depend upon is no less careful to use all Lawful Means than if there were no promise of God at all well knowing that ordinarily God appointeth the means and the end to go together and that the certainty of God's Purposes and Promises doth not excuse but rather oblige Man's diligent use of fit means for the Accomplishment of them as we see in Acts 27.30 31. Except these stay in the Ship ye cannot be saved Though God be not bound up to Means yet doth he not usually work without them God works here by this Stratagem against Gibeah as he had done before by the like against Ai Joshua 8.4 5. c. The Sixth Remark is The many Remarkable Branches of this Third Battle As First The Time when it was fought 't is said to be upon the third Day ver 30. for after their last Defeat they spent one Day in marching up to Shilo and the second Day was spent in deep Humiliation before the Lord in Shilo and on the third Day they renew their Fi●ht against Gibeah or it is call●d the third Day of Battle in respect of the two Battle Days they had before Secondly That Army of Israel who were ordered to feign a Flight made according to their Orders a preposterous Retreat this did flush the Benjamites and made them cry Victoria too soon ver 31.39 and so eager they were of pursuing those Counterfeit Cowards that the whole Garrison of Gibeah was drained dry Thirdly This gave a fair opportunity for the Liers in wait to arise out of the Meadows and Storm the City and then Fire it which was the Sign for those that fled to make a stand turn Head and renew the Battle as soon as they saw the Smoak of the City ascending Hereby the Benjamites were struck with Horrour being disappointed of their Pursuit they had made in the two former Battles and beholding this Third Battle to begin both before them and behind them they fled yet knew not wither for in flying from Death they fled the faster to it so that Day there fell of them Twenty five Thousand besides the Thousand that were slain in the two other Battles ver 38.46 Fourthly God's Presence made Israel's Victory easie here ver 43. In the two former Battles wherein they wanted Divine Assistance to concur with their Humane Endeavours they found it too hard a work for them to overrome their Enemies but now they tread them down without difficulty Fifthly This Slaughter of the Benjamites ceased not in the Field not only upon those that came to Gibeah but pursued them home to their several Cities unto which they fled out of the Battle ver 48. where the Israelites slew Man Woman and Child and all the Cattle that came to hand and burnt the Cities with fire because they had sent Aid to Gibeah All this seemeth harsh bloody and unlike an Isrealite to his Brother if it were not done by the Command of God but out of a Military fury they were certainly blame worthy However we may learn hence N. B. 1. Earnestly to pray that God may prevent Civil War which is always Utrinque triste sad on both sices 2. That such abominable Wickedness may neither be practised among us nor much less protected and patrooniz'd for which Divine Vengeance as well as Humane Revenge cut off the whole Tribe save a few yea their very Infants which was not unusual in such cases Numb 31.17 1. Sam. 15.3 Josh 7.15 and Deut. 13.15 God bid it be done there in a Parallel Case 3. It teacheth us what God will do with the Rod wherewith he Chastises his Children The Rod of the Wicked shall not always rest upon the lot of the Righteous Psal 125.3 when his chastizing work is done he casts the Rod into the fire and burns it as he doth Benjamin here whom God first made use of to execute his Justice upon Israel for their not punishing Idolatry among them and then God useth I●rael to Plague Benjamin for not delivering up the Delinquents of Gibeah to Justice yea that Rod wherewith God had most severely Corrected Israel he here casts into the fire when Israel was low enough and Benjamin high enough and so burns it that nothing but a small stump remained unburned namely the Six Hundred Men in the Rock Rimmon ver 47. This brings in the last part namely the Consequents of this third Battle whereof we have an Account in the next Chapter CHAP. XXI of Judges JVdges the Twenty First which Relateth how the Tribe of Benjamin now almost extinct came to be restored In this Relation or Narrative the Causes thereof are declared which be two First The Efficient Cause namely Israel's Repentance and deep Sorrow at those sad Issues their Rash and Uncharitable Oath disturbs them on one hand and their Pity and Compassion to their Brother Benjamin whose utter extirpation they never designed though it fell out very near it in the heat and fury of War beyond their expectation this even distracted them on the other hand therefore come they to Shilo not so much to praise God for their late woful Victory but more especially now to seek God's Direction how they might extricate themselves out of this present Labyrinth to this end they spend a whole Day in Praying Weeping Sacrificing and Deploring the deplorable case of their Brother Benjamin ver 1 2 3 4 5 6. All these Actions were Signs of Israel's Sorrow The Second is The Material Cause or the Means by which the Tribe of Benjamin now shrunk up into a small Remnant was restored namely by providing Wives for them and these were of two sorts 1. Some were given to them freely to wit such as were the Daughters of Jabesh Gilead whose Males c. Israel destroyed because they assisted not in the War against Benjamin ver 8 9 10 11 12 13 14. And 2. When still Two Hundred of that Tribe could not be provided by this Gift others must be stolen and taken by force to save them from the Curse they had Imprecated on themselves in their Oath that they would not give them Wives of their own Daughters therefore are they ordered to commit Two Hundred Rapes upon the Damosels that came to Dance their Dances at the Feast in
Lightning and hot Thunderbolts just when they were ready to fall on upon a Fasting and a Praying People N. B. At the Prayer of Samuel God doth this to shew plùs precando quam praeliando c. more good may be done by Divine Prayer than by Humane Power Vnarmed Israel had no more to do here than to pursue v. 11. and to take up the Weapons that the Philistines in their fright had thrown away and so slay them with their own Swords Nor was this all God did for Israel but Josephus saith The Earth trembled and open'd and so devoured many of them Israel pursued them to Bethcar which signifies the House of the Lamb the place of this Victory was so call'd from the Lamb which Samuel Sacrificed to procure the performance of his Mother Hannah's Prediction chap. 2.10 and Samuel set up a Stone as a Trophee of this Victory calling it Ebenezer a Stone of help v. 12. this place did the more deserve a double Monument because it was the very place where Israel had been formerly so fatally beaten and the Ark of God taken c. chap 4.1 call'd so there by way of Anticipation and where now Israel recovers their lost Liberties for this Victory was so formidable and fatal to the Philistines that they durst no more rally their scattered Troops nor recruit their Vanquish'd Army to make any new Incursions in Samuel's Day v. 13. And the Cities formerly lost were restored by those Crest-faln Philistines unto Israel yea and not only they but the very Amorites the most Valiant of all the Canaanites come and truckle to and made Peace with Israel v. 14. The Fourth Remark concerneth the second part of this Chapter namely the Acts of Samuel in the time of Peace after this Time of War was accomplished He judged Israel all the Days of his Life v. 15. that is thirty eight years alone and though Saul was an Ordinary King in his two last Years yet Samuel was the extraordinary Judge which Office from God Saul could not take from him and Samuel being a mixt person a Prophet as well as Judge exercised his Office in the former Years of Saul as chap. 11.7 and 15.32 33. and their times are joyn'd together Acts 13.20 21. He is commended here First For his Prudence towards the Republick in going his Yearly Circuits for the Peoples ease and conveniency administring Justice publickly at three places Bethel Gilgal and Mizpeh v. 16. and privately at his own House in Ramah this Good Man was ever in Action for the publick good And Secondly For his Piety toward Religion in building an Altar for extraordinary Sacrifices v. 17. when probably both Tabernacle and Altar were destroy'd at Shilo He had no word from the Lord as a Prophet to remove the Ark out of the private House at Kiriath Jearim that was not done till David's Day yet might he have a word for building this Altar that his Sacrifices might be joyned with his Prayers for direction in all Emergencies c. 1 Sam. CHAP. VIII CHapter the Eighth contains the change of Israels Aristocracy into a Monarchy in its Causes and Occasions c. The First Remark is the moving Cause and Occasion why Israel desired this change which was 1. Samuel's Superannuation they conceived that his Old Age had disenabled him for his High Duty yet was it not really so for he performed signal and singular service in his Office long after and even in Saul's Reign was strong enough to hew Agag in pieces Chap. 15. But the 2. Cause was more real Namely the Degeneration of his Sons Joel and Abiah whom in his declining Days he made his substitutes being not able to do the whole Duty by himself And no doubt but this good man had given his Sons the best Breeding and was not without great hopes of their good behaviour in the execution of their Offices Yea and 't is not at all improbable but they demeaned themselves demurely enough at the first and managed their matters in a due Decorum until they came to be intoxicated with their new Dignities which proved over strong Wine for their weak Brain Prov. 1.32 but more especially till they came to be Debauched by Bribes v. 1 2 3. N. B. 'T is too severe a censure to imagine that Samuel so good a man could set up his Sons as his Deputies out of any such fond Indulgency as himself had reproved in Eli and denounced Gods dreadful judgments against him for so doing Gideon durst not do so in his Day Judg. 8.23 This was Samuel's Sin For God called the Judges not Man c. He might not make his Sons Judges yet it may not be doubted but that both his own Example and his Sons Education ●gave the good Father a very hopeful prospect that his Sons were well qualified for the highest employments though it proved otherwise c. However this may be truly said as Samuel succeeded Eli in his place so he did in his Cross though not in his Sin The Second Remark is The weak Arguments the Elders use to cause Samuel's Compliance with them in Desiring a King v. 4 5. They Urge First Thou art Old They might have been Answered 't is true he was in his Old Age but not come yet to his Doteage for he could do and did his Office for many years after so deserved not to be deposed by them now Secondly Thy Sons walk not in thy ways It may be this was the first time that the faults of the Sons were complained of to their Father possibly N. B. These Sons might have been reclaimed by Samuel's Gravity and Authority upon the first or Second sharp Admonition And suppose they had proved proof against reproof and so had become unreclaimable Might not better Vicegerents to the Supream Judge been put in their places No necessity there was still to alter the Government Thirdly Now make us a King to Judge us But what assurance could they give that their King would be of a better behaviour than Samuels Sons had been of Might it not have been retorted upon them how some of them long since set up that Bastard Abimelech to be their King and how little Comfort came to them out of that Cursed Bramble Fourthly We will be like other Nations But there was not the like reason for God had separated Israel from all other Nations as a peculiar Nation to himself and had received them into his own special Charge and Government Therefore Josephus the Jew doth well call this Government of Israel under Judges of Gods own chusing and not of the Peoples rather a Thoocracy Governed by God than an Aristocracy Governed by Primates and Principals of the People The Third Remark is Samuel 's resentment of this resolute motion for an absolute Monarchy 'T is said But the thing displeased Samuel v. 6. And why so Because it was an high affront and an hainous Indignity done to his Person by their attempting to shake of his
