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

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Targumized He calls to the Architect 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saying ramm him in under the foundation R. Jose saith they whelmed him under an heap of Clay 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Is there any Clay in the Mountain of the Temple Gloss. There was Mortar which they used in building It may be noted by the by that they were building in the Temple in the days of the first Gamaliel who sate President in the Sanhedrin about the latter days of our Saviour which confirms what I already have noted in Chap. II. 20. And further let us see how they might have stones in readiness for they were now building and they might have pieces of stones enough there CHAP. IX VERS II. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Who did sin this man or his Parents I. IT was a received Doctrine in the Jewish Schools that Children according to some wickedness of their Parents were born lame or crooked or maimed and defective in some of their parts c. by which they kept Parents in awe lest they should grow remiss and negligent in the performance of some rites which had respect to their being clean such as washings and purifyings c. we have given instances elsewhere II. But that the Infant should be born lame or blind or defective in any part for any sin or fault of his own seems a riddle indeed 1. Nor do they solve the matter who fly to that principle of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or transmigration of souls which would have the Jews tinctured with at least if we will admit Josephus as a just Interpreter and judge of that principle For thus he y y y y y y Lib. de Excid II. cap. 12. It is the opinion of the Pharisees 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That the souls of all are immortal and do pass into another body that is those of the good only observe this but those of the wicked are punished with eternal torments So that unless you will say that the soul of some good man passing into the body of this man was the cause of his being born blind a supposition that every one would cry shame of you say nothing to the case in hand If the opinion of the transmigration of souls amongst the Jews prevailed only so far that they suppos'd the souls of good men only pass'd into other bodies the very subject of the present question is taken away and all suspicion of any punishment or defect happening to the infant upon the account of Transmigration wholly vanisheth unless you will say it could happen upon a good soul's passing out of the body of a good man 2. There is a solution attempted by some from the souls pre-existency which they would pretend the Jews had some smatch of from what they say about 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those souls which are in Goph or Guph z z z z z z Avodah Zarah ●ol 5. 1. R. Jose saith the Son of David will not come 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 till the souls that are in Goph are consummated The same passage is recited also in Niddah a a a a a a Fol. 13. 2. and Jevamoth b b b b b b Fol. 62. 1. where it is ascrib'd to R. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Asi. There is a repository saith R. Solomon the name of which is Goph and from the Creation all the souls that ever were to be born were form'd together and there plac'd But there 's another Rabbin brought in by another Commentator that supposeth a twofold Goph and that the souls of the Israelites and of the Gentiles are not in one and the same Goph Nay further he conceives that in the days of the Messiah there will be a third Goph and a new race of souls made R. Jose deduceth his opinion from Isaiah LVII 16. miserably wresting the words of the Prophet to this sense My will shall hinder for the souls which I have made For so Aruch and the Commentators explain his mind Grant now that what I have quoted might be sufficient confirmations that the Jews did entertain the opinion of the Souls pre-existence yet what concern the pre-existence of souls hath with this place I confess I have not so quick an apprehension as any way to imagine unless we will suppose a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 too or that some souls come immediately from the hand of God stain'd and defiled III. I would therefore seek to untye this knot some other way 1. I would have that passage observ'd which we have in Vajicra rabb c c c c c c Fol. 184 3. And the days draw nigh in the which thou shalt say I have no pleasure in them Eccl. XII 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those are the days of the Messiah wherein there shall be neither merit nor demerit That is if I mistake not wherein neither the good deserts of the Parents shall be imputed to the children for their advantage nor their deserts for their fault and punishment They are the words of R. Akibah in loc and they are his application of that passage in Eccles. and indeed his own invention but the opinion it self That there shall be neither merit nor demerit in the days of the Messiah is what is commonly receiv'd amongst the Jews If so then let me a little enlarge this question of our Saviours Disciples by way of Paraphrase to this purpose Master we know that thou art the Messiah and that these are the days of the Messiah we have also learnt from our Schools that there is no imputation of merit or demerit from the Parents in the days of the Messiah whence then is it that this man is born blind that in these days of the Messiah he should bring into the world with him some mark and imputation of fault or blame somewhere What was it his Parents fault This seems against the receiv'd opinion It seems therefore that he bears some tokens of his own fault is it so or no 2. It was a conceit amongst the Jews that the infant when form'd and quicken'd in the womb might behave it self irregularly and do something that might not be altogether without fault In the Treatise last mention'd a woman is brought in complaining in earnest of her child before the Judg 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that it kickt her unreasonably in the womb In Midr. Cohel and Midr. Ruth Cap. III. 13. there is a story told of Elisha ben Abujah who departed from the faith and became an horrible Apostate and amongst other reasons of his apostacy this is render'd for one There are which say that his Mother when she was big with child of him passing through a Temple of the Gentiles smelt something very strong they gave to her of what she smelt and she did eat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the child in the womb grew hot and swell'd into blisters as in the womb of a Serpent In which story his Apostacy is supposed
Office he discharged with great care and diligence though he had at that time a multiplicity of affairs to divert him especially that of perusing the sheets of the Polyglott as they were wrought off from the Press He was extreamly solicitous during his being Vice-Chancellor that he might not do any wrong to any Man or any unkindness to his friend He did once fear during that year that he had by a Sentence determined injuriously against a Friend of his This was so great a torment to his mind that he told a Friend that is yet alive that he thought it would accompany him with sorrow to his grave But the good Man was soon satisfied that what he had determined was not only just but necessary also Nor were our Authors Labours confined to the University and to his Rectory For besides the many excellent Books which he wrote of which I forbear to give any account here because I find it done to my Hand he was concerned in the useful undertakings which were begun and finished in his time Among which the Edition of the Polyglott Bible which was finished in the year 1657. deserves to be mentioned in the first place This excellent and useful Work was in great measure accomplished by the indefatigable pains of the Learned and Reverend Brian Walton D. D. and afterwards Lord Bishop of Chester and remains a monument of the exemplary diligence and eminent Learning of that excellent Prelate I shall only at present consider how far our Author was concerned in that Work I find him consulted about that whole Work by Doctor Walton at his first entrance upon it in a Letter of the Doctors to him bearing date Jan. 2. 1653. In which he begs our Authors assistance as to the Samaritan Pentateuch which he bestowed much pains about Vid. Dec. Chorograph in S. Marc. Cap. X. § 5. Nor was this the first application which had been made to him for by that Letter it appears that our Author had modestly declined the employment upon the score of his inability to which the Doctor in that Letter replies that our Author had given sufficient and publick Testimony to the World of his ability I find also that Doctor Walton as appears by his Letters bearing date Feb. 23. 1653. and April 24 1654. and June 14. 1654. and several others sent our Author the several Alphabets of sheets as they came off from the Press and desired him to peruse them as he had done and note the mistakes he should meet withal In one of which he tells him that as to the Samaritan his Diligence and Judgment had been so exact that there would be little cause to alter much less to censure and correct I find also that our Author assisted in that Work several other ways not only by procuring Subscriptions toward its encouragement but by furnishing him with several M S S. out of the University Library viz. a Syriac M S. of the Prophets which the Doctor acknowledges in a Letter bearing date Nov. 7. 1655. and a Syriac Lexicon a MS. He assisted him likewise in rectifying the Map of Judaea as appears by another Letter dated July 23. 1656. and with certain Notes out of the Jerusalem Talmud as appears by another Letter Nov. 4. 1657. Besides this our Author sent him his Chorographical Observations which we find prefixed to the Polyglott Bible under his Name Next to the Polyglott Bible and in order to render that the more useful also the greatest Work of this last age and indeed of any other of that kind is that incomparable Book the Lexicon Heptaglotton by Edmund Castell D. D. published in the year 1669. I find that Dr. Castell a Man for his great Piety incomparable Learning and incredible Diligence not to be mentioned without a Preface of honour before he entred upon that Work consulted our Author about it and submitted it to him either to stifle or give it life as he expresseth himself in a Letter to him bearing date Dec. 2. 