too good for him foaming out of his Mouth in his Frantick Fit whatever Spite and Spleen yea the most Malignant Malice could invent making foul Reflections upon his own Queen Jonathan's Mother as if she had been a Whore or no better than his Concubine Rispah 2 Sam. 21.8 or however such an Imperious Dame whom he could never govern possibly opposing at times his Frantick Extravagancies And seeing partus sequitur ventr●m The Birth follows the Belly that Jonathan had derived this perverse Temper from her and not from him and thus the Tyrant Rants and Hectors his good Son intimating as if David by his Crafty Insinuations had wheedled the Fool out of his Kingdom whereof he was Heir Apparent so in a Rage resolves that the Cheat David shall surely die N. B. Note well Nay but stay Sir you must ask God leave For to him belongeth Issues from Death Psal 68.20 and David's times were in the Lord's Hand Psal 31.15 and not in the hands of bloody Saul No sooner did Jonathan intercede a word for David in his Why shall be die v. 32. but presently Saul seconds his raging Words with outragious Deeds casting his Javelin at his dear Jonathan v. 33. which had it hit and kill'd Saul could expect little Joy in so doing for a Father to kill such an obliging Son with his own hands might have broke a more Natural Father's Heart c. N. B. But a Mad Man is not capable of any such consideration Had this Hypocrit● now dissembled his Displeasure he might have got David into his Clutches c. but hereby he proclaims his Irreconcileable fury and taught David by this Token to provide the best for his own safety The Fifth Remark is Jonathan's Anger at his furious too Angry Father that had thus foully affronted him at the publick Table traducing him for a Traytor in so open a Theatre and not only so but essaying to wound him c. N. B. The Signs of Jonathan's Anger were two First His Abrupt Departure from the Royal Table upon this Affront from Saul The Second was his Abstinence from Meat all that second Day v. 34. So near to his good Heart did David's desperate Condition lay making it as if it had been his own so that the cause of his Anger was for David's sake as well as for himself Duo nunc moriuntur in uno Two days as it were in one by Sympathy The Last part is the Consequents The Remarks on it are First The third day being the time appointed v. 6.19 Jonathan Walks forth into the Field no better guarded than with a Boy to signifie these said Tidings to David v. 35 36 37 38 39. as they two had agreed the Boy being altogether ignorant of the design as the Boy●an Jonathan shot his Arrow beyond him and cryed to him Is not the Arrow beyond thee This was the Warning-word for David to pack away N. B. Note well Thus God shoots sharp Arrows sometimes beyond us not to wound us but to warn us of Saul's or Satan's design to destroy us When Jonathan had shot all his Arrows beyond the Boy he bids him gather them up bring them away take his Bow Arrows and Quiver and be gone with them in haste to the City v. 40. The Second Remark Then David observing the Coast clear of Passengers came forth of his Cave meets Jonathan and these two dear Friends met and melted one over another v. 41. until David exceeded having the greater Reason in many Respects for now he was like to be Banish'd 1. From the sweet Society of his dear Jonathan 2. From his Wife and Family 3. From the Common-wealth of Israel But above all 4. From the Church of God whereof he complains mostly chap. 26.19 because there lay his chief delight Psal 42.1 2. and 84.1 2. The Third Remark is Jonathan dismisses him with his Prayers as well as Tears that the Lord would direct him Renews the Covenant with him and returns to the City v. 42. leaving David to Divine Direction N. B. Note well Behold here what a plunge David was in not knowing whither to go for safety not to Saul's Friends durst he go for they would betray him nor to his Foes for those also he had incensed against him by his many Victories over them Into all these and many other present Perplexities God was pleased to plunge David to fit him the more for future felicity and in the mean time to exercise his Faith and Patience that he might run to God as his only Rock and Refuge by fervent Prayer Psal 16.1 2. and 144.1 2 c. CHAP. XXI THis Chapter contains the beginning of David's perpetual Banishment which was first to Achish King of the Philistines residing in Gath c. Upon which the Remarks are First David in his way thither comes to Nob about Twelve Miles from Gibeah where Jonathan and he had their sad parting he comes hither because it was a City of Priests chap. 22.19 whom David feared not to betray him into Saul's Hands N. B. It seems Saul had removed the Tabernacle from Shilo to Nob though the Ark was still at Kiriath Jearim where it continued till David's Reign yet the Priests of the Lord did here attend the Tabernacle and David had a double Errand to this place not only to supply his Wants with Bread c. but also and more especially to seek Counsel and Comfort from God by the Mediation of the High-Priest here The Second Remark is David's Success in this double Errand with the High-Priest at Nob Now was David in great distress being driven both from the Prince Jonathan and from the Prophet Samuel who were both fast and faithful Friends to him where could he hope to find any Justice and Compassion better than in the Bosome of those Priests of the Lord under his present Circumstances seeing their Persons were Consecrated to God and his Worship N. B. No doubt but David's prime and principal Errand to this place was to consult with God for his direction what way he should take in this Emergency for his own future preservation it being of far more importance than to seek relief for his present Necessities which he might expect at another place as at Anathoth where the Priest likewise dwelt as appeareth 1 Kings 2.26 Nehem. 11.31 N. B. Note well Though this consulting with God be not mentioned in this Chapter yet is it over and over again in the next where Doeg Accuseth Ahimelech for so doing and Ahimelech himself confesseth he did it Chap. 22.10 13 15. N. B. Nor is it at all improbable that David resorted hither to visit the Tabernacle of God which he so dearly loved and the loss of which he so much bewailed in his Exile before his departure out of his Native Countrey and Kingdom both to pour forth his own fervent Prayers unto God for his protection and direction in his distressed condition and also to ask Counsel from God's Oracle by the High-Priest who
Truth for Saul had indeed faln upon his own Weapon but his Coat of Mail had hindred it from piercing deep enough to be so speedily a mortal wound but that the Philistines might come and catch him alive and abuse him and tho' it be said when his Armour-bearer saw that Saul was dead he slew himself 1 Sam. 31.5 Which yet Dr. Lightfoot Senseth thus When he saw Saul had given himself so deadly a wound he did the like and died indeed but Saul's wound was not of so quick a dispatch therefore he desired this Man to kill him outright N. B. Notwithstanding all this yet upon a more serious inquest into Particulars this whole story seems more probably to be a pack of Lies one stitched to another for these Reasons The First is 'T is altogether improbable either that Saul after he had given himself such a deadly wound whereof he was ready to dye should be able to call him and spend so many words in talking with him or that this Man should dare to stay so long in this Discourse with Saul seeing he also was fleeing with the whole Army to save his own life which he might have lost by making this halt had the Philistines overtaken him in their pursuit which Saul feared for himself during this Parly The Second Reason is Nor can it be probable that Saul should desire to die rather by the hands of an uncircumcised Amalekite than of the uncircumcised Philistines which he so much feared He could not put any such difference between them seeing Amalek was more accursed and devoted to destruction than the Philistines The Third Reason is 'T is expresly said that Saul fell upon his own Sword 1 Sam. 31.4 but this Fellow saith he fell upon his own Spear v. 6. here Gnal Chanatho Hebr. whereas it is Ethbachereb his Sword The Fourth Reason is 'T is as expresly said that Saul's Armour-bearer being yet alive saw that Saul was dead 1 Sam. 31.5 which doubtless he would throughly know before he did kill himself The Fifth Reason is Had the Armour-bearer been yet alive when Saul call'd this Amalekite to dispatch him he would certainly have hindred him from doing that which himself durst not do 1 Sam. 31.4 The Sixth Reason Nor could that be more probable which he told David I took the Crown that was upon his head v. 10. but look'd rather like a Lye for 't is not likely Saul would wear his Crown upon his head in Battle this would have made him a fair Mark to his Enemies whom they chiefly aimed at A Wise General will rather disguise himself as 1 King 22.30 than be so fondly exposed c. The Seventh Reason The Scripture of Truth doth manifestly ascribe Saul's death to be his own action 1 Sam. 31.4 5. even to his falling upon his own Sword which must be of more credit with us than an artificially composed speech of an accursed Amalekite who had taught his tongue to tell Lyes Jerom. 9.5 and all to curry favour with David from whom he promis'd to himself some great preferment by thus glozing with him N. B. Note well First Thus far it is true that this Fellow brought Saul's Crown c. to David How he came by it is the question The Rabbins relate that as the Armour-bearer was Doeg so this Man was his Son and as the Father had the Crown in his Custody to carry it before the King in State and now seeing Saul was like to wear it no longer and that himself was resolv'd to dye with the King he gave Saul's Royal Crown and Bracelets to this Fellow his Son advising him to carry them to David ut in ejus gratiam se insinuaret so to win the favour of him whom he calls his Lord whom he owned as King now Saul was dead N. B. Secondly This very Sword wherewith at God's Command Saul should have cut off the Amalekites but spared them was the Instrument of his own death and as some say an Amalekite one whom Saul had spared with Agag must push it forward and Saul who had been so Cruel to David all along is now become cruel to himself Thus God fills Men with the Evil of their own ways Prov. 14.14 The Fourth Remark is the effects of this Relation which be two-fold First What David did v. 11 12 13 14 15 16. And Secondly What David said thereupon v 17 18. c. First What David did as 1. He rent his Cloaths v. 11. which was usually done in those days to testifie an extremity of passion without regard either to damage or decency Regis ad exemplum his Men did the same with David 2. They all Mourned Wept and Fasted until Even v. 12. though upon their own private accounts they had but small cause to do so Yet upon the publick account there was great reason for so doing because a great blow now was given to the Church of God and that by the hands of the uncircumcised who would by this means exalt their Dagon above the God of Israel and there was cause enough of this Humiliation because Israel had brought this fatal Overthrow upon their own heads for their many grievous sins yea tho' Saul was their Capital and irreconcilable Enemy yet was he the Lord 's Anointed and one that had Fought the Battels of the Lord with good success Therefore it may not be marvel'd at that tho' David was so well pleas'd with Nabal's death yet he thus mourn'd for Saul's because the case was not alike beside many brave Men were fallen in Battle out of Israel but above all David's dear Jonathan as afterwards 3. David did after all this Arraign Examine Condemn and Execute the Amalekite that came to curry favour with him v. 13 14 15 16. wherein David like a Just Judge gives him a fair Trial in a Judiciary way and tho' the Fellow had told him that he was an Amalekite v. 8. yet David asks him again who he was either for fear of his mistake in not minding his story well enough because of his great grief or it was to try the man whether he would agree with himself in telling his Tale then David said Why didst not thou refuse to kill the King as his Armour-bearer had done how knowest thou but some Providence might have happened for saving his life notwithstanding his most eminent danger c. Thou confessest thou kill'd the King thou shalt be killed N. B. Note well A just hand of God on this Amalekite for his Lying As David before had as it were Sacrificed a whole band of Amalekites to Saul's Funeral 1 Sam. 30.17 before he had intelligence of Saul's death so now he Sacrificed this Intelligencer thereof on the same account which David might lawfully do both because God had commanded that all the Amalekites might be slain as before and because David at Saul's death was now virtually the King 2. What David said as well as did namely David's Elegy or Funeral Song upon
the living Possessions where he gives least of the dead c. The second Wonder is That so wise a Father should have so foolish a Son As the greatest Persons cannot give themselves Children so the wisest cannot give Wisdom to their Children This was Solomon's complaint That he knew not whether his Heir and Successor would prove a wise Man or a Fool Eccles 2.18 19. Solomon the Father was a Man for Wisdom while he was but a Child in Years short of twenty Years old when Rehoboam the Son was but a Child for Folly when he was grown up to manly Maturity even to the Forty-first Year of his Age 2 Chron. 12.13 and yet call'd a Child c. 2 Chron. 13.7 Remark the Fourth This Factious Assembly at Shechem sends for Jeroboam out of Egypt ver 2 3. where he had laid lurking till Solomon's Death in the House of Solomon's Brother or Father-in-Law who nourished this Serpent in his Bosom that stung so fatally Solomon's Successor c. This Jeroboam comes to Shechem the place stained with Perficiousness of old and becomes the Mouth of this many-headed Multitude which would have done better had they presented Rehoboam with the Head of this Fugitive and Traytor to Solomon than in making him the Head of their Faction and Rebellion But they pitch upon him who had been a prime Officer among them and as one that had suffered Banishment for speaking freely for them to Solomon and who was a mighty Man of Valour Chap. 11.26 28. Yea and of the same Tribe of Ephraim also But probably most of all because he had God's Promise of the Kingdom by the Prophet Ahijah Remark the Fifth This Seditious Assembly at Shechem sent for Rehoboam thither as well as Jeroboam pretending to Crown him and to perform all the Solemnities usual at a King's Coronation if he would grant their Requests but indeed intending a Defecti●n whatsoever Answer Rehoboam should make Jeroboam being made the Peoples Mouth Petitions Rehoboam to ease them of the heavy Taxes his Father had laid upon them ver 4. This Crafty Fox had undoubtedly troubled the Waters of Israel that he might fish the better for a Kingdom therein therefore comes he in their Name with a design to Cavil N.B. 'T was true thus far that Solomon had levied great Taxes upon them for his many Works Wars and Wives but they had forgot who it was that had filled all their Coffers with such a prodigious Plenty of Gold and Silver wherewith with chearfully they might have born their Imposts nor do they mention one word of the Idolatry set up among them in Solomon's declining days as any grievance to them They could be thus Careful for Redress in Civil Matters but over Careless in the Converns of Religion brooking Idolatrous Worship well enough which sheweth how fast they Ripened for those dreadful Judgments of God which are now hastning upon them Remark the Sixth is Rehoboam's Answer from ver 5 to 14. wherein Mark 1. He begs time for Deliberation ver 5. no doubt but Rehoboam was perplexed to meet with this Complaint of his Father's Government in the first Place instead of a Congratulation of him his Son to the Crown and Kingdom If Rehoboam yield he blemisheth his Father if he deny he endangers his Kingdom Here he sticks and craves three Days for Advice This seems a Word of Wisdom not to give a sudden Resolve in a Case of Importance but P. Martyr calls it an Act of Imprudence to give a raging People such a space for their Consults seeing they now well understood the King bare no good Mind to them otherwise he would not have delayed answering their Designs at first Mark 2. the Misimprovement Rehoboam made of his three Days desired First he consulted with Solomon's old Counsellors ver 6. this was a right step had he stood to their Counsel Their conversing so long with such a wise King had made them wise saith Grotius With the Antient is Wisdom c. Job 12.12 13. Their Advice to him was from the Advice of his Father A soft Answer turns away Wrath c. Prov. 15.1 Namely to give them now good words and he would gain them for ever ver 7. To purchase a lasting Allegiance with one mouthful of good words as soon spoke as bad and no harder Task for the tongue is an easie Price for a Kingdom Mark 3. But this foolish King forsook their sage Counsel ver 8 with whom he had consulted for fashion-sake only being resolved before-hand to stand upon his Punctilio's of Majesty and looking upon it as below a Royal Person to truckle to his Subjects Therefore Secondly he consults with Greener Heads than those other grave and gray-headed States-men and these gratified his Ambitious Humour saying 'T is uncomely for a King to admit such a sawcy Address of his Subjects and 't is but Prince-like to crush this Presumption in the Egg and Embryo c. ver 9 10 11. Mark 4. When the third Day came this young King thus flush'd with his rash and raw headed Counsellers spake roughly to Jeroboam and the People that came then for his Answer ver 12 13 14 He now can speak nothing but Daggers to them every word hath its sting nothing but Burdens and Scourges and Scorpions to they hear from him being less wise but more wilful than his Father Solomon Mark 5. Here was a Prince and a People well met As the latter the People was all for their Penny nothing for Purity and Piety no complaint their Religion was corrupted with Idolatry no Petitioning the King to begin his Reign with God to Purge his Church of Idol-mongers and whole Piles of Abominations c. So the former the Prince was all for his Will and Pleasure sic Volo sic Jubeo for an absolute Sovereignty and no doubt but Jeroboam in his Plot was well pleased with this Imperious Answer Remark the Seventh There be two causes of Israel's Revolt from Rehoboam here the first is the Causa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or external Cause namely Rehoboam's roughness one churlish Word lost him now the Ten Tribes whom he would but might not recover with Sword and Blood afterwards As his changing of Counsellors from the Old to the Young did argue great weakness of Judgment whereas had he on the other hand changed them from the Young to the Old this had been both his Prudence and Honour c. N.B. So his rash rude rough rugged Answer to a People even at this Juncture fully fledge and ripe for Rebellion did plainly proclaim Rehoboam's sublime Simplicity No doubt but Jeroboam had plied his Plot warmly all the three days respite and had prepared the People for a Combustion against that time wherein he expected a peremptory Resolution of Rigour would drop from Rehoboam But the Causa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Internal Cause was the great God ver 15. there was a wheel within a wheel Ezek. 1.16 For 1. God with held Wisdom
and tired themselves in vain Elijah Jeers and Ridicules both their Persons Actions and Idols taunting them with saying Baal was so busie in pursuing his Foes that he had no leisure of attending his Friends c. N. B. Which teacheth that all Jesting is not unlawful faith Peter Martyr save that only which intrencheth upon Piety and good Manners saying that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which Paul condemns Eph. 5.4 is taken for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Salt Jests and Scurrility not for an inoffensive Vrbanity or a pleasant facetiousness of Speech Mark 7. When Baal's Priests end and can do nothing with all their ridiculous Endeavours all the day long then Elijah begins at the time of the Evening Sacrifice ver 30 to ver 40. who no doubt did all by divine Direction He 1. calls the People to come away from those falle Prophets that had so long seduced them unto him the true Prophet of God 2. He repairs the Altar of the Lord which Baal's Worshippers had demolished with twelve Stones representing the Twelve Tribes thereby renewing the Covenant betwixt God and Israel now when Ten Tribes were Apostatized ver 30 31 32. 3. He orders twelve Barrels of Water supposed to be fetch'd from the Sea near Carmel when the drought had dried up all their Land-Brooks to be poured upon the Wood and Altar to avoid all suspicion of any Collusion in hiding Fire any where under such a vast quantity of Water which ran upon the Altar and filled the Trench too that the reality of the Miracle might be made the more manifest by a greater fervency of such a Fire as to lick up all ver 33 34. 4. Then betakes he to Prayer for fire c. 36 37 38. wherein though the Prophets of Baal had cried loud yet this Prophet of God cried louder saying Hear me O Lord hear me well knowing that God and not Baal was the true Prayer-hearing God N. B. The Baalites Prayers had been long and tedious to a deaf dumb and dunghil Deity but Elijah's Prayer was short and pithy charging God with the care of his Covenant of his Truth and of his Glory N. B. Nor did his twelve Stones for repairing the Altar and his twelve Barrels of Water wherewith he filled the Altar and Trenches any less rebuke the Ten Tribes for falling off from the Two in the Worship of God N. B. This is beyond doubt that his strong Crys of Faith did reach the Throne of Grace and soon discover to Israel that Elijah's God was unlike Baal neither talking nor travelling nor pursuing nor sleeping not a God of such a narrow Uunderstanding as unable to mind two things at once But as he is the Creator so the Governor of all things both in Heaven and Earth and hath the command both of Fire and of Water at all times and as an Evidence hereof at this time he first sends fire to consume Elijah's Sacrifice and not only to lick up the twelve Barrels of Water that filled the Trenches by that flash of fire but after gives abundance of Water in a plentiful Rain also to remove the Judgment of Drought and Famine insomuch that when Israel saw the first Sign that God had answer'd by Fire to the Prophet's Prayers they cry out as fully The Lord and not Baal is God the Lord is God and he can give us Water as well as Fire if our Sins hinder not N. B. They might say Oh well is it with us that this fearful flash of fire hath not consumed our own flesh for our Idolatries as it hath done the flesh of the burnt Offering and licked up our Blood as it hath all the Water in the Trench and so they might acknowledge God's Mercy as they did his Power twice over ver 39. Remark the Sixth is the Execution of Justice upon Baal's Prophets and the return of Rain after a long Drought of Three Years and six Months from ver 40 to 46. wherein Mark 1. Elijah strikes while the Iron is hot he takes hold of this Opportunity while the Peoples Hearts were warm with the fresh Conviction of this wonderful Miracle and bids them take those juggling Priests and let not one of them escape v. 40. and kill them at Kishon that their Blood might help to fill that River which their Idolatry had emptied by the Drought N. B. All this Elijah might lawfully do at God's direction and according to God's Law Deut. 13.5 and 18.20 for which like Justice Jehu is afterwards commended 2 Kings 10.28 and probably he had the consent of the King who found them Impostors and was assured of Rain when this Work was done c. indeed Luke 9.55 Our sweet Saviour rebukes that over-hot Spirit which would call Fire from Heaven to consume such as slighted him this he said was not suitable to the Gospel of Peace but Elijah was a Restorer of the Law c. Mark 2. After this Execution of Justice Elijah foretels Mercy was now coming ver 41. saying to Ahab Haste thou from Kishon up to thy Tent on Carmel and refresh thy self there after thy long fasting day The chief cause of the Drought being now removed God will send Rain therefore go eat thy Bread with joy and drink thy Wine with a chearful heart c. Eccles 9.7 For Col. Ha●non c. Hebr. I hear a Wind whistling in the Heavens and presaging abundance of Rain He heard this noise with the Ears of his Faith saith Osiander when none else did hear it Mark 3. Ahab now satisfied with news of Rain goes up to his Repast and Elijah goes up to his Prayer ver 42. minding more God's Glory in that great day's Work than his own Refreshment Josephus saith He prayed sitting but 't is otherwise expressed here He put his face between his knees the very posture saith Peter Martyr wherein the Babe layeth in the Womb with his Head between his Knees N.B. This was a Gesture of his deep Humility as unworthy to lift up his Eyes to God of his remembrance with thankfulness how he was brought to light from a miserable beginning at his Birth and now was about to be as it were born again after his three Years and half absconding in the Womb of Providence The Prophet prays for Rain in this posture which strained all the strings of his Head Heart and whole Body well knowing though God had promised Rain yet would he have his Prayer to fetch it and therefore no wonder if the Apostle say He prayed earnestly James 5.17 18. And though 't is not told us what he prayed yet this is Recorded his Prayer was so earnest that he opened Heaven by that Key Mark 4. The Prophet unwilling to break off his Prayer sends his Servant which Vatablus saith was the Widow of Sarepta's Son to watch the first rise of a vaporous Cloud out of the Sea ver 43. Elijah had pray'd saith Sanctius that the Fire might descend immediately for a speedy freeing of his own Faith and for
Deeds both as to Substance and Circumstance ver 17. Elisha's promise working miraculously beyond Nature both in Wife and Husband is reckon'd his Sixth Miracle The Second Branch of this History concerning the Shunamite's Son as of his miraculous Birth before so now of his more miraculous raising from Death to Life follows which may well be reckoned for Elisha's Seventh Miracle though it be reduced before only as a Branch of his Fourth Miracle which indeed is a double Miracle in this Chapter Recorded ver 18 to 30. wherein first the Antecedents then the Concomitants and Consequents of it Remarks First upon the Antecedents are First the checker'd Work of Divine Providence in its oft mixing sowre with sweet the black of Misery with the white of Mercy which yet is beautiful to behold How glad a Mother she was of her born Son after so long a Barrenness may easily be imagined especially when grown up and able to find his Father in the Field who though Rich like another Boaz loved to over-see his Harvest-Labourers It seems likewise that the Father much cocker'd the Child and the Child dearly loved the Father and therefore was moved to go out to him ver 18. The Sun beams in that hot Season of Harvest which in that Country saith Peter Martyr is exceeding vehement had beaten hard upon the Child's tender Head which not only his childish Age but also his delicate Education had made more than ordinarily tender This heat made him the sooner sick he complains to his Father of his intolerable pain of Head-ach as the doubling of the Phrase intimates ver 19. N. B. Dr. Hall notes well here Oh that Grace could teach us what Nature teaches this Child to bemoan our selves to our heavenly Father in all our Troubles c. Remark the Second The business of this Earthly Father was earnest abroad he knew the care of young especially sick Children belonged more to the affectionate Mother at home which afforded better Accommodations than could be found in the Field therefore bids he his Lad take his Son up into his Arms and carry him out of the open Sun-shine to his Mother she shades him in her Bosom lays him on her lap till Noon and then he died ver 20. This was a most doleful Tryal in many respects as 1. This Son so much desired given as a special Favour of God and that by a Miracle 2. A Son above a Daughter an only Son past the danger of Infancy breeding of Teeth c. and able of it self to walk to his Father in the Fields 3. Yet suddenly unexpectedly and within its Mother's Arms to die Oh miserable Spectacle for such a compassionate Mother to behold Her Child was well sick and dead and all in a few hours time he was well when he went to the Field about Nine in the Morning brought sick Home and held in her Bosom to refresh it till Noon and at high-Noon it died on her Lap. N. B. This severe stroke is a fair warning to fond Parents not to love their little ones with inordinate love The way to over-live is to over-love strong