1657. To which when the Doctor had received our Authors Answer in which he approves his excellent design in a second Letter the Doctor returns him his thanks and after his acknowledgments he adds And truly says he had we not such an Oracle to consult with bootless and in vain it would be to attempt such an undertaking And a little afterwards he adds O nos felices ter amplius quibus contigit Te vivo opus hoc tam grande quam arduum auspicato suscepisse Et benedictus ob hoc semper sit summus ille rerum Arbiter This Letter is not dated but must be written upon the beginning of that great undertaking I forbear to relate in how many particulars his Advice and Assistance toward that excellent Work was requested The Doctor tells our Author in a Letter dated Feb. 22. 1663. what his sense of him was in these word your Worth and Works so transcendent to the Vulgar way of writing all the learned World doth and ought highly to esteem I have and shall as does become me in this Work now upon me sundry times with honour mention c. Our Author did not only advise and commend and speak well These are cheap things He assisted by supplying with Money and supporting the excellent undertaker This I find acknowledged by the Doctor in a Letter bearing date March 14. 1663. How far our Author gave his assistance this way I know not but this I find that in that Letter the Doctor is transported that in these three Kingdoms says he to our Author there should be one found 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for such a second has never yet appeared to me who has manifested such a sentiment of my ruined and undone condition He does indeed except in that Letter the Bishop of Exon whose kindness to him was incomparably great Doctor Lightfoot indeed was very much concerned for that most Worthy undertaker and did I find do his utmost to support the Good Man in that excellent Work He wrote often to him and failed not by all manner of ways to encourage him in his Labours The Doctor tells him in a Letter bearing date Nov. 15. 1664. next to the Divine I meet with no lines like yours that so sweetly refresh and delight my Soul when quite wearied with labour c. When the first Volume of that excellent Book came out I find the Doctor giving our Author the notice of it and promising him to transmit it with a request to give a Censure of it none being either more able to judge or that will do it with greater Candor especially he desires his more severe scanning of the Arabick This he does in a Letter dated Jan. 14. 1667. He acquaints him also with the finishing of the Second Volume in a Letter dated to him June 9. 1669. By this it appears how far our Author was concerned in the encouraging of this excellent Work For the Synopsis Criti●orum undertaken by Mr. Matthew Pool I find our
I might mention the care and regard he ever had to the family of the Cottons And I do remember that when I was a Student of Katharine Hall there was one who was a Cotton and an heir of that Family was likewise a Student and admitted there by the Doctors means over whom he had a more especial Eye and frequently had him sent for into his Lodgings to eat with him and confer with him and to shew kindness to him for Jonathans I mean his Great Uncles sake And out of respect to that dear name he caused one of his sons to be called Cottonus Nay he loved the very name of Bellaport the seat of Sir Rowland And I have a Letter which Sir Rowland wrote Anno 1629. in answer to his Epistle Dedicatory to him before his first Book that he published this beloved Letter the Doctor preserved unto his dying day as a kind of Sacred Relique upon which was wrote with his own hand Sir Rowland Cottons Letter And for a conclusion of our Discourse of Sir Rowland Cotton whom we have spoke so largely of and of whom Dr. Lightfoot could never talk enough hear the Conclusion of his Funeral Sermon upon him prepared though not Preached upon what occasion I know not That blessed Soul that is now with God in the night of its departure laid the burthen of this present Work upon me in these words You are my old acquaintance do me the last Office of a Friend make my funeral Sermon but praise me not A hard task Fathers and Brethren is laid upon me when I who of all Men this day have the greatest cause to mourn for his loss that is departed should of all Men this day be allowed the least liberty of mourning because of this present work And a strange task Fathers and Brethren is laid upon me when I must make to you all a Funeral Sermon and yet must tell to none of you for whom t is made For if I do but call him Sir Rowland Cotton I commend him It was not a time to say so then but now I dare say it over again a hard task Fathers and Brethren is laid upon me when I must have much cause of tears for his death and yet not be allowed to weep and such reason of remembrance of his life and yet be denyed to praise I obey Blest Soul I obey but I am full I cannot hold Dispence with me something for I cannot hold It is for your sake Worthy Audience that I must hold tears lest they should hinder my speech Be pleased to give me liberty of speech in recompence of my restrained tears And it is for thy sake Blest Soul that I must withhold commendation lest I should break thy command give me liberty of indignation against that command in recompence of my restraint from thy Commendation Meus Tuus noster imo Christi as Hierom of Nepotianus so we of him whose departure we may commemorate My Sir Rowland Cotton Yours the Countries nay Christs hath forsaken us and because Christs therefore he hath forsaken us to go to him whose he wholly was Oh! that my head were waters or rather words for only that manner of mourning and my Tongue a fountain of tears for only that instrument of weeping is allowed me now that I might weep day and night not for him that is gone for he is gone where he always was and where he would be but for my self but for you but for the Country It is not my ambition but my sorrow that I claim the first place and to be first served in this heavy dole of lamentation For I have lost I cannot tell you what My Noble Patron my best Friend my Father my my Self I should lose if I should but begin to tell what he was to me Why should I speak more For should I speak my self away I could never speak enough Oh! my Father my Father the Chariot of Israel and the Horseman thereof How thy love to me was wonderful passing the love of Women And is it nothing to you O ye that s●● by Behold and see if there be any sorrow like unto my sorrow which is done unto me wherewith the Lord hath afflicted me in the day of his fierce anger He it was that first laid the foundation of my poor Studies and always watered them with his discourse and encouragement and now the Lord hath taken my Master from my head He it was under whose branches I sheltred when any storm was up and now my Tree of defence is cut down He it was that was my Oracle both for things of this life and of a better and now my Prophet is not any more He it was that was all things to me that man could be but now can be nothing to me but sorrow And is this nothing to you O all ye that sit by Yes the Cup is gone among you also and a great Man is fallen in your Israel Hath not the Magistracy hath not the Gentry hath not the Country lost such a Man as was But you must speak out the rest for his Command stops my mouth You of the Magistracy know how he had Wisdom in an high degree as was his calling and withal care and conscience answerable to his Wisdom to discharge his calling And you may commend this rarity in him I dare not You of the Gentry know that he was a prime Flower in your Garland that he spake a true Gentleman in all his actions in his comportment in his attendance in his talk once for all in his hospitality even to admiration and you may commend him I dare not c. A sensible strain of Rhetorick which passion and inward sorrow had as large a share in dictating as Art XIII His Relations HAving expatiated thus largely in our notices of this Man that we may omit nothing that is material we will now begin to consider him in his more private and personal capacity His Reverend Father had five Sons whereof our John was the second His eldest was Thomas the only of all his Sons bred to a secular employment being a trades Man The third Peter a very ingenious Man and practised Physick in Uttoxeter and besides his Art he was of great usefulness in that Country and often in Commissions for ending of differences He also had intended to have writ the Life of his Brother Dr. John Lightfoot but was prevented by death The next was Josiah who succeeded his Brother Dr. Lightfoot in his Living of Ashley the only of the Brothers now living The youngest was Samuel a Minister also but long since deceased And as it was his Honour that he was derived of an honest and gentile stock by both Father and Mother so it was a part of his Happiness that God blest him with a Posterity He was twice married and both times into Families of Worship His first Wife was Joyce the Daughter of Crompton of Staffordshire Esquire a Gentleman of a very antient