Affections bring strong Afflictions they that love over-much shall be sure to grieve over-much God oft in his wisdom famisheth our earthly Idols Zeph. 2.11 and exerciseth his dearest Servants in their dearest Comforts Gen. 22.2 and 37.3 c. Ezek. 24.16 21. How unstable are all created Comforts here 's both a Father's and a Mother's Joy soon a Bud blasted Remark the Third upon the Antecedents of this Seventh Miracle is The sorrowful and mourning Mother lays her dead Son upon the Prophet's bed ver 21. though she had lost her Child she had not lost her Faith nor had her Passion bereav'd her of her Prudence even this was an act of her Faith having probably heard saith P. Martyr that Elijah had restored to Life a Widow's dead Child 1 Kings 17.21 Faith is the best Lover at a dead lift whereby she with others received her dead to life again Hebr. 11.35 and possibly she might hope that the Prophet's Bed would contribute something hereunto however that it might be prepared for the Prophet whom the very place would excite to Prayer But beyond all dispute it was an act of Wisdom to conceal her Son's death and hide her own grief from her Family lest their Consternation should obstruct her passage to the Prophet as Labour in vain therefore she lets none of them know locks the Door and hastens to her Husband Remark the Fourth The Prudence of this pious Matron though she could do much with her Husband whose Heart trusted in her yet will she do no Matter of moment without his consent ver 22. She presumes not to gad from home saith P. Martyr or to meddle with either Servants or Asses without his leave which humbly and reverently she prays for assuring him tho' she must run to the man of God yet would she not stay long but hasten home she acquaints him with her Journey but not with her Errand and therefore was he at a loss as to the Cause ver 23. seeing it was neither New Moon nor Sabbath N. B. On which days good People in those evil Times resorted to God's Prophets for Instruction and Comfort Her answer to him thus admiring was only Shalom Hebr. Peace which Vatablus interprets All is well whence some infer that she lied to her Husband who suspected something was amiss But 't is thus answer'd this good Woman thought all things done by God are well done Mark 7.37 She saw better things in God's will than in her own and some say her Husband suspected not but that the Child was well by this time 't is oft so with little ones 't is a wonder he did not ask how it did Peter Martyr senseth Shalow thus I go to enquire the Peace of the House be content with my going farewel She hides the Cause that he might not be oppressed with Grief Remark the Fifth She hastens to Carmel ver 24. Grief rideth without Reins where there is but any hope to find help Elisha spys her afar off before she could spy him ver 25. He was sitting at the door as Abraham was Gen. 18.1 so saw her the sooner and like a thankful Guest sends his Servant hastily to meet her and to ask if All were well she answer'd Shalom again all is well ver 26. which Lyra calls a Lye but Piscator saith better that she would not tell Gehazi but reserves it for Elisha so puts off the Servant that Interrupts her haste to the Master But best of all saith Lavater 'T was no Lye for she accounted all well which a wise and a good God's Will ordered to be done She comes to Elisha ver 27. caught him by the Feet forgetting her former fashion of bashful modesty and out of an awful Reverence standing at a due distance in the Chamber door ver 15. here is the first Broach of her Passion hid hitherto but now made
yea and Reformation of Manners ver 8 9. They cryed mightily to the Lord during those forty days not only the Men but even the Beasts too cryed to God saith Calvin by way of Implication as Psal 147.9 when pinched with Famine saith Lyra The Men cryed mightily with Intention of Mind as well as Extention of Mouth praying the more earnestly as Luke 22.44 and bouncing hard at Heaven-Gates as if resolved to wring Mercy from God with an holy Violence as Matth. 11.12 N.B. This may serve to shame our cold careless and indifferent Devotion Nor rested they here but looked upon Prayer as to small purpose when Supplication is not seconded with Reformation hereupon they renounce with loathing as well as leaving their old Darling sins they restore all rapaciously gotten goods without which God would not remit them Non remittitur Peccatum nisi restituatur Ablatum saith Augustin on Numb 5.6 7. N.B. Here was Repentance from Sin as well as Repentance for Sin Remark the Fifth All this they did not without hope of Mercy ver 9. Mi Jodeang Jashub Hebr. Who can tell if God will turn c This is the speech of one that doubteth but despaireth not saith Calvin 'T was not their Diffidence but the Difficulty of finding Mercy Their Faith struggled with their Vnbelief saith Tarnovius Jonah was peremptory in his Prephecy of Nineveh's Destruction by such a day therefore had they good cause to doubt if not of the pardon of their sins yet of saving their City Mercerus saith All their hope was it was not God's Absolute Decree but only a Conditional Threatning if they repented not of their Sins which if they could God would repent of his Sentence and be reconciled to them though he cannot repent as Man Numb 23.19 Remark the last Relateth the Effect of their Repentance upon God ver 10. God saw not their Sackcloth c. without saith Calvin but their Works within with the Fruits of their Faith which Men could not see in a serious and sincere Repentance as Mercerus and many good Authors charitably stile it That it was real Repentance two Reasons are rendred for it 1. God approved of it here and remitted their Ruine And 2. Christ approved of it after Matth. 12.41 but others are of another Opinion saying their Repentance was but feigned and forced like that of Pharaoh Ahab c. arguing 1. God approved of Ahab's Humiliation though but External 2. This led them not into a milder Carriage to the Captive Jews c. 3. Nor did it last long for about forty Years after Nahum denounces Nineveh's utter Destruction However the merciful God gave them now a Reprieve and Repented to Ruine them at this Time which was only Mutatio Rei non Dei effectus non affectus facti non consilii saith Tarnovius N.B. God granted to Nineveh that they might be reduced to Repentance what Abraham deny'd to Dives requesting one raised from the Dead to reclaim his five profane Brethren Luke 16.27 28 29 30. for here Jonah is raised out of the Belly of Hell Jonah 2.2 and sent to preach Repentance to this sinful City upon which they reformed their Evil Manners c. Jonah CHAP. IV. THIS Chapter relateth a marvelous Tryal at Law as it were betwixt Jonah the Plaintiff and Jehovah the Defendant Remark the First Upon the Plaintiff in the first part of the Tryal Though Jehovah was well pleased as above yet Jonah was ill displeased ver 1 2 3 5. David had once been Displeased with an Act of God's Severity against Vzzah 2 Sam. 6.8 because the General Joy of that Day was dashed and damped with such a sad and suddain Disaster Therefore David gives a good Caution Cease from Anger and fret not thy self in any wise to do Evil c. Psalm 37.1 7 8. but Jonah did here far worse than David who in a pet and pang of preposterous Passion was deeply discontented with an Act of God's Lenity and tender Compassion to the Penitent Ninevites God bids Be angry but Sin not Eph. 4.26 This is the easiest Charge under the hardest Condition and Terms that can be 't is assuredly a difficult Task to kindle and keep quick saith one this Fire of Anger without any Smoak of Sin Therefore the Greeks give this good Rule 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Anger either say nothing or say that which is better than nothing lest thou Sin c. Remark the Second Jonah expresseth his Anger in a Speech call'd a Prayer ver 2. with such a turbulent and tumultuating Mind saith Tarnovius that it seems rather a Brawl than a Prayer Calvin saith N.B. That his Pious Principle put him upon Praying down his own present Passions knowing himself to be naturally Hot and Hasty and feeling himself feeble in giving place to Passion Eph. 4.27 He though to cure it by Praying but the Flesh of his treacherous Heart prevail'd against the Spirit in him under Divine Desertion so that whereas he should have wrastl'd with God as Jacob did Gen. 32.24 26. behold Jonah downright wrangl'd with God and justified himself for his declining the employ as foreseeing the Issue Therefore I fled before to Tarshish so soon forgetting how he had so sorely smarted for his flight yet God had so graciously granted him Deliverance c. Remark the Third Jonah doth not only justifie himself but he accuseth God of too much Mercy to the Damage of his Truth and the Danger of his Honour yea and to the Disparagement of his Prophet all which he thought would be prejudiced by the many Misconstructions the Adversary will make upon the sparing of Nineveh which God foretold by him should be destroyed Thus Jonah quarrell'd with that great Attribute of God's Mercy the chiefest flower in God's glorious Crown Exod 34.6 7. and even with that goodness of God which had so lately preserved himself from perishing in the Sea and whereby he still subsisted thus is he doing enough to undo himself for ever had not God's Mercy triumphed over his Justice James 2.13 Remark the Fourth The Epilogue of Jonah's pitiful peevish Prayer ver 3. Take my Soul out of my Body Hebr. Kack na eth naphshi mimeni whence Grotius gathers this good Argument plainly proving from hence that the Soul is a distinct Substance from the Body and perishes not with it 'T is better for me to Dye saith he than to Live namely in Disgrace of being a false Prophet never more to be believed Jerome doth excuse Jonah herein As if he were more Zealous for God's Glory and the Weal of the Jews whom he conceived would be Damag'd by the Conversion of the Gentiles than for his own personal Reputation But others do better observe that this preposterous Prayer was a zeal without Knowledge and that he added one Sin to another therein For 1. He puts a Fallacy upon God call'd non causa pro causâ alledging that God's being too merciful was the cause of his former flight from his Message
Zach. 1.15 sends the Maul of the whole Earth Jer 50.23 the Chaldeans to break Nineveh and the Assyrian Empire in pieces as the great Hammer breaks the bardest Stones N.B. Thus Cities Countreys Kingdoms and Empires have their Times and their Turns their Rise Reign and Ruine All this here was done by the great God and ought not to be ascribed to Blind Fate or Fortune or any Necessity of Nature as Pagan Politicians do dotingly Dream c. Remark the Sixth The Divine Decree for Nineveh's Destruction was inevitable it could neither be averted nor avoided the Assyrians were altogether unable to save themselves either in City or Countrey with all that Power whereby they had conquer'd all Nations Mark 1. This old great and strong City because Bloody c. was run down by an over-running Flood Chap. 1.8 as effectually and universally as the old wicked World was by the General Deluge for the stoutest of their Champions stumbled Chap. 2.5 and none of their men of Might could find their Hands as Psalm 76.5 6. because God struck them with a Terrour upon the first coming of the Chaldees So that when Asa●haddon call'd Sardanapalus by Pagan Writers King of Nineveh commanded his Captains now or never to play the Men seeing the Empire was at Stake N.B. Yet so fearful and faint-hearted were they as to flee away without looking back Chap. 2.8 Their Hearts sank into their Heels and they had more Mind to save themselves by a Cowardly Flight than by a Couragious Fight Yea their Martial Men in the midst of the City where they should shew their Valour most as Cocks on their own Dunghil became Crest-faln and weak as Women Chap. 3.13 Mark 2. The Execution of the Divine Decree 1. In cutting off the King and all the Royal Race Chap. 1.14 his Posterity perished which cannot but be grievous to proud Princes and Persons who Promise themselves a kind of Immortality by their Posterity on Earth Psalm 49.11 2. In Captivating the Queen Chap. 2.7 Huzzah with her Straglio of Women or Maids of Honour fall into the Hands of rude Soldiers who hurried them away into a far Countrey sore against their Wills which made them go Moaning and Groaning all along for the greatness of their Griefs 3. In that Plenty of Plunder both Gold Silver and pleasant Furniture the Chaldeans took in the City when God gave them the Word of Command to fall on Chap. 2.9 10. where we have a most elegant Agnomination Bukah Vmbukah Vmbyllakah Hebr. far above the reach of our English Translation for elegancy rendring it only empty and void and wast for the Destruction of it 4. In the slaughter of all sorts of Persons Princes and Peasants Gentle and Simple Chap. 3.3 The heaviness of Dead Carkases Hebr. intimates they lay so Thick that the Earth seemed to groan under the heavy burden of them Mark 3. The Event and upshot of this Execution The nakedness of Nineveh God shewed to all Nations Chap. 3.5 6 7. So that all Spectators abhorr'd her and cast their scorn and contempt upon her yea cast abominable filth as Piss-pots Rotten-eggs and Dirt is cast upon carted Whores so that she stank above ground like loathsome Carrion The same dismal Fate that befel populous No now call'd Alexandria or Scanderoon shall befal thee Nineveh saith Nahum Chap. 3.8 9 10 11 12. all that look upon thee shall loath thee and all that have been oppress'd by thee shall insult over thee and rejoice at thy Ruine ver 19. they shall take up this Taunting Proverb against thee saying How is the Golden City ceased c. Isa 14.4 5 6 7. which most men look'd upon as impossible and never look'd to have seen such a Day but her wickedness was the cause of all this wretchedness God make it a warning to all great Cities c. THE fifth and sixth Prophets saith Dr. Lightfoot were both Joel and Obadiah that Prophesy'd at the same time the former against Jacob and the latter against Esau Thus God raised up a Generation of Prophets far more than in former Ages at one time and those continued in a Succession until the Captivity leaving their Prophecies in Writing behind them that nothing might be wanting on God's part to prevent their ruine The Second Part of 2 Kings Chapter 15th concerns Jotham the Son of Vzziah ver 32 to ver 38. whose History takes up the whole twenty seventh Chapter of the second of Chronicles Remark First Concerning Jotham he like a right-dutiful Son did not thrust out his Father from his Title to the Throne but ruled all under Vzziah while he lived a Leper as a Deputy only and as a Substitute under him This humble dutifulness of the Son was doubtless some Comfort to the Disconsolate and Diseased Father Vzziah Reigned still to make up his Reign of fifty two Years though he was a Leper his Leprosie in the Forehead where it was most conspicuous did not wholly remove his Crown from his Head So as hath been noted before N.B. If once we be of the Royal Generation 1 Pet. 2.9 Our Leprosies of Sin may Deform us but they shall not Dethrone us we are kept in Christ Jude v. 1. by the Power of God to Salvation 1 Pet. 1.5 Remark the Second This King Jotham did that which was Right in the sight of God 2 Kings 15.34 and 2 Chron. 