that performed it not but plainly demonstrated that none could perform it and so left all under a curse and these words Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things c. conclude both So that the Law was not given for justification but to be subservient to the Covenant of Justification not to cross the Covenant but to serve it not purposely to leave under the curse but to shew the curse and to drive men to get from under it So that men might live in it but not by it It was the way in which men were to go to seek for Justification but it was not the cause or means whereby they were justified See Gal. 3. 5. The Jews made the Moral Law cross to the Covenant of Grace whilst they sought to be justified by works and they made the Ceremonial Law cross the Moral whilest they resolved all duty into Ceremony and so the Law which in it self was holy and pure and good they turned to death unto themselves by their abuse They might have lived in the Moral Law had they used it aright though not by it for the more a man sets himself to the exact performance of it the more he sees he cannot perform it and therefore he is driven the more to Christ But they resolved all into Ceremonious performance and so lost sincerity toward the Moral and hereupon the Ceremonial Law good in it self became to them Statutes not good and Judgments wherein they could not live Exek 20. 25. From Rome also and reasonable early in this year Paul wrote THE EPISTLE TO TIMOTHY and in it urgeth Timothy to come to him before Winter Timothy was now at Ephesus when this Epistle was directed to him as may be observed out of the Epistle it self by these collections 1. In that he willeth him to salute the houshold of Onesiphorus Chap. 4. 19. who was an Ephesian Chap. 1. 16 18. 2. In that he biddeth him take Troas in his way as he comes to him Chap. 4. 13. which had been the way that Paul himself had gone from Ephesus 2 Cor. 2. 22. and to Ephesus again Acts 20. 5. 3. In that he warneth him of Alexander Chap. 4. 14. who was an Ephesian 1 Tim. 1. 20. Act. 19. 33. There is one passage in this Epistle which hath caused some to doubt about the time of its writing for about the place there is no doubt and that is what he saith Chap. 4. 6. I am now ready to be offered up and the time of my departure is at hand which would make one think that he was now ready to be martyred and taken away and it hath made some believe that this was the last Epistle that ever he wrote but when we compare his own words again in ver 17 18. and Phil. 1. 25. and Philem. ver 22. it maketh it past controversie that he speaketh not of his sudden Martyrdoom but that he is to be understood in some other sense But what is that Baronius giveth this gloss The words of Paul concerning his speedy death seem not possibly otherwise to be understood then that God had revealed it to him that he should suffer death under Nero. For that time might very well seem near which was to be fulfilled under the same Prince I but Nero for his age might have reigned 50 or 60 years after the Apostles writing of this Epistle and so the last words of this gloss are but a very poor salving And indeed the resolution of the difficulty lieth open and conspicuous in the text it self Paul looked upon Timothy as the prime and choice man that was to succeed him in the work of the Gospel when he himself should be dead and gone as being a young man not only of singular qualifications for that work but of whom there had been special Prophesies and predictions to such a purpose 1 Tim. 1. 18. as was observed before He exhorts him therefore in this place to improve all his pains and parts to the utmost to do the work of an Evangelist and to make proof of his Ministry to the full for that he himself could not last long being now grown old and worn with travel and besides all this in bonds at present and so in continual danger therefore must Timothy be ●itting himself daily to take his work up when he was gone With Timothy he desires that Mark may come along with him to Rome whom we observed to be at Corinth at Pauls last coming thither and one clause in this Epistle seemeth also to speak to that matter Chap. 4. 20. Erastus abode at Corinth but Trophimus I left at Miletum sick Erastus abode at Corinth Why that Timothy knew without any information for he was with Paul all along that journey when Erastus went to Corinth and staied there And Trophimus I left at Miletum sick Why Timothy could not but know that too without Pauls telling him so from Rome Miletum and Ephesus were so very near together nay it is more than probable that Timothy was left at Miletum too when Trophimus was left there But when was he left Not when Paul went towards Jerusalem and sent for the Elders of Ephesus to Miletum Acts 20. for Trophimus went and was with him at Jerusalem Acts 21. 19. But it was when Paul returned from Jerusalem in bonds to Rome as hath been said though it be not particularly mentioned that he touched there Some would have the word Miletum to be read Mileta among whom is Beza who is ever one of the forwardest to tax the Text for corrupt when he cannot clear it Po●ius conjicio legendum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith he quod vocabulum facile fuit in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 depravare Luke saith plainly that at Pauls coming away from Judea in his voyage to Rome it was their resolution to sail by the coasts of Asia Act 27. 2. which had been a far fairer ground to have concluded upon that Paul was at Miletum in that voyage since that was a part of those Asian coasts then to change Miletum into Melita upon no ground at all And certainly the very scope of the Apostle in that passage will not admit of that change for he is not telling Timothy of Erastus his abode at Corinth or of Trophimus his sick stay at Miletum as things unknown to him but as things very well known yet mentioned to him as making to the Apostles present purpose He had sent for Timothy and Mark to come away to him to Rome and to forward them to that journey he doth these two things 1. He sheweth how all his company was scattered from him ver 9. 10. and therefore he had need of them in that destitution 2. He telleth how supply might be made in their places though they came away for though Mark should come from Corinth yet Erastus might be a supply for Erastus abode there And Timothy come away from Ephesus yet Trophimus is there ready to supply his place for
of the Gospel and if my poorness could some contribution towards the building of Sion The Method that I prescribed to my self in this undertaking some glimpse whereof thou maist see in this present Parcel was 1. To lay the Text of the Evangelists in that order which the nature and progress of the Story doth necessarily require 2. To give a Reason of this Order why the Text is so laid more largely or more briefly according as the plainness or difficulty of the connexion doth call for it 3. To give some account of the difficulties in the language of the Original as any came to hand either being naturally so in the Greek it self or being made difficulties when they were not so by the curiosity misconstruction or self-end-seeking of some Expositors 4. And lastly to clear and open the sense and meaning of the Text all along as it went especially where it was of more abstruseness and obscurity These two last things did I assay and go on withal a great way in the work with much largeness and copiousness both concerning the language and the manner For for the first I did not only poise the Greek in the ballance of its own Country and of the Septuagint but I also examined translations in divers languages produced their sense and shewed cause of adhering to or refusing of their sense as I conceived cause And for the second I alledged the various Expositions and interpretations of Commentators both ancient and modern and others that spake to such and such places occasionally I examined their Expositions and gave the Reader reason to refuse or imbrace them as cause required When seeing the Work in this way likely to rise to vastness of bulk it self and of trouble to the Reader I chose to abridg this first part for a trial and therein having expressed only those things which were most material for the understanding of the Text where it is less plain for where it is plain enough why should I spend time and labour about it And spoken mine own thoughts upon it and omitted unless it be for a taste of what I had done the glosses and thoughts of others I now wait for the direction and advice of my learned and loving Friends and Readers whether to exhibite the other parts that are to follow by Gods good blessing and assistance in that large and voluminous method that at the first I prescribed to my self or in that succiseness that this present parcel holdeth out I have partly chosen and have partly been constrained to tender this work to publick view by pieces whereof only this and this but a small one neither appears at this time I have chosen so to do that I might give the world my thoughts upon the Evangelists as the Lord giveth time for who would defer to do any thing of such a work till he have done all since our lives are so short and uncertain and the work so long and difficult And I have been constrained thus to do partly because of mine other occasions many and urgent which deny me opportunity to follow that business as such a bulk would require and partly because of the straits of the times which have straitned our Presses that they Print but rarely any thing voluminous Every year by Gods permission and good assistance shall yield its piece till all be finished if the Lord spare life health and liberty thereunto Divers things were fitting to have been premised to a work of this nature but because that if they should all be set before this small piece that we now exhibit the Preface or Prolegomena would be larger than the Book it self therefore have I reserved to every piece that shall come forth it s own share and portion And the things that I have thought upon and hewed out unto this purpose are these 1. To fix the certain year of our Saviours birth as a thing very fit to be looked after and to shew the certain grounds whereupon to go that our fixing upon such a year may be warranted and without wavering This have I premised to this first part wherein comes the Story and Treatise of our Saviours birth 2. To give account of all the dislocations of Texts and Stories in the Old Testament which are exceeding many to shew where is their proper place and order and to give the reason of their dislocation And this being so copious and frequent in the Old Testament the like will be thought the less strange and uncouth in the New 3. To make a Chorographical description of the Land of Canaan and those adjoyning places that we have occasion to look upon as we read the Gospel a thing of no small necessity for the clearer understanding of the Story 4. To make a Topographical description of Jerusalem and of the Fabrick of the Temple which will facilitate divers passages in the Gospel which are of no small obscurity 5. To give some account and Story of the State and Customs of the Iews in these times when the Gospel began and was first preached among them out of their own and other Writers which things the Evangelists mention not and yet which conduce not a little to the understanding of the Evangelists These as things very necessary for the matter in hand shall wait severally upon the several parts that shall follow as the Lord shall please to vouchsafe ability time health and safety From my Chamber in Westminster Octob. 1. 1644. PROLEGOM I. The Age of the World at our Saviours birth fixed the account proved the chiefest difficulties in the Scripture Chronicle resolved IN the Stories of times the times of the stories do challenge special notice and observation and of all other that of our Saviours birth being the fulness of time may best as best worthy make such a challenge A time to which all the holy ones that went before it did bend their eyes and expectation and a time from which all the Christians that have lived since have dated their Chronical accounts and computation And yet how unfixed is this time and age of the world in which so great a mystery came to pass and upon which so general accounting doth depend in the various reckonings of learned and industrious men It is not only to be seen in their writings wondered at in regard of the great difference at which they count but the fixed time is the more to be studied for upon this very reason because such men do so greatly differ among themselves The only way to settle in such variety is to take the plain and clear account and reckoning of the Scripture which hath taken a peculiar care to give an exact and most certain Chronicle to this time and not to rely upon the computation of Olympiades Consuls or any other humane calculation which it cannot be doubted must of necessity leave the deepest student of them in doubting and uncertainty Now the Scripture carrying on a most faithful reckoning of the times from
and vex the Reader and yet there are none who do more intice and delight him In no Writers is greater or equal trifling and yet in none is greater or so great benefit The Doctrine of the Gospel hath no more bitter enemies than they and yet the Text of the Gospel hath no more plain interpreters To say all in a word To the Jews their Countrymen they recommend nothing but toys and destruction and poyson but Christians by their skill and industry may render them most usefully serviceable to their Studies and most eminently tending to the Interpretation of the New Testament We here offer some specimen of this our reading and our choice for the Readers sake if so it may find acceptance with the Reader We know how exposed to suspicion it is to produce new things how exposed to hatred the Talmudic Writings are how exposed to both and to sharp censure also to produce them in holy things Therefore this our more unusual manner of explaining Scripture cannot upon that very account but look for a more unusual censure and become subject to a severer examination But when the lot is cast it is too late at this time to desire to avoid the sequel of it and too much in vain in this place to attempt a defense If the work and book it self does not carry something with it which may plead its cause and obtain the Readers pardon and favour our oration or beging Epistle will little avail to do it The present work therefore is to be exposed and delivered over to its fate and fortune whatsoever it be Some there are we hope who will give it a milder and more gentle reception for this very thing dealing favourably and kindly with us that we have been intent upon our Studies that we have been intent upon the Gospel and that we have endeavoured after Truth they will shew us favour that we followed after it and if we have not attained it they will pity us But as for the wrinkled forehead and the slern brow we are prepared to bear them with all patience being armed and satisfied with this inward Patronage That we have endeavoured to profit But this Work whatever it be and whatever fortune it is like to meet with we would dedicate to You My very dear Katherine-Hall men both as a Debt and as a Desire For by this most close bond and tye wherewith we are united to You is due all that we study all that we can do if so be that All is any thing at all And when we desire to profit all if we could which becomes both a Student and a Christian to do by that bond and your own merits You are the very centre and rest of those Desires and wishes We are sufficiently conscious to our selves how little or nothing we can do either for the publick benefit or for Yours yet we would make a publick Profession before all the World of our Desire and Study and before You of our inward and cordial affection Let this pledge therefore of our love and endearment be laid up by You and while we endeavour to give others an account of our Hours let this give You an assurance of our Affections And may it last in Katherine-Hall even to future Ages as a Testimony of Service a Monument of Love and a Memorial both of Me and You. From my Study The Calends of June 1658. HORAE Hebraicae Talmudicae OR HEBREW AND TALMUDICAL EXERCITATIONS upon the Evangelist St. Matthew CHAP. I. VERS I. Βίβλος Γενέσεως Ἰησοῦ Χριστοῦ The Book of the Generation of Iesus Christ. _ע 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 TEN a Stocks came up out of Babylon 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Priests 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Levites 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a a a a a a Talm. in Kiddush cap. 4. Art 1. Israelites 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Common Persons as to the Priesthood such whose Fathers indeed were sprung from Priests but their Mothers unfit to be admitted to the Priests Marriage Bed 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Proselytes 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Liberti or Servants set Free 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nothi for such as were born in Wedlock but that which was unlawful 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nethinims 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bastards such as came of a certain Mother but of an uncertain Father 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Such as were gathered up out of the Streets whose Fathers and Mothers were uncertain A defiled Generation indeed and therefore brought up out of Babylon in this common sink according to the Opinion of the Hebrews that the whole Jewish Seed still remaining there might not be polluted by it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For Ezra went not up out of Babylon until he had rendred it pure as flower They are words of the Babylonian Gemara which the gloss explains thus He left not any there that were illegitimate in any respect but the Priests and Levites only and Israelites of a pure and undefiled stock Therefore he brought up with him these ten kinds of Pedigrees that these might not be mingled with those when there remained now no more a Sanhedrin there which might take care of that matter Therefore he brought them to Jerusalem where care might be taken by the Sanhedrin fixed there that the legitimate might not marry with the illegitimate Let us think of these things a little while we are upon our entrance into the Gospel History I. How great a cloud of obscurity could not but arise to the people concerning the original of Christ even from the very return out of Babylon when they either certainly saw or certainly believed that they saw a purer spring of Jewish blood there than in the Land of Israel it self II. How great a care ought there to be in the Families of pure blood to preserve themselves untouched and clean from this impure sink and to lay up among themselves Genealogical Scrols from generation to generation as faithful witnesses and lasting monuments of their legitimate stock and free blood Hear a complaint and a Story in this case b b b b b b Hi●●●● Kidd●● fol. 6● ● Bab. ibid fol. 71. R. Jochanan said By the Temple it is in our hand to discover who are not of pure blood in the Land of Israel But what shall I do when the ●●●●● m●● of this generation lie hid that is when they are not of pure blood and yet we must not declare so much openly concerning them He was of the same Opinion with R. Isaac who said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Family of the poluted blood that lies hid let it lie hid Abai also saith We have learned this also by tradition that there was a certain Family called the Family of Beth-Zeripha beyond Jordan and a son of Zion removed it away The gloss is some eminent Man by a publick Proclamation declared it impure But he caused another which was such that is
we have produced is plain and without any difficulty as if he should say It is an old Tradition which hath obtained for many ages VERS XXII 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But I say unto you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But I say the words of one that refutes or determines a question very frequently to be met with in the Hebrew Writers To this you may lay that of Esaiah Chap. II. vers 3 And he will teach us of his ways c. When Kimchi writes thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This Teacher is King Messias And that of Zacharias Chap. XI vers 8. Where this great shepherd destroys three evil shepherds namely the Pharisee and the Sadu●ee and the Essene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. That whosoever is angry with his brother without a cause c. First let us treat of the Words and then of the Sentences With his Brother The Jewish Schools do thus distinguish between a Brother and a Neighbour that a Brother signifies an Israelite by nation and blood a Neighbour an Israelite in religion and worship that is a Proselyte The Author of Aruch in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Son of the Covenant writes thus The Sons of the Covenant these are Israel And when the Scripture saith If any ones Ox gore the Ox of his Neighbour it excludes all the Heathen in that it saith of his Neighbour Maimonides writes thus t t t t t t in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ch. 2. It is all one to kill an Israelite and a Canaanite Servant for both the punishment is death But an Israelite who shall kill 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A stranger inhabitant shall not be punished with death because it is said Whosoever shall proudly rise up against his Neighbour to kill him Ex. XXI 14. And it is needless to say he shall not be punished with death for killing a Heathen Where this is to be noted that Heathens and stranger Inhabitants who were not admitted to perfect and compleat Proselytism were not qualified