27.2 that is both for Matter Manner Motive and End For nothing is Recorded of him that renders him so much as any suspected Hypocrite much less an open Apostate as Joash Amaziah and Vzziah stand branded upon Scripture Record Josephus accounts this Jotham a Just Pious and a publick-spirited Prince and one that wanted no Vertue and Lavater saith the same Probè piè Regnavit some suppose his Mother promoted his Piety being the Daughter of Zadok a Godly Priest v. 33.2 King 15. N.B. For in those times as Priests married Kings Daughters 2 Chron. 22.11 So Kings might marry Priests Daughters which was more blest than the Daughters of Forreigners as is done by Princes in our Days c. Remark the Third Though it be said of him He did according to all that his Father Vzziah had done ver 34. yet this is restrained in 2 Chron. 27.2 saith Piscator only to that which his Father did right for ver 2. excepts the incroaching of the Priests-Office by his Father the Son durst not enter into the Temple for any such end though no doubt He entred daily thither to serve God N.B. And therefore the Hebrews say he was without blame not having his Name for nought seeing Jotham in Hebrew signifies perfect Remark the Fourth He is commended for his good endeavours for while the People doated upon the High-Places which Practices he disliked he built the Highest Gate of God's Temple ver 35. and 2 Chron. 27.3 the Eastern Porch saith Vatablus call'd the New Gate Jer. 26.10 and 36.10 sixty Cubits high saith Sir Walter Rawleigh and therefore call'd Ophel for
ver 3 4. for Mordecai upon their asking him the Cause of his Obstinacy as they call'd it was not asham'd or afraid to shew them both his Countrey and his Conscience that no Jew might do as they did because God had forbidden to give Divine Honour to any but to himself Deut. 6.13 Matth. 4.10 and had commanded to blot out the remembrance of Amalek Exod. 17.14 Deut. 25.19 1 Sam. 15.3 of whom Haman descended Remark the Third The Material Cause of Haman's Coonspiracy was the cutting off the whole Nation of the Jews as one Man for the sake of that one Jew Obstinate Mordecai ver 5 6. upon a certain lucky Day which he sought out by casting Lots to find it ver 7. Mark 1. Those Pestilent Pick-thanks that had reason'd the Case with Mordecai and could not reclaim him from his Non-conformity carry their Complaints to Haman that they might curry favour with the King 's greatest Favourite and incense him to ruine Mordecai Mark 2. Hereupon Haman swells like a Toad glows like an Hell-Hagg blustering out those Words Shall this Slave think himself too good to Bow when all the Free-men of Persia think it not below them to adore me c. saith Josephus And his Rage was so inflamed that he thought it a thing below him and too little for his revenge to vent it all upon one Man Mordecai but he will spend it on his whole Nation Mark 3. Yet Haman wants an Happy or Lucky Time or Day wherein to execute his most mischievous and bloody Design Hereupon he useth Diabolical Divination or Sorrilegy which was Sorcery Maiom Leiom Vmekodesh Lekodesh Hebr. casting Lots into the Lap saith Menochius Prov. 16.33 or into a Pitcher according to the Ancient Customs of those Eastern Countreys in their Divinations putting into a Pitcher Papers with Names of every Month and of every Day in the Month then one blindfolded puts in his Hand and pull'd out one Paper and according to the Marks set down amongst them all from the first Month to the twelfth and from Day to Day in each Month that Month and Day the Paper he pull'd out had writ within its Roll they look'd upon it as their Lucky Time or Day ver 7. Mark 4. The marvelous Providence of God for the good of his Church in a double Respect first This damnable Design of an effectual and universal Extirpation of the whole Jewish Nation was so far over-ruled that it shall not be undertaken until the twelfth Year of this Artaxerxes Ahasuerus at which time Esther had been his Queen about five Years and who being so greatly beloved by him was in a better Capacity to interpose and interceed for her People Thus God made a Remedy ready before the Malady brake forth And secondly Though Haman's Malice was so implacable and unwearied as to trouble himself so long in seeking out a lucky Day for revenge yet herein God over-shot the Devil in his own Bow disposing of this Diabolical Lottery so Prov. 16.33 as to defer Haman's supposed lucky Day from that March unto February following whereby it came to pass that his Devilish Design was defeated before that time came wherein to accomplish it Chap. 9.1 c. Remark the Fourth The formal Cause namely the Means and Arguments wherewith Haman perswaded the King into a grant of his Royal Authority for executing his bloody purpose upon the Jews after he had found out his supposed lucky Time for the accomplishment of it ver 8 9. Mark 1. Haman Caresseth the King saying There is a certain People not worth hanghty Haman's naming scattered abroad this was not their Crime but their Calamity Deut. 32.23 26. but he meant saith Menochius they were a malevelent People so might be more mischievous being dispersed in all the Provinces of thy Kingdom therefore the more dangerous for infecting the King's Liege-People and for sowing Seeds of Sedition c. whereas indeed saith Bonartius this dispersion did disenable them to make Head against an Adversary and expos'd them to be destroy'd with more ease and their Laws divers from all People so indeed they were and better Laws Deut. 4.6 7 8. Neh. 9.13 here Haman spake Truth as that old Lyar the Devil will do sometimes but for a Devilish End to deceive the King with Sycophant Sophistry Mark 2. Nor do they keep the King's Laws wherein saith Piscator Haman reflects upon Mordecai's not bowing to him at the King's Command and He being a Jew all the Jews must be Criminals accordingly could they but find occasion c. thus this Breathing Devil represents all the Jews as Refractaries and Rebels c. being an Impudent Lyar even while he speaks Truth for though it was true they kept not the King's Laws in sacred Matters which therein they could not do it being contrary to their Consciences and they must obey God rather than Man as before Yet kept they the King's Laws in Civil Cases promoting the Peace of such Places where they lived as bidden so to do Jer. 29.7 Mark 3. This cursed Courtier comes to draw his Conclusion out of all his plausible Premises in which Syllogism call'd Sorites he fills his Mouth with most cogent Arguments every Word in it seeming to have weight and worth therefore it is not for the King's Profit to permit them thus while he pretends only the King 's and Kingdom 's Profit lest Sedition should be excited by the Jews saith Bonartius he solely intends the satiating his own Private Rage which he conceals Mark 4. Haman Harangues the King at the close with fine smooth silken Words Im gnal Hammelek Tob Heb. ver 9. If it seem good to the King c. thus while he spake so fair the sooner to insinuate He had seven Abominations in his Heart so should not have been believed saith Solomon Prov. 26.25 Haman adds Let an irrevocable Decree pass to destroy them all root and branch N.B. This wicked Haman was one of those wretched Adversaries who stand upon Record for saying Come let us cut them off from being a Nation that their Name be no more remembred Psalm 83.4 Mark 5. Lastly to prevent a Tacit Objection that the Destruction of the Jews who paid prodigious Tribute as Captives into the Royal Treasury would prove a vast Damage and Detriment to the Kingdom Haman Answers he will purchase their Extirpation with ten thousand Talents of Silver which was a vast summ computed to be three thousand seven hundred and fifty thousand Pounds Sterling If any ask where should Haman have so much Money Tirinus Answers he might Promise to reimburse himself out of his Prey of the Slain Jews ver 13. beside being of the Seed Royal of Amalek of Agag whom Samuel hew'd in pieces saith Dr. Lightfoot he might have much Money left him by his Ancestors and now being promoted to the highest Honours in the Kingdom and having doubtless many Places of Profit concentr'd in that one highest Figure so might he lay up Gold us
setteth c. Concerning John Baptist we have these Remarks Recorded c. The First Remark is That He was as Chrysologus calls Him Legis Evangelii fibula the Buckle or Button that bound the Law and the Gospel together the bond of both Testaments He is resembled to that Angel with one Foot on the Sea the Law which is rough and moveable and with the other Foot on the Land the Gospel which is smooth firm and stable c. Rev. 10.2 Christ himself calls him more than a Prophet Mat. 11.9 because he pointed out Christ with the Finger whereas the foregoing Prophets only saluted him afar off Heb. 11.13 He was beyond all born of Women both in Dignity and Doctrine above all the Prophets as nearer to Christ and his immediate Forerunner yet behind and below the Apostles as not being an Eye-witness of Christ's Sufferings Death● Burial Resurrection and Ascension as they and the Evangelist were He by his Divine Doctrine and Aust●re Life had merited among many to be taken for the Messiah Joh 2.19 20 but he durst not assume that Honour to himself ver 21 23. The Second Remark is This John Baptist was at first exceedinly admired by the Jews as a burning and shining Light among them Joh. 5.35 burning in himself and shining to others Hereupon a prodigious Resort was made unto him even all Judae● as well as Jerusalem and all the Regions round about Mat. 3.5 6. but they soon grew weary and fall off Rejoycing in him only for a Season for the which they were justly raxed by our Saviour Mat. 11.7 He also soon grew stale to them as they soon grew weary of him so that they made no more reckoning of Him than of a Reed sh●ken with the Wind a worthless poizeless priceless Person one of no worth a thing of nothing Then they shamefully slighted him as after the Galathians did St. Paul for whom once they could have pull'd out their own Eyes but afterwards they would have pull●d our his Eyes could they have come at him Gal. 4.14 15 16 And as it is now the fate of Godly Ministers to whom Peoples fickle Affections too soon flag and fall neutrum modô Mas modò Vulgus Vulgar Men are variable in their Minds as soon in and as soon out not pleas'd full nor fasting Austere John hath a Devil and a Sociable Saviour is a Wine bibber no Preacher can please Froward Hearts The Third Remark is so soon as John Baptists Work was done He had a Writ of Ease sent him He is then cast into Prison The last account we have of the Baptist is his baptizing at Aenon near Sal●m Joh. 3.23 that was before he was cast into Prison ver 24. We hear no more of him by any of the Four Evangelists till the story of his Imprisonment which Luke records with the occasion of it Luk. 3.19 20. who tells us ver 1. that Herod was Tetrarch of Galilee as Pilate was of Judaea and Aenon stood in Galilee the Baptist's then last place of Residency And it appears that the Baptist preached to Herod who heard him gladly and did many things being unable to ward off the Power of the Word which came so close upon him Mark 6.20 and that John told this Tetrarch of his faults with as much freedom as he committed them especially in telling him It was not lawful for him to have his Brothers Wife Herodias had a quarrel against John for being so sawcy with her pretended Husband Herod touch the Mountains and they smoak yet Herod remembred John Mark 6.19 20. True Sanctity shines with such Majesty as sometimes strikes an awe upon its Adversaries Consciences as here in Herod but his Carnal Concupiscence did overpower his Superficial Reverence therefore the Evangelist Luke doth characterize him to purpose saying He added yet this above all to all his other Evils that he shut up John in Prison Luk. 3.19 20. This Sin was his Top Sin wherewith he fill'd up his measure a sad Document to Persecutors There is no stint in acts of sin but as one Wedge makes way for another so here Herod ●dded still and this sin filled up his Ephah then no Remedy 2 Chron. 