with the title of Neighbour nor with any privileges But under the Gospel where there is no distinction of Nations or Tribes Brother is taken in the same latitude as among the Jewes both Brother and Neighbour was that is for all professing the Gospel and is contradistinguished to the Heathen 1 Cor. V. 11. If any one who is called a Brother And Mat. XVIII 15. If thy Brother sin against thee c. ver 17. If he hear not the Church let him be a Heathen But Neighbour is extended to all even such as are strangers to our religion Luk. X. 29 30 c. He shall be guilty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 words signifying guilt or debt to be met with a thousand times in the Talmudists Es. XXIV v. 23. They shall be gathered together as Captives are gathered into prison Where R. Solomon speaks thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Guilty of Hell unto Hell which agrees with the last clause of this verse Of the Councel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Sanhedrin that is of the Judgment or Tribunal of the Magistrate For that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Judgment in the clause before is to be referred to the Judgment of God will appear by what follows Raka 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A word used by one that despiseth another in the highest scorn very usual in the Hebrew Writers and very common in the mouth of the Nation u u u u u u Tanchum fol. 5. col 2. One returned to repentance his wife said to him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Raka if it be appoynted you to repent the very girdle wherewith you gird your self shall not be your own x x x x x x Id. fol. 18. col 4. A Heathen said to an Israelite Very sutable food is made ready for you at my house What is it saith the other To whom he replied swines-flesh Raka saith the Jew I must not eat of clean beasts with you y y y y y y Midras Tillin upon Psal. CXXXVII A Kings daughter was married to a certain durty fellow He commands her to stand by him as a mean Servant and to be his Butler To whom she said Raka I am a Kings daughter z z z z z z Id. fol. 38 col 4. One of the Scholars of R. Jochanan made sport with the teaching of his Master but returning at last to a sober mind Teach thou saith he O Master for thou art worthy to teach for I have found and seen that which thou hast taught To whom he replied 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Raka thou hadst not believed unless thou hadst seen a a a a a a Bab. Berac fol. 32. 2. A certain Captain saluted a religious man praying in the way but he saluted him not again He waited till he had done his prayer and saith to him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Raka It is written in your Law c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Into Hell fire The Jews do very usually express Hell or the place of the damned by the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gehinnom which might be shewn in infinite examples The manner of speech being taken from the vally of Hinnom a place infamous for foul Idolatry committed there for the howlings of Infants roasted to Molech filth carried out thither and for a fire that always was burning and so most fit to represent the horror of Hell b b b b b b Bab. Erubhin fol. 19. 1. There are three doors of Gehenna one in the Wilderness as it is written They went down and all that belonged to them alive into Hell Num. XVI 33. Another in the Sea as it is written Out of the belly of Hell have I called thou hast heard my voice Jon. II. 2. The Third in Jerusalem as it is written Thus saith the Lord whose fire is in Sion and his furnace in Jerusalem Esai XXXI 9. The Tradition of the School of R. Ismael Whose fire is in Sion this is the Gate of Gehenna The Chaldee Paraphrast upon Esai ch XXXIII ver 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gehenna eternal fire c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Gehenna of eternal fire We come now to the sentences and sense of the Verse A threefoid punishment is adjudged to a threefold wickedness Judgment to him that is angry 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is without cause Judgment also and that by the Sanhedrin that calls Raka Judgment of Hell to him that calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Fool. That which is here produced of the threefold Sanhedrin among the Jewes pleases me not because passing over other reasons mention of the Sanhedrin is made only in the middle clause How the Judgment in the first clause is to be distinguished from the Judgment of the Sanhedrin in the second will very easily appear from this Gloss and Commentary of the Talmudists Of not killing c c c c c
Pet. II. Their sins will not let them linger and slumber but continually cry in the ears of God for judgment The injuries they do to Law Gospel and Blood of Christ will not let them linger nor slumber but these are continually crying to God to avenge their cause And will not God avenge his cause What need I speak of his Soveraignty challenging that he dispose of all mens eternal being as he brought them into being here What should I speak of his Justice challenging that every one be rewarded according to his work And indeed what need I to insist much to prove that God is Judge of all and that he will bring all to judgment to any that call themselves Christians and have the Bible in their hand And so I have done with the first double Proposition in the Text viz. That God is Judge and Judge of all And now briefly to speak to the second duplicity viz. He stands before the door and before the door of all I know the Apostles expression means in general the Judge is near but if it should come to particularizing of this or the other or any person would he not say the same And will not any say the same that will acknowledge a Judge or Judgment Who can say who dares say the Judge stands not before my door I am sure a good man dares not say so for he accounts his God and Judge near unto him Thou compassest my path and my lying down and art acquainted with all my ways Psal. CXXXIX 3. And if any wretched man dare say so let him take heed that he finds not his Judge a great deal nearer than he supposes nay the nearer for his putting him so far off The Scripture speaks of two kinds of people but indeed are but one and they seem to look two several ways whereas indeed they look but one and the same way viz. those that put the evil day far from them and those that desire the evil days coming You have mention of them both near together in one and the same Prophet Of the former Amos VI. 3. Wo to you that put the evil day far away And of the latter Amos V. 18. Wo to you that desire the day of the Lord. How they put away the evil day in their own foolish fancy and conceit is no hard thing to understand I wish that too common experience had not acquainted us with that too much and too many a time But how do such wicked wretches desire the day of the Lord The Prophet Esay tells you of some Chap. V. 19. That say let him make speed and hasten his work that we may see it and let the counsil of the holy one of Israel draw near and come that we may know it And all this in scorn as making a puff at the Word of the Lord that tells of an evil day and a day of the Lord to come Here is talk of the Word of the Lord I pray you let us see it and telling of the Lords coming where is it Let him come that we may know it Directly these mockers 2 Pet. III. 2. That say in scorn where is the promise of his coming Now is the Judge ever the farther off for these mens putting him and his judgment far away Nay is he not the nearer In that place of Esay the wretches that spake so in scorn are said to draw iniquity with cords of vanity and sin as it were with cart-ropes And if they draw these do they not draw judgment on too Judgment is the nearest when the sinner is securest and when men cry peace peace then sudden destruction cometh upon them 1 Thes. V. But First At whose door doth not the Judge stand harkening and taking notice of mens behaviour Rev. III. 20. Behold I stand at the door and knock He knocks that if it may be he may be admitted but if he be not he stands not in vain but takes notice of what passes in the house that he may take account of it in his due time Jer. VIII 6. I hearkned and heard but they spake not aright no man repented him of his wickedness saying what have I done Mal. III. 16. The Lord hearkened and heard and a book of remembrance was written before him The Judge writes what passes and in time will have a reckoning about it And so may the counsil of the Apostle here be very well construed Grudge not brethren one against another grumble not repine not one against another for the Judge is at the door and he takes notice of every thing that passeth and you must account for it It were an excellent lesson for every Christian to get the hundred and nine and thirtieth Psalm not only by heart but in his heart and to be convinced and have a feeling of what is there spoken concerning Gods nearness to every man in what place and posture soever he is I need no more proof for that we are speaking of than only that Psalm I would every heart would make the Use of the doctrine there taught and make Application by his practise Secondly Who can say otherwise then that the Judge is at the door and may break in any moment by death and judgment And this needs no other proof than only to remember the uncertainty of death and judgment Isaac was of this belief when he said I know not the day of my death Gen. XXVII 2. whereas he lived many a fair year after And remarkable is that of the Apostle that when he is speaking of the Judgment to come he states it as if it were to come even in his time whereas so many hundred of years above a thousand are passed since his time We shall not all die but we shall all be changed 1 Cor. XV. And 1 Thes. IV. The Lord himself shall descend from Heaven with a shout And then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with him into the clouds Why Blessed Apostle dost thou think the resurrection and general judgment shall come while thou art alive Do it or do it not I have learned always to think that the Judge always stands before the door And I would teach all generations and ages to believe the same that the Judge standeth c. And Thirdly who can keep him out when he is pleased to break in Elisha could shut the door against the Kings messenger that was sent to take away his life can any man do it against the great Judge when he comes to do it Are any doors judgment proof when the Lord will batter against them Rather list up your heads O ye gates and be lift up O ye everlasting doors that the King of glory may come in Prepare to meet thy God O Israel that when he comes thou mayest comfortably entertain him It may seem a very hard passage that of the Apostle 2 Pet. III. 12. Looking for and hasting to the day of God when the heavens being on fire shall
him from death and was heard in that he feared It lies upon glorified Saints in one part of it viz. Thanksgiving It is so a Duty for the unholiest that though they sin in their prayers yet they sin worse if they pray not Your prayers are not sin as to the Act but because of other things External adoration is absolutely required to be given to God by all his creatures and if that be not yielded they doubtless sin This the wicked man when he prays gives to God They mistake foul that say Pray not till the Spirit move you Truth saith Pray because Duty requires you and in doing your duty wait for the Spirit 3. It is a Duty that makes out and sanctifies all our duties As 1 Tim. IV. 5. Every creature of God is sanctified by the Word of God and Prayer So is every religious duty that we perform What is our hearing reading meditation if we pray not that God would sanctifie it and make it beneficial to holy ends and purposes to us 4. We had need to pray in reference to our Duty lest God turn us out of all and own us not for Tenants because we pay not our Rent You read in XXX Exod. 12. c. That every Israelite was to give half a shekel for the Redemption of his Soul the rich was not to give more nor the poor less This Christ himself paid Matth. XVII 24. c. Prayer is that half shekel to us The rich can give no more and the poor hath this to give viz. To make our humble acknowledgments to God for our lives and our comforts This is the greatest owning of our homage and none is so poor as to be without it The words that signifie Prayer speak this viz. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Judging our selves and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Depending upon grace We hold all upon grace The acknowledgment of this is the payment of our Homage to our Creator Would you comfortably enjoy your Houses Lands Studies Comforts pay your Rent Pray Pray Pray See what becomes of them that pay not this Homage Jerem. X. 25. Pour out thy sury upon the Heathen that know thee not and upon the Families that call not on thy Name Secondly We had need pray because of our wants This is the only way for our supply II. This is the bucket to draw our Water Ask and you shall have Call upon me in the time of trouble and I will deliver thee Yea though God know our wants we must pray for the supply of them That is a strange motive to prayer in Matth. VI. 8. Your heavenly Father knoweth what things ye have need of before ye ask them What need then is there to tell them If he will give he will give whether we ask or ask not Yes pray for what ye stand in need of though ye are sure of the grant of those things Daniel prayed for the restoration of the Captivity which he knew certain David for the pardon of his sin which he knew God would pardon And that for these reasons First God will have his Homage T is reason Elias should have his cake first that provides meal for the maintenance of the whole family 1 Kings XVII 13. Secondly We pray not to shew God our wants as if he were ignorant of them but to shew that we are sensible of them and to signifie that we know he only is able to supply them Saints are called poor because they know their wants and know they live on Gods Alms. See Rev. III. 17 18. Because thou sayest I am rich and encreased with goods and have need of nothing and knowest not that thou art wretched and miserable and poor and blind and naked I counsil thee to buy of me gold tryed in the fire that thou mayest be rich c. God would that this Church of Laodicca should know her wants and buy by prayer the supply of them Thirdly I may add We had need to pray because of our advantage and benefit yea though we receive not particularly what we pray for Though as Psal. XXII 2. We cry in the day time and God heareth not and in the night season we take no rest Though God seem as in Psal. LXXXVIII 14. to cast off our Soul and hide his face from us yet we had need to pray still because we still want and if we never receive particularly what we pray for yet these benefits we shall reap by our prayers 1. We keep up and refresh our communion with God Constant prayer hath this advantage that it suffereth not God to forget us Lord why hast thou forgotten me saith David Prayer permits not God to forget no more than a Mother can forget a crying child He that prays is Gods Remembrancer and gives him no rest 2. The more we pray the better God will know our faces at the day of judgment I know you not shall Christ say to some why They never looked towards him Psal. XIV 2 3. The Lord looked down from Heaven to see if there were any that did understand and seek God They are all gone aside c. And I. Esay 4. There t is said of wicked men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that they are estranged backward or turned backward To these methinks the great Judge will say another day Ye were always strangers to me such as turned their backs upon me I could never see your face and therefore verily I know you not But on the contrary he that now confesses Christ and makes himself known to him by prayers and humble addresses he will know and confess him at the day of Judgment 3. The more we pray the more the heart is in Heaven and with God So that Prayer it self is a blessed benefit Phil. III. 20. Our Conversation is in Heaven This of all other Conversations is the heavenly Conversation As Christ when he prayed was transfigured Luke IX 29. So in prayer the Christians heart is changed the soul is winged and mounts up till it gets hold of God as Jacob had him in his arms when he prayed 4. Time will come that all our prayers and tears shall meet us God puts our tears in his Bottle God reserves our prayers not one of them is left and we shall in time receive the fruit of them In 1 Kings VIII 59. There Solomon prays Let these my words wherewith I have made supplication before the Lord be nigh unto the Lord our God day and night that he maintain the cause of his Servant c. Prayers are nigh unto God And thus I have finished the first Observation viz. That we had need to pray I come to the second II. That we had need to be taught to pray There is no doing spiritual work but according to the Patern in the Mount God prescribed Forms As at the offering of the first-fruits of the Land of Canaan XXVI Deut. 3 4. c. Thou shalt go unto the Priest that shall be in those days and
to hinder him from the Love of God the Believer hath Sin the World the Flesh the Devil nay Deum Visum iratum God himself when he seems to be angry yet he loves God through all these Whereas Adam fell in the first opposition 3. A Believers obedience is more excellent than Adam did or could perform Adam had no hindrance nay he was not in a condition of passive obedience A Believer obeys through poverty sadness pains nay to death it self Thus Having the Spirit speaks not perfection yet at last brings to perfection in Heaven Adam begun in perfection and grew imperfect Holiness begins and sojourns in imperfection here and ends in perfection hereafter VII Having the Spirit speaks having it for ever XIII Joh. 1. Having loved his own which were in the World he loved them unto the end The falls of them that have the Spirit as for example of Peter of David speaks not the loss of the Spirit nor the weakness of the Spirit but only the Spirits disposing Every sickness is not loss of life so every fall is not the loss of the Spirit I might illustrate this from the Spirits acting in ruling and guiding the course of nature The Spirit as Creator preserves the Universe in its being and order How In that he hath set rules in the course of nature that there should be such seasons such productions such causes to produce such effects that warmth and nearness of the Sun should cause Spring and Summer and so contra And the Spirit sits above all and gives influence So when Nature is inverted that there happen winter-weather in Summer and contra Summer-weather in Winter the Spirit is not departed from his work nor is he become weak but so disposes and that after his own Rule viz. Northern cold winds and rain to breed cold though in Summer thick cloudy air and sky warmth even in Winter So though he fails of the Rule set in regard of the seasons yet not of the Rule set of such causes producing such effects So the Spirit hath set a Rule in Course in the work of Grace that such cause produce such effect that it should be Summer or Winter with the Christian as the Sun of Righteousness is near or far off And in Winter we have not lost the Sun though he be not so near Now when the Course of Grace is inverted and man falls the Spirit is not lost but this is according to the Rule set of causes and effects care of mens ways to produce growth and comfort neglect thereof to produce failings But yet the Spirit is not quite gone from his work VIII Having the Spirit speaks not having the gift of Prophesie As some did not distinguish before concerning the Indowments of the Spirit so do others not distinguish here or at least confound Hence some will say I believe therefore I have the Spirit of prophesie Of all men I believe least they have the Spirit that boast of it But to this I shall only say two things First Did the very holiness of Christs person necessarily indue him with the Spirit of Prophesie If so then what need had he of the gift of the Spirit It is said of John Luke I. 15. That he should be filled with the Holy Ghost even from his mothers womb But it is not said so of Christ. Nor was John Baptist filled with the Holy Ghost in that sense Secondly These are of so different natures that one is not the cause of the other 1. The Spirit of Sanctification is only to help our infirmities c. the Spirit of Prophesie not 2. The Spirit of Sanctification is beneficial to the person in order to his Salvation the other not 3. The Spirit of Sanctification only proves good the other may be the occasion of evil S. Pauls revelations were in danger to puff him up 2 Cor. XII 7. Lest I should be exalted above measure through the abundance of the Revelations there was given unto me a thorn in the flesh the messenger of Satan to buffet me 4. The Spirit of Sanctification changeth the heart the other not 5. It goeth through the whole soul the other not And thus I have done with the eight Observations I named which may serve as good directions for our understanding what it is to have the Spirit and what is the nature of his operations I might add more As First One may have the Spirit and not know it Secondly One may have a great measure of the Spirit and yet doubt whether he have it at all Thirdly The Spirit is not had upon courtesie of mans will but by the over-powering of Gods grace Fourthly The chief way of the working of the Spirit is to work Faith and Love and to build up Christians by Faith and Love A SERMON PREACHED AT S. MARIES Cambridge June 24. 