36.16 Mat. 23.31 32. The Fourth Remark is Herod having thus wickedly gratified his wanton Minion Herodias in confining the Reproving Baptist she being highly displeased with him for his disturbing her in her lewd Dalliance by his Reproof waits a fit occasion for a full Revenge but could not find it because Herod feared John c. till he had lain in Prison about 18 Months which was the just number of Months God allowed him for his Publick Service at liberty and then laid him aside when his Work was done as he doth and will do us in this day Till then Divine Bounds are put upon Humane Persecutors beyond which no Powers can pass Job 38.11 The Fifth Remark is Jesus hearing of John 's Imprisonment steps into Galilee Mat. 4.12 The true cause of John's confinement was Herod's not complying with John's Doctrine about his Herodias as the Pharisees Sadduces Publicans Soldiers and the rest of the People had done Mat. 4.7 Luk. 3.10 11 12 13 14. Though fear of Sedition was pretended because of the Great Multitudes that followed and admired him This hath ever been an ordinary accusation cast upon the most quiet and innocent to be Seedsmen of Sedition and Troublers of Church and State as upon Elijah Jeremy c. Thus Paul was called a Pest Act. 24.5 and Luther Tuba Rebelltonis the Trumpet of Rebellion c. These old Rusty Tools the Devil draws forth furbisheth them as the Broker doth Old Clohes c. Tertullian calls Satan Interpolator Creaturae a Broker or brusher up of Old Clothets c. for doing Mischief this Day The Sixth Remark is Christ's Departure into Galilee upon John's Confinement was not so much his slipping aside for his own safety but rather to be a supply and Successor to John who was taken a Prisoner at Aenon in Galilee which was under Herod's Government Still God takes care of these two Tribes Zebulon and Napthali which had long laid in darkness Now the Devil in Herod blowing out one Shining Light John as to usefulness God sends them a Jesus God will not starve his Work for want of Witnesses The Seventh Remark is It was during this many Months Imprisonment that John sends his Message from Machaerus Castle to Christ Mat. 11 from 2 to 20. and Luk. 7. from 18. to 36. not for his own sake but for the satisfaction and settlement of his Disciples who possibly expected that Jesus among all his other Miracles might add this one of Miraculously Releasing their Master out of Herod 's Hands seeing he was a Prisoner for Christ and the Gospel But they meet with this Answer to that point yet fully to all the Rest that his Work was to preach the Gospel to set Prisoners free from Hell not from Herod that his Kingdom consisted not of
Receive for himself a Kingdom c. But this was not all for himself telleth us his Errand was also to prepare a Kingdom for his Redeemed John 14.2 3 c. Our Lords Errand into that far Country of Heaven was Manifold as 1. To open a passage for us into Paradise out of which Adam had Excluded himself and all us in him the Gate whereof hath been ever since Guarded by Cherubims with a Flaming Sword Gen. 3.24 But now hath he opened this Gate saying to the Penitent Thief this Day shalt thou be with me in Paradise Luke 23.43 Thus we read also when Christ gave up the Ghost the Vail of the Temple which separated the Holy from the most Holy Rent in Twain from Top to Bottom Mat. 27.51 Hereupon Christ by his Ascension is said to open a way into the most Holy place Hebr. 9 8. and 13.19 20. and 12 24. 2. To prepare a place even a Mansion of Glory for all his Members as before John 14.2 3. He went not into Heaven suo Nomine in his own Name only but in our Names also as our Father Isa 9.6 Our Lord and Master Mal. 1.6 yea our King ver 14. Now Children may follow their Fathers freely where he takes up his Lodging and Servants their Lord yea and Subjects their Soveraign Heb. 2.10 11 12. This Consideration of so near a Relation affords us not only a faint Hope but also the Riches of Assurance Col. 2.2 As he hath taken our Nature and Flesh along with him as a Pawn and Earnest of our Reception into his Glory John 17.4 Ephes 2.6 3. To send the Comforter to us John 16.7 while Christ was present with his Disples he was one Comforter to them John 14.1 but the Holy Spirit which he sent after his Departure from them was another Comforter to them John 14.16 whose work it is to remind us of his precious promises John 14.26 To help our Infirmities with Spiritual Breathings in Prayer and Mediation Rom. 8.26 and to apply all the Blessed Benefits of his Merits and Mediation by a strong Faith as a Soveraign Plaister to our Sin-sick Souls Hab. 2.4 4. To make an Attonement for us by his Intercession Hebr. 9.24 as the High Priest did for Israel Levit. 26.2.21 34 In him our Persons are Accepted Ephes 1.6 and by him our Prayers are first perfumed Revel 8.3 Then presented acceptable to God Isa 60.7 None of the People under the Law might offer his own Sacrifice but the Priest must both bring it and burn it before the Lord 'T is the work of our Mediatour both to Hallow our Prayers with his Incense as Luke 1.9 And to help them up and hand them into Heaven otherwise they are as Arrows shot short of the Mark c. as Lam. 3.44 5. To answer all Satans Accusations against us as he accused Job to God yet without cause Job 1.6 9. and 2 3. So he accuseth us who give him much cause to do so by our Manifold sins yet have we Christ our Advocate to Non-suit all his Accusations 1 John 2.1 Whose Blood speaketh better things than the Blood of Abel Hebr. 12.24 Though this Accuser of the Brethren as he is called Revel 12.10 be a most Subtle Sophister and can from his almost 6000. years experience plead cunningly enough yea and not without cause yet our Advocate is not ashamed to own us Hebr. 2.11 But he Answereth this Envious Accuser I have Dyed for them they shall not Dye c. How ought we to Admire and Adore this our Advocate though Satan be a Non-such Plaintiff seeing common Plaintiffs have their Term and their Vacation and sometimes a long Vacation but Satan observeth no Vacation 't is alway Term-time with him both for Tempting us to sin and then impeaching us for sin just as the young Man taxed Joab 2 Sam. 18.11 12 13. This Restless Devil never Resteth Night nor Day Yet have we a None such Advocate against this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Adversary who taketh no Fees as ordinary Advocates do but pleads our Cause both freely and continually and whom the Father both hath heard doth hear and will hear always John 11.41 42. As this our Advocates Prayer for us doth give both Value and Vertue to our Prayers c. So it effectually disappoints Satan both of his Temptations to sin and of his Accusations for sin Luke 22.31 32. 6. Another Errand of this Traveller was to lead Captivity Captive Ps 68.18 Eph. 4.8 Namely Satan Sin and Death for before our Lords Ascension Satan had the power of Death through sin Hebr. 2.14 The Field was fought betwixt our Advocate and our Adversary upon the Cross upon which Christ Spoiled the Devil Col. 2.14 Takes him Prisoner and leads him away Captive as his Conqueror This is an Allusion to Conquering Kings who having Conquered their Enemies in the Field do take some of the Conquered Captive and having made them Tributary to his Reign he leads away his Captives in Triumph then goes he to his Pallace to rest himself and to Rule his Kingdom in Peace this our Lord doth when he maketh all his Foes to become his Foot-stool Ps 110.1 5 7. Hebr. 10.12 13 14. 7. He Ascended up on High to oversee all his Sheep that are scattered abroad over all parts of the World both Jews and Gentiles he is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Great Shepherd of the Sheep Hebr. 13.20 The grand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Overseer of Europe Asia Africa and America his Eyes run to and fro throughout the whole Earth to shew himself strong in the behalf of them whose Hearts are upright towards him 2 Chron 16.9 while Christ was in his State of Humiliation he had but a few Disciples to be his followers and so he could easily oversee them while he remained upon the Earth but since that time he hath broken down the Partition-Wall and hath most Miraculously inlarged his Tents among the Gentiles Insomuch that a very great part of the Posterity of Japhet he hath perswaded to dwell in the Tents of Shem as was Prophesied and promised Gen. 9.27 Christ Riding upon the White Horse of the Gospel hath so gone forth Conquering and to Conquer Revel 6.2 As that now it may be said Who can tell his Generation Isa 53.8 He hath now divided the Spoil with the strong ver 12. That is with the strong Turk strong Pope and strong Devil as that he hath not only an Hundred forty four Thousand Sealed ones among the Jews Revel 7.4 But he hath a Numberless Number also among the Gentiles ver 9. Upon this account our Lord saith it was expedient that he should go away John 6.7 And Travel up to Heaven for his having to speak after the manner of Men a more convenient Prospect upon all his Redeemed in all places he saith I am the good Shepherd and know my Sheep c. John 10 14. Yea though they be Scattered upon a Thousand Hills yet are
Enquiry the First how shall the Servants have Rewards Rendred to them Answer This Lord-Judge will then Render to every Man according to his Works Rom. 2.6 to Well-doers Eternal Life ver 7 10. But to Evil-doers Eternal Death ver 8 9. And this Judgment of Christ shall be according to Truth ver 2. For the Right understanding of this Scripture take these three Cautions Caution the 1. This must not be meant of Children who dye while young and live not to work good or evil c. Some of which are Saved by the Eternal purpose of Electing-love and by the Grace of the Covenant of Grace which saith I will be thy God and the God of thy Seed Gen. 17.7 Deut. 30.6 Isa 61.9 65.23 Rom. 4.16 9.8 c. Whereas other Children are out of the unaccountable Wisdom of God passed by and left of God as Children of Wrath in the fallen Nature c. Oh! The Depth c. Rom. 11.33 34 35. That the Election obtains and the rest do not ver 2.5 7 8. The 2. Caution is This Rewarding every one according to their Works must not be meant of such as are called at the Eleventh Hour of the Day Matth. 20.6 9. as was the Penitent Thief Luke 23. ver 40 41 42 43. He had lived wickedly all his Life yet now at the point of Death he was Converted by hearing Christs pretious Prayers and by seeing his profound patience c. Then he brake out into that brave Confession worthy to be writ in Letters of Gold his Real Repentance Received from his Gracious Redeemer a full Remission of all his former sins Ingressa pietas priorem Impietatem Depulit saith the Father his now begun Piety drove away all his former Impiety that little time he lived after his Conversion he spent it in expressing his Faith by his Works and so he is said to live very much in a very little space had he lived longer he would have done no less but have lived better c. his Penitent Prayer which he made upon his Cross was as Jacobs Ladder whereon Angels Descended to fetch up his Soul into Paradise his Judge Jesus Judged him by the State he Dyed in and not by the State he had formerly lived in c. The 3. Caution is That Expression Rom. 2.6 is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Juxta non propter according and not for their Deeds and so 't is said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To give every Man according as his Work shall be Revel 22.12 Both which Scriptures do signifie the Quality Quantity or Measure rather than the Merit of Works which is but a Popish Delusion upon these Accounts in short 1. There is no proportion betwixt Mans Work and Gods Wages 2. What we Merit by must be our own but our good Works are from God Isa 26.12 Not from our selves so cannot Merit at Gods Hands 3. Our good works are but a due Debt to our Maker so cannot Merit any thing 4. when we have done our best works we are still but unprofitable Servants Luke 17.10.5 Good works are the Via non causa Regnandi saith Bernard they are the way in Christ John 14.6 to walk in unto glory not the procuring cause of Glory c. The 2. Enquiry is How will the Lord Reckon with and Reward the Godly Answer This is certain that the Saints shall Rise first 1 Thess 4.16 when Christ appears the Saints shall appear with him in Glory Col. 3.4 and shall Reckon with their Lord as they are the Blessed Sheep Set upon the Right Hand of Christ Mat. 25.33 34 c. From whence some Divines do say that the Sins of the Saints it a Velantur per Grattam Domini ut non Revelentur in Judicio are so valled by the grace of Christs Righteousness as not to be Revealed in the Day of Judgment and their Reasons be these 1. That Exemplification of the Judgment Day 's process Mat. 25.35 36. The Judge mentions only their good Deeds not as a cause but only as an Evidence of their Acceptance c. which they in all Humility seem ignorant of in Admiting Christs Candour and Kindness to them c. ver 37 38 39 but there is not one word mentioned of any Evil Deeds c. 2. Our Lord expresly saith that Believers have Eternal Life and shall not come into Condemnation John 5.24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall not come into Judgment as the word signifies not as the Rabbi's fondly fancy saying there be four sorts that shall not come into Judgment 1. He that is extream poor 2. He that hath a wicked Wife 3. He that is so deep in Debt as cannot possibly Extricate himself and 4 He that is Tormented with the Torture of the Collick as if all those had Hell here in this Life c. These Jewish Fables are Recorded by De Dieu c. but the true Sense is that Believers shall not come into that Judgment which endeth in Condemnation for 't is said There is no Condemnation to them that are in Christ c. Rom. 8.1 where the Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and signifies more than 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before 3. That Maxim in Divinity is alledged peecata non Redeunt Justificatis Sins return not to the Justified for that Blessed Scapegoat the Redeeming Angel Gen. 48.16 carries away upon his Head all the sins of his Redeemed into the Land of Forgetfullness as some Sense it Levit. 16.21 Christ so blotteth out the black lines of their many sins with the red lines of his Meritorious Blood that even the thickest Clouds of their Iniquities shall be remembred no more Isa 23.25 and 24.22 and Hebr. 10 16 17. Moreover it is alledged 4. What Hezekiah affirmeth to Gods glory thou hast cast all my Sins behind thy back Isa 38.17 So as they shall never appear before thy face any more 5. David's Assertion is urged God hath Removed our Sins so far from us as far as the East is from the West Ps 103.13 which two contrary quarters can never meet together again 6. The Prophet pleads Gods promise thou wilt cast all our Sins into the Depth of the Sea Mic. 7.18 19. That is so as they may never be Buoyed up again out of thy bottomless Bowels c. 7. 'T is said likewise that the Lord is too gracious to shame his Saints by laying open their sins in the sight of a wicked World God himself saith thou shalt not bear a grudge against the Children of thy People Levit. 19.18 't is the glory of Man to pass by Infirmities Prov. 19.11 How much more is it the glory of a gracious God to do so c. If Mans love can cover all sins Prov. 10.12 much more can Gods love c. God multiplies Pardons Isa 55.7 even above 77. times Matth 18.22 And upon Real Repentance our Sins are all so fully remitted by him as if they had never been committed