1660. 1 COR. XIV 26. How is it then Brethren When ye come together every one of you hath a Psalm hath a Doctrine hath a Tongue hath a Revelation hath an Interpretation let all things be done to edifying THE last time I spoke of one abuse in the Publick Assembly of this Church of Corinth and that was misjudging and misreceiving the Holy Sacrament Here in the Text is another disorder and confusedness in the exercise of the Publick Ministry from what arising uncertain but certainly ending in non-edification as the Apostle intimates by the conclusion of the verse Such confusion indeed in their business that we know not where to find them and indeed the Chapter is very hard very hard either to find out what it was they did or what it is the Apostle would have them do or whence proceeded that enormity that he doth correct We will inquire after it the best we can and keep as near as we can to the words of the Text. In it are three parts I. What to do in a certain case How is it then Brethren II. The case propounded When ye come together every one of you hath a Psalm hath a Doctrine a Tongue hath a Revelation hath an Interpretation III. The Determination given Let all things be done to edifying I. What to do in a certain case 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a School-phrase and if I be not much deceived the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a word used infinitely in the Talmud and in Tanchum of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word occurs a thousand times It means most commonly What is to be done in this case or May such a thing be done Either will serve here Every one hath a Psalm hath a Doctrine hath a Tongue c. What is to be done in this case Or may we do thus and keep to this Custom The Apostle resolves the case in the end of the Verse Let all things be done to edifying And so vers 15. compared with vers 14. If I pray in an unknown Tongue my spirit prayeth but my understanding is unfruitful And then comes on 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What is
contabescere morbo corrodi to languish to pine away to be eaten up with some malady and if I miscount not you have it but three times in the Bible and those in the Psalms Psal. VI. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rendred by our English Mine eye is consumed because of grief by the Interlineary Latine Erosus est prae indignatione oculus meus And the very same words you have Psal. XXXI 9. where our English renders after the same manner and that Latine Contabuit and in the very next verse after 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 My bones are consumed Now the third person future of that word if you would write it in Greek letters you can hardly do it more properly than in the word Jesus that is before us And to this Hebrew word I cannot but conceive that the Syriack Translator had an Eye when he writes not Bar Jesus but Bar Shuma by which he means not Filius Nominis a man of Name or renown as some would have it and as indeed it might signifie but a man of sores swellings or breakings out for so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is taken in Levit. XII 2. in the Targum of Jerusalem and Jonathan upon the Law and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Esa. I. 6. and elsewhere in the Targum of the other Jonathan upon the Prophets And how Bar Shuma a man of sores agrees with Bar Jesus a man wasting and languishing I need not tell you But how doth Elymas agree with both vers 8. Elymas the Sorcerer for so is his name by interpretation But there is some scruple which name is meant whether his name Bar Jesus or his title Magus And that that hath been the currentest rendring hath been by the Arabick word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ain inchoante which signifies a knowing a wise man and so may be bowed to the sense of Magus But both the Syriack and Arabick Translators begin the word Elymas with another Letter I learn from that incomparable work for pains and learning the Heptaglot Lexicon that Alima or Elima Eliph inchoant in the Arabian Tongue signifies Dolere or cruciari to be in pain or anguish And I think I need to look no further how Elymas doth interpret Bar Jesus when the one signifies contabescere and the other dolere the one morbo corrodi and the other cruciari the words being so near a kin It were worth inquiring why his Hebrew name is rendred into Arabick and not into Greek as is generally done all along the New Testament with other names But that discussion is not so proper for this time and occasion The mans sickly names therefore Bar Jesus or Contabescens and Elymas or dolens may justly make us to look upon him as some pitiful pining langushing diseased body Which whether that were so or no is not much material but certainly the titles that the sacred Historian and blessed Apostle do give him put it out of all question that he carried a very sad sickly and diseased soul. The Jewish Writers when they would speak out a very wicked man indeed they say that he brake out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the superfluity of naughtiness as our English renders the phrase turned into Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jam. I. 21. Now read this mans Epithites and guess whether he could have broken out further than he did The holy Pen-man calls him a Jew a false prophet a Sorcerer vers 6. The holy Apostle calls him full of all subtilty full of all mischief the child of the Devil and enemy of all righteousness in the verse before us Titles or Epistles or Stigmata or call them what you will so foul that an hours discourse can speak but little to them of what might be or what were requisite to be spoken to give every of them their due Therefore to confine my self to the time I shall confine my discourse only to his present action upon which the Apostles Eye is more peculiarly intent viz. that he perverted and ceased not to pervert the right ways of the Lord. Into which sink of his as into a common sewer flowed all the rest of his puddles here mentioned some as causes of his so acting and some as instruments Hither flowed as causes his being a Jew a false prophet a Sorcerer these set him on work And hither flowed as instruments his subtilty his mischievousness his Devilishness his enmity against all righteousness these helped him in his work And what his work was or what is meant by his perverting the right ways of the Lord we need not go far to learn the eighth verse resolves it fully he withstood the Apostles Barnabss and Paul and he sought to turn away the Deputy Sergius Paulus from the faith He opposed the preaching of the Gospel and he opposed the conversion of the Gentile And such Emissaries some will tell you the Jews had abroad in the World for such a purpose subtil and mischievous men sent abroad purposely to oppose and contradict and vilifie the Gospel and to hinder as much as possibly the conversion of any Heathen It were too bold to say this man was sent by the Sanhedrin upon such an employment If he were not they could hardly have fitted themselves better for such a business than with him so accomplished and accoutred for so cursed a design The very mildest title that he carries viz. as he was a Jew speaks him capacitated and principled sufficiently for such an Employment had he been neither false prophet nor Sorcerer Accordingly I shall only take up that Epistle and relation of his and let all the rest alone and consider him as a Jew and so acting as a Jew in this his cursed employment Not ceasing to pervert the right ways of the Lord or to oppose the Gospel If you scan and observe the demeanor of the Devil in the two different ages of the World under Heathenism and under the Gospel you will find this to have been his method and his shifting policy viz. That under Heathenism he foisted upon the World the greatest lie that could be forged in Hell to make the Heathen believe that the Devils that they served were Gods And under the Gospel when that lie would not do he set men to oppose and contradict that greatest truth that could be revealed from Heaven the truth and tenor of the Gospel And the first Agents that he employed in this business was the Nation of the unbelieving Jews A generation by the very principles of their Religion fermented into a sowrness and contrariety to the Gospel and the right ways of the Lord in it Our Apostle in Rom. XI 8. tells us They were under the spirit of slumber And 1 Thes. II. 15. he intimates how they were under a spirit of contradiction They are contrary to all men Under the spirit of slumber so that all their Religion was but ● dream of men that slumbred And under the spirit of contradiction so that all their acting was