had they not pressed him to it beyond his Pagan Power yet doing it with great Reluctancy however our Lord was thus Intitled by his Hand which was guided by the great God and whose Head and Heart were so confirmed in it that though he understood it not yet would not Retract it with all the Priests pressing him to the contrary He was unchangably Resolved that what he had writ should stand How much more the Writings of him whose Name is I am that I am Exod. 3.14 and the same yesterday to day and for ever Hebr. 13.8 N. B. Note well We may learn from this Pagan to be constant to a good Cause and in a good Course and not be changlings But we must raise our Minds higher and look beyond Pilate at the Counsel of God who would have Christ proclaimed his Churches King by this Publick Testimony in Pilate's Inscription and that it might be made manifest to the World that Jesus was Innocent and that he was Executed for the same Truth for which he was before Condemned by the Sanhedrim of the Chief Priests and therefore was the Title writ in Hebrew Greek and Latin the best known Tongues then every where that this venerable Elogy might be read and understood of all and that Christ's Innocency might appear unto all not only intimating that he was King of that Religion among the Hebrews of that Wisdom among the Greeks and of that Power among the Latines or Romans for which three things those three People were then Famous The Jews glory'd in their Law and the Greeks in their Wisdom and the Romans in ●heir Power and Dominion but also as presaging the Future Vocation of not only the Hebrews but of the Greeks and Latines too to the Kingdom of Christ N. B. Note well to which may be added that hereby the Holy Ghost hath commended to us the Dignity and Study of these three Learned Languages Hebrew Greek and Latin which are to be Retained for ever in the Church of Christ and seeing Christ hath Sanctified those three Tongues upon his Cross by this Inscription 't is but a Brutish Notion to call them the Languages of the Beast N. B. Note well Moreover this may reprove the Sacrilegious Tyranny of the Romanists who render themselves worse than Pilate in not only forbidding that the Sacred Scriptures should be Translated into the Mother-Tongue of each Land but also Restraining the People from Reading them in Hebrew Greek or Latin yea or in their own Native Language whereas Pilate as God's publick Herald will have Christ Read and acknowledged to be King in any Language both Forraign and Domestick 'T is pitty a poor Pagan should exceed and excell those Papagans who profess to Adore Ch●ist The 4. Branch of the Introduction is their Crucifying two Thieves the one on the Right and the other on the Left Hand of Christ Matth. 27.38 Mar. 15.26 27. Luke 23.33 Joh. 19.18 placing Christ in the midst not so much that he might have Companions in Misery for Solamen Miseris socios adhibere Doloris 't is some Comfort to those in Misery to have Companions in it As it was designed by those Priests to Palliate their wickedness that the People might look upon Christ Crucified in the midst as the worst and as the Prince of Malefactors and the greatest of those three had they Crucified Christ alone he would at least have seemed a better Man than any Thief But Mark the Evangelist lifts us up to look beyond this politick design of the Priests at the profound Counsel of God who directed this Deed that the Prophet's Oracle might be Accomplished saying He was Reckoned to wit by those Priests among Transgressors Isa 53.12 and not only among them but as Chief of them Thus he became the greatest of Sinners both by Imputation as he bare the sins of many ver 6.12 and by Reputation as he was Reckoned among Thieves Robbers Throat-Cutters and Traitors yea in the midst as exceeding the worst of them N. B. Note well As this may teach us how vastly prodigious was the wrath of God against Man's sins for the Expiation of which our Surety the Son of God must be cast into the Catalogue of Notorious Malefactors So no less holds it forth the most Immense Love of our Lord Jesus to us who can submit to be a Companion of Miscreants to make us fit Associates with Holy Angels Zach. 3.7 both Here and in Heaven c. but of these Thieves more afterward is discoursed c. CHAP. XXXII Of Christ's Crucifying NOW come we after those five Introductions to Discourse upon the Passion and Death of Christ Crucified upon the Cross wherein many most Eminent Remarks are comprehended in the Bowels of that one Act of Crucifying Christ As Moses turn'd aside to behold that great wonder of the Bush burning yet not consumed Exod. 3.3 So let us turn aside here to see this great Sight to behold the grand Sin-offering burnt without the Gate yet not consumed to Corruption Levit. 9.11 16 27. Hebr. 13.12 Psal 16.10 11. Acts 13.35 36 37. and to behold the High-Priest himself of our profession Hebr. 3.1 As the great Sacrifice for the whole World was now laid upon the High Altar his Cross and there was Rosted with the Hot Fire of the Wrath of God and of Men and of Devils Behold the Son of God Bleeding Mocked Tortured Dying and Reconciling God and Man and Marrying Justice and Mercy together c. Psal 85.10 The First Remark is Behold the Man He must Die the worst of Deaths for us so Angry was God with Man for Eating the Forbidden Fruit of Sin that he spareth not his own Son when he became a Surety for Sinners He shall die saith Saul though the Lot fall upon my Son Jonathan 1 Sam. 14.39 We Read of Zaleucus's Law that the sin of Adultery should be punished with the loss of two Eyes his own Son was found faulty herein Zaleucus put out one of his Sons Eyes as he was a Just Judge but that he might save his Sons other Eye and not make him quite blind he to satisfie the Justice of his own Law is content to put out one of his own as a Compassionate Father This Resemblance falls far short of the matter Resembled Yet thus far they do Symbolize in an Apt Parallel Congruity The Creator gave this Law to the Creature If thou Eat the forbidden Fruit thou shalt surely dye Gen. 2.17 Man Transgresseth that Law of God even Adam call'd the Son of God Luke 3.38 Now that Justice might be satisfied Man the sinner loseth one Eye only to wit his Paradise-Happiness c. and God the Father of Adam is content to give his Son who was as Dear to him as his Right Eye out of his Bosom to make full Satisfaction for the Breach of that Law N. B. Note well Sinfull Man may say here is both a Just Judge to the Law and yet a Compassionate Father to me
Blasphemy on them as they falsly fastened it on him saying Your Fathers persecuted those that Prophesied of Christ as you do me for Preaching him nay you go beyond your Fathers steps for you have kill'd Christ himself but they kill'd only his Prophets beside you are more for Ceremonies given by Moses than for the Moral Law given by God himself 3dly He tells them of sinning against the Spirit all this inraged them they immediately condemn and execute him having no better Reply to make c. The fourth white of Mercy was the Beatifical Vision vouchsafed to this first Martyr of the Gospel as Abel was of the Law to support him in the midst of all his Enemie's Fury and his own Anguish He both saw and said he saw his Lord standing up to behold his Servants carriage and courage to count every Stone cast at him and to judge and avenge himself of his Judges and Executioners so cannot be conquered c. The fifth white of Mercy was Stephen having seen his Exalted Jesus thro' a shower of Stones kneels down upon his knees in the midst of his Martyrdom and prays as before that this Jesus whom he saw standing might receive his Soul when his Body was Ruin'd imitating his Lord herein Luke 23.46 So after that his Martyrers might be pardoned He prayed for himself standing but when for his Foes he kneeled This had a singular Efficacy for Paul's Conversion 1 Tim. 1.16 c. Then died he quietly as one fallen asleep being assured of his Resurrection See Acts 7. per totum The sixth is The Church not afraid of these mad Murtherers solemnly buried him Acts 8.2 Bewailing their great loss they own him though executed for a Blasphemer c. CHAP. VII The Fourth Persecution of this First Church NOW come we to the Fourth Persecution raised against this first Gospel-Church which had hitherto continued in the Apostle's Doctrine and Fellowship and in Breaking of Bread and Prayer Acts 2.42 and was highly commended with that honourable Character of having great Grace upon them all both Apostles and Auditors both the Pastors and the People Acts 4.33 An account of this Persecution is given in Acts 8.1 3 4. where there is a Relation only of two grand Remarks 1. Of the Efficient or Instrument of this Persecution to wit the bloody Wolf Saul And 2. The Effect of it to wit the almost Universal Scattering of the Body of that most purely and most powerfully Constituted Church at Jerusalem N.B. But not one word have we here of any peccatum flagrans or flaming sin whereby God was provoked to let loose the Devil's Ban-Dogs among Christ's Flock to scatter them We read concerning God's Church in the Wilderness so call'd Acts 7.38 that while she kept pure from the Iniquity of Baal-peor God saw no sin in her and as the mad Prophet Balaam subtilly said none of that Devil's Spelman's Inchantments could prevail against her Numb 23.21 23. therefore gave he that pestilent Advice to Midian and Moah to entice Israel with their Daughters both to Adultery and Idolatry c. Numb 25.3 Hos 9.10 Micah 6.5 N.B. This Satanical Consult succeeded produced that foul-flaming sin in God's Eye which stunk in God's Nostrils and whereby they were put under Divine displeasure 2 Pet. 2.15 Jude 11. Rev. 2.14 but no such foul God provoking sin is found Recorded concerning this Primitive Gospel-Church for which such a plaguy dispersing Persecution did here so foully fall upon it which may teach us N.B. That sometimes the great God out of his meer Soveraignty over his Servants may let loose Persecution and sore Affliction upon them and in so doing he is not bound to give an account of his Reasons why he does so to the Sons or Daughters of Men Job 33.13 c. Thus God dealt with his None-such Servant Job his prodigious and None-such Sufferings we do not find were inflicted upon him for punishing any gross flaming foul sin that was found in him but meerly for the exercise of his great Grace of Patience and for evidencing his Sincerity which Satan said he wanted c. Nor do we find any provoking sin in this Church which was the procuring cause of this Persecution c. yet may we not say that our heavenly Father doth as earthly Fathers are said to chastize their Children for their own pleasure no but he always corrects for his Children's profit Heb. 12.9 10. Though N.B. Whom he loves he chastens yet he loves not to chasten Rev. 3.19 Heb. 12.6 7 11. God doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the Children of Men Lam. 3.33 We are in heaviness only when need is 1 Pet. 1.6 7. as well to prevent sin as to punish sin thus the Messenger of Satan was let loose to buffet Paul for preventing his Pride lest he should be exalted above measure c. 2 Cor. 12.7 8. N.B. In this sound sense only may it be said that God afflicts from sin as well as for sin Thus God's Visitation upon Job preserved his Spirit sweet for his Generation-work Job 10.12 And thus the same afflicting hand of God withdraws many men from their sinful purposes and hideth Pride from Man Job 33.17 We must all say always in our afflictions with holy David I know O Lord that thy Judgments are righteous and that thou in thy very faithfulness hast afflicted me Psal 119.75 'T is our duty in a Suffering day dropping in upon our heads then to search our hearts at what door it had its entrance Lam. 3.40 Sinning in the general is always the occasion of suffering when this or that sin is not ever the particular cause thereof as it was in the Church of Corinth For this cause of their unworthy Receiving the Lord's Supper many are weak and sickly among you and some are fallen asleep 1 Cor. 11.30 There could be no just suffering where there is not before some unjust sinning Now seeing God finds all his Churches and all his Children to be sinners against him for there be none that sinneth not 2 Chron. 6.36 and God hath a But at the door of the best as against Naaman 2 Kings 5.1 but he was a Leper and against David but in the matter of Vriah 1 Kings 15.5 The best of men are but men at the best And a notwithstanding I have at least a few things against those seven Golden Churches of Asia Rev. 2.4 14 20 c. wherefore his Soveraignty doth most justly bring sufferings upon them giving them their Hell on Earth to make them long the more for Heaven A bitter life makes men look for a better life c. Now though this Primitive Chruch was the purest Gospel-Church that ever was in the World yet was she not altogether without sin If that glorious Coelestial Body the Moon which borrows her Light from the Sun of the Firmament hath some spots in her no wonder if this Terrestrial Church borrowing her Light from the Sun of Righteousness be not found without some
Syrian Army were smitten with Blindness so that they could not captivate that one single Servant of God Elisha 2 Kings 6.18 Their senses being so deluded by a Divine Operation yet was this Conjurer worse confounded than they and stopped in his perverting carreer The seventh Remark is In the midst of wrath God remembers mercy even in his dealing with wicked men Hab. 3.2 and stirs not up all his wrath Psal 78.38 This Blindness therefore was not a perpetual as it might have been but only a temporary Blindness Thou shalt not see the Sun for a season N.B. This phrase intimateth that it was inflicted upon him not so much in a poenal as in a medicinal way that he might be reclaimed from his Villany be reduced by Repentance and receive his sight again The Antients do without Book affirm that he did hereby Repent of his sin and was restored to his Eye-sight again yet after this they say he returned with the Dog to his Vomit and with the Sow to his wallowing in the Mire not only of his old Judaism but to his devilish Magick Tricks again which shews he repented of his very Repentance but so did not Paul who was struck blind also Acts 9.8 for he saw savingly c. The eighth Remark is God over-shoots Satan in his own Bow That which the Devil designed for obstructing the Gospel was over-ruled by the Lord for a farther promoting it Sergius Paulus was set upon by Satan in this Sorcerer to be turned aside from becoming a Proselyte yet when this prudent man saw that the Gospel which Paul Preached was attended with so much Majesty and with such a power of working Miracles accompanying it he the more firmly believed being astonished at the Doctrine of the Lord verse 12. N.B. The Word never works more kindly than when it is received with admiration The second Journey Paul and Barnabas took from Cyprus when they had done their work there N.B. Was to Perga in Pamphilia verse 13. whereof we have nothing of note Recorded save only how their Collegue that ministred to them verse 5. plaid them a slippery Trick there though some say this was that John Mark who wrote the Gospel called by his name yet his departure from them at this juncture when they were walking their Biennial Circuit was blame-worthy Acts 15.38 Whatever was the cause of this withdrawment from the Yoke of Christ Sundry Conjectures there be why he did so N.B. As 1. That he foresaw from this short Experience what difficulties and dangers attended the Gospel and therefore in time provided for his own safety and avoided it as one soon weary of his work There be too many who can be content to be doing something for Christ yet care not to meet with suffering little or nothing for him as the King of Navarr told Beza He would launch no farther into the Sea of Religion than so as that he might be sure to save himself by returning safe home to Shore at night 2. N.B. Some suppose Mark returned to Jerusalem out of an over-fond affection to his Aged Mother who lived there But he had learnt a better Lesson in his own Gospel Mark 10.29 30. to forsake Mothers for Christ who promised to be worth ten Mothers to him c. N.B. The third Conjecture is That Mark heard of the Imprisonment of Peter with whom he had some special familiarity yea a peculiar Interest in him as appeareth from 1 Pet. 5.13 whom Peter there calls his Son and in that Peter was so well acquainted with Mark 's Mother's house Acts 12.12 therefore his extraordinary respect to Peter might draw him back to see what became of him at Jerusalem N.B. The fourth Opinion is That his Relation to Peter who was the special Minister of the Circumcision made him the more shy and nice to venture among the Uncircumcised Gentiles not only lest he should not shun that occasion of offence to the Jews and Peter but also because he fore thought of the Tediousness of that two years Journey they having now but newly entred therein who had met with a Temple of Venus at Paphos in Cyprus and now were come to Perga in Pamphylia where there was another Temple of Diana which would unavoidably create trouble enough to those that cried down their Idolatrous Worship and they were now like to go deeper into the thickest of these Idol worshippers every day more than other this might become Mark 's discouragement N.B. But whatever was the cause of Mark 's withdrawment from this work it was so unwarrantable as to make a breach betwixt him and them for the present nay it occasioned that bitter Paroxism betwixt Paul and Barnabas afterward even the great commotion or perturbation Acts 15.39 Let us leave Mark in his Journey to Jerusalem learning this Lesson only from his frailty Let him that thinks he stands take heed lest he fall 1 Cor. 10.12 whither when he came he did abide there till Paul and Barnabas came thither again N.B. Beside this Remark of Mark 's departure from his Ministry here we find nothing remarkable concerning Paul and Barnabas at Perga in Pamphylia no more is Recorded of them Their third Journey was to Antioch in Pisidia verse 14. so called to distinguish it from the other Antioch of Syria from whence they set forth verse 1 3 4. and Acts 11.19 which was next to if not part of Pamphylia Here these two Apostles as we read went into the Jews Synagogue upon their Sabbath day N.B. Either to joyn with the Jews in their Worship which was not then unlawful or rather to get an opportunity of Preaching the Gospel more publickly to them for this was the grand Errand of their coming thither And the Rulers of the Synagogue soon gave them a candid Invitation thereunto after the Reading of the Law and the Prophets v. 15 c. The other part of this Chapter begins with the special Remarks upon Paul and Barnabas's Actings at this Antioch where Paul Preacheth a most powerful Sermon wherein a general prospect may be presented as to the form and manner of his Convincing Discourse in these following particulars As 1st His Prologue or Preface v. 16. wherein he craves their careful attention which he intimates none could do but only such as truly feared God for that is the proper Character of a right Attentive Hearer 2ly His Narrative of the Divine Benefits which the Lord of old bestowed upon his People Israel frankly for the Messia'hs sake and these he reckons up to be four 1. God's free Electing of them above all Nations and his wonderful delivering them out of Egypt verse 17. 2. God's Indulgency towards them for forty years in the Wilderness as a Mother bears with her Child's frowardness or as an Huband bears with his Wife's crossness verse 18. 3. His giving them the Possession and Improvement of the Land of Promise verse 19. 4. His constituting them into a form of Government there both that of
we wait for him Hab. 2.3 the Lord is not slack concerning his coming 2 Pet. 3.9 we must be looking for his return Isa 8.17 so that when he returneth we may be able to cry with comfort This is our Lord we have waited for him we will rejoyce in his Salvation Isaiah 25.8 9. The fourth comfortable consideration is Though during this distance of time betwixt Sion's King's departing from her and his returning to her again be the time of Zion's trouble and travel The Church Militant here upon Earth is compared to a Travailing Woman tho' pangs take hold of her and she is in pain labouring to bring forth Mic. 4.8 9 10. yet this traveling-pain these labouring pangs do not last long she is at length delivered to her great satisfaction and comfort This same allusion our Lord himself maketh that the time of his Absenting himself from his Church would be her Traveling time she should suffer the pangs and pains of a Travailing woman and she should have sorrow because her hour is come yet so soon as she is delivered of a Man-Child she then remembers no more her fore-going anguish but all her former sorrow is swallowed up with present joy because God hath enabled her to bring forth a man-child into the world John 16.20 21 22. And thus the Woman Christ's Church is said to bring forth a Man-child which was caught up into Heaven for its security from the Dragon Rev. 12.5 Thus likewise we are told when Christ comes to be formed in the hearts of true penitents by such godly Ministers as Travel in birth for their Conversion as blessed Paul did Gal. 4.19 then there is joy in Heaven over one sinner that repenteth Luke 15. verse 6 10 23 and 32. Now assuredly the Church of Christ shall not alway go with her great Belly nor shall she long complain as Hezekiah did in his Day that the Child of Reformation is brought to the Birth and there is no strength to bring forth Isa 37.3 The Lord will hasten her deliverance in his own due and appointed time Isa 60.20 and Dan. 8.19 He will work wonderful works which we never looked for Isa 64.3 Who hath heard or seen such a thing that before Zion travelled she brought forth before her pain came she was delivered of a Man-child a Nation is born in one day so soon as Zion travelled she brought forth her Childeren Shall I bring to the Birth and not cause to bring forth saith the Lord c. Isa 66.6 7 8 9. As 't is the voice of the. Lord that maketh the Hinds those girt Creatures to Calve Psa 29.9 and Job 39. ver 1 2 3 4. So and much more than so 't is the Voice of the Lord from his Temple that openeth the Church's Womb and causeth her to bring forth her sorrows with Joy and the same Voice from the Temple calleth upon all that love her to rejoice for joy with her and to suck the Breasts of Consolation unto satisfaction and to milk out so as to be Delighted with the Abundance of her Glory Isaiah 66 610 11 12 c. The fifth Cordial is Tho' there be four famous Joys that are temporal and Transitory here upon Earth and all Recorded in Scripture namely 1st The Joy of Harvest And 2dly The Joy of Victory both these be named in Isa 9.3 as very great earthly joys for 't is well known what strange transporting Joys are practiced by Country-men at the last Load of Corn led out of the Field into the Barn to which we add the shearing of Sheep which is called a good day c. 1 Sam. 25.8.36 And 't is well known what strange Triumphing Joys are made by the Conquering Soldiers when they run to divide the Rich Spoils of their Conquered Enemies 3dly There is the Joy of marriage mentioned in Cant. 3.11 Where the day of Solomon's Espousals is call'd the day of the gladness of his heart And 't is no less to other meaner men unto whom it cannot but be matter of Joy When man at his Marryng a Woman doth verily find again his Lost Rib that was taken out of his side Gen. 2. v. 21 22. Therefore marriage is near in sound to a merry age 4thly There is the Joy that succeeds this Joy of Marriage namely the Joy of a Man-child born into the World as is afore-mentioned this is likewise matter of great Joy because thereby Names Posterities Families and Generations are upheld in the World throughout all Counteries over the face of the Earth and without which the World would soon come to an end c. Yet this Joy of the Church bringing forth the Man-child of Reformation is a Joy that far transcends all the other four former Joys not only as it is 1. A Spiritual and Heavenly Joy wherein it exceeds all Joys that are only Carnal and Earthly which strangers do not intermeddle with Pro. 14.10 But also 2. Because It is an everlasting Joy Isa 35.10 61.7 65.17 18 19. Thus our Lord tells his Disciples their Joy at this Man-child's Birth upon his return will be joy which no man taketh away from them Joh. 16. v. 21 22 'T is call'd a day of Refreshing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Refrigerij a cooling day after hot persecutions Acts 3.19 yea And 3. It s a most extensive happiness as it is a day of Restitution of all ●hings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 verse 21. as the ground of this Joy is greatest so 't is a joy that lasts longest Moreover 't is said to the faithful Servant Enter thou into the Joy of thy Lord. Matth. 25.21 and again verse 23. Intimating this Joy is too great to enter into us but we must enter into it and when it is once entered into we must enjoy that Joy fore ever The sixth comfortable Consideration is To behold Christ coming in his Kingdom with power and great glory Matth. 24.30 to save Zion from her Enemies Spiritual as well as Temporal and to make all her Foes to become her Foot-stool Psal 110.1 Matth. 22.44 Mark 12.36 Luke 20.42 Acts 2.35 1 Cor. 15.24 25 26. Heb. 1● 13 and 10.13 This must needs be a most joyful sight thus often Recorded in Scripture and infinitely transcending those three famous sights which Father Augustin so earnestly wished to see namely Romam in store Paulum in Ore et Christum in Carne that is Old Rome in her Antient splendor blessed Paul preaching with his Charms of Eloquence and our most blessed Redeemer in his humane nature walking about and doing good as Acts 10.38 We are told how the Tulep call'd a Lilly doth out-shine Solomon in all his glory Matth. 6.28 29. How much more glorious will the sight of Christ be in his State of Exaltation who was greater than Solomon in his State of Humiliation Matth. 12.42 An exalted Christ is a rare sight so excellent as only to be seen of Angels 1 Tim. 3.16 yet it is said that some men shall not taste