reliance upon Christ comes not into date till a man do the best he can to fit himself to be a sacrifice for that Altar The Altars sanctifying of the gift came not in date till the offering was fit for the Altar There must be these concurrents First It must be of the clean kinds of Beasts or Birds Oxen or Sheep or Goats Sparrows Pigeons or Turtles not Dog Cat Ass Bear not a Crow Raven Owl or Vultur Then it must be viewed by some skilful person that it be without blemish as well as that it be clean viz. That it be not a blind Bullock or Lamb that it be not broken diseased c. And lastly the Offerers free-will and mind in his offering must be concurrent And thus qualified it was fit for the Altar and the Altar sanctified it Now was there all this care about the offering of a beast upon a material Altar of brass or stone and is not as much at least required for the offering of a souls own self on Christ the Altar Must any thing polluted or unclean come near that Altar Faith in Christ is not so easie a matter as men take it for a man must first do all he can in purifying himself before he can believe For his believing is his refuging to Christ to make out for him when he sees he cannot do it himself And by this appears the vast difference 'twixt the believing of a Jew and the faith of a true Christian. The Jew as he thought performed the Law and believed that he should be justified by his performance and looked no further A true Christian observes the Law the best he can but when he hath done all he finds himself but an unprofitable servant and that he comes infinitely short of Justification by all he can therefore casts himself upon Christ to satisfie for him The sacrifices of God are a broken heart a broken and a contrite spirit O God thou wilt not despise Psal. LI. 17. Under the Law nothing that was broken or bruised was to be offered under the Gospel no heart but broken or bruised is to be offered And whereupon bruised and broken not only upon sight of the evil they have committed but also upon sense how little they can do of good when they have done their best And then lay such an heart upon the Altar Christ and the Altar sanctifies the gift and makes out for it Brethren take heed you be not deceived about Faith by which you must stand or fall to all eternity It is more than fancy or thinking or hoping you shall be saved by Christ it is more than taking on you to pray in the name of Christ more than begging mercy for the sake of Christ. It is working and labouring in the way of Gods Commandments till you be weary and heavy laden and then resting your selves in Christ for safety and refreshing It is doing your duty all you can and still leaning on Christ to make out all failings for you It is that that must bring up the reer of your best endeavours As Simon of Cyrene was laid hold upon to bear the Cross of Christ after him when it was too heavy for him So on the contrary lay hold on Christ and get him to bear your burthen for you when you your selves are not able to bear it II. By this also we may observe the absolute necessity of keeping Gods Commandments for salvation as well as the absolute necessity of faith for salvation and the amicable and indeed unseparable agreement 'twixt these two It is impossible to find acceptance with God for justification and salvation unless by faith in Christ we be presented as living sacrifices upon him the Altar And it is impossible to be fit sacrifices for that Altar unless by keeping the Commandments of God we be purified and fitted For as Faith purifieth the heart where it is once come Act. XV. 9. So keeping the Commandments of God is purifying the heart that Faith may come Consider of that 1 Pet. I. 22. Seeing you have purified your hearts in obeying of the truth Now what is obeying of the truth but doing what God in the word of truth directeth and commandeth and this also purifieth the heart toward believing as Faith doth when a man now believes And thus believing and obeying are so twisted together that without keeping of Gods Commandments the best you can you cannot come by Faith and Faith when it is come it cannot be without keeping of Gods Commandments the best you can For as to the former we may not unproperly apply those words of the Apostle Gal. III. 23. For before faith came we were kept under the Law shut up unto the faith which should afterwards be revealed And as to the later that in Jam. II. 26. As the body without the spirit is dead so faith without works is dead also And now to make some Application upon what hath been spoken and to take up the words in order First From the title here given to our Saviour that he is our Altar upon and through whom to offer our selves and all our services to God we may observe that the bare offering of Christ himself upon the Cross is not the all that a Christian hath to look after for his salvation but he himself is also to offer himself through Christ to God Christ was a dying sacrifice a Christian must be a living and as Christ voluntarily offered himself to God so is he also to do in his place and station How oft do we find in Scripture that the death of Christ doth challenge our dying to sin and not living to our selves 1 Cor. V. 7. Purge out the old leaven that ye may be a new lump for even Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us 2 Cor. V. 15. And that he died for all that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him that died for them And so there are divers other places to the like tenor The obedience of Christ does not dissolve the obedience of a Christian but enhance it For his obedience was not to disannul our obedience but to challenge it to love him who loved us first His offering himself was to lead us the way and to teach and engage us to offer our selves also He to die according to the will of God and we to live according to his will that is to die unto sin and to live unto righteousness Secondly Now since every one that is accepted of God is to be presented to him as a sacrifice offered through Christ as the most Sacred Altar it may give us just cause daily to examine our selves how fit we are to be presented to that Altar and from that Altar to God The Sacrifice under the Law was to be examined whether it were fit or no by one that was skilful in such a scrutiny The work now under the Gospel must be our own every one to examine his own heart since the heart
how they undervalue the Scriptures by that very opinion But yet will own and wrest and strain the Scriptures where they think it may serve their opinion Men will have their own minds and would have every thing to serve their humor and to maintain their conceits The Arian and Socinian will have Christ to be a Creature and not God the Holy Ghost a Creature and not God What do they gain by this toward Heaven Do they not set themselves further off when they make him that should redeem them but a Creature like themselves and him that should sanctifie them to be but a Creature like themselves But they must have their own minds These Sadducees what gained they by their opinion against the Resurrection and world to come What either profit or credit or comfort could their opinion carry with it that men should die like dogs or other beasts and there is an endof them But they must have their own minds And it is like they were well content there should be no Resurrection nor World to come For this opinion might very well serve a voluptuous life For a man to live as he pleased in all voluptuousness and pleasure and to hear no more of it never to be judged or called to account for what he had done This is a brave opinion to maintain lust and loosness and all manner of villany They in Esai XXII cry Let us eat and drink for to morrow we die One would think they should have been in another tune when they thought death was so near and left their jovializing to day when they think they must dye to morrow But dying was all the business they looked on and looked no further That was bitter to think of when they must perish with all their delights and pleasures and braveries but beyond death they little thought of any thing And so Historians report of the Egyptians that when they were feasting and in the height of their frolic and joviality a man brought in a dead mans skull and shewed to every one of them with these words added Eat and drink and make merry for you know not how soon you may be like to this One would think that the sight of such a spectacle should have called them to repentance and mourning and weeping and girding with sackcloth But they aimed it a clean contrary way viz. that since they were sure they should die they should take as much pleasure as they could while they lived and lose no time from their voluptuousness because they knew not how long or short their time might be and how soon they might be cut off from those delights It is more than probable that the Sadducees maintained their opinion to the like purpose and were very well content to forgoe the world to come that they might the freer and with less disquieture enjoy this The Pharisee fasted and was of a strict and severe life and conversation but the Sadducee thought it more delightsome to live more at large and not to deprive himself of those contents and pleasures that he might have here And it is more than probable that he so maintained his opinion upon that account at least his opinion did suite most properly with such a course The Sadducees denying of the Resurrection may justly mind us to make it our Hope and Awe unless we also should be Sadducees Let me use the strain of Paul to Agrippa Men and Brethren do you believe a Resurrection I know you believe it May I add and say I know you remember it This I dare say that if you do not I know you have no cause not to remmember it A thing of the greatest concernment that ever will befal you a thing as sure to come to you as you are sure you have come hitherto a thing that you can as little avoyd as you can avoyd death and a thing that must determine of your eternal state And do you not remember it I am sure we have all cause to remember it The Prayer of Moses for the people is very reasonable pathetical and affectionate Deut. XXXII 29. O that they were wise that they understood this that they would consider their later end Do you not consider this out of these words That they that are not wise do not consider this and out of the thing it self we are speaking of that the Resurrection is our later end beyond our later end Death is our later end but the Resurrection is a later end beyond it And if the continual remembrance of death be needful as who will deny it the continual remembrance of the Resurrection is as needful I had almost said is more needful according to the rate that most men think of death Oh! how bitter is the remembrance of death to them that are at ease and in earthly prosperity But upon what account Because they must part with all their delights here and must be no more as they have been jocund and jovial and florid The Roman Emperor of old spoke not only his own sense but the sense of others when dying he cryed out Ah! poor soul wither must thou go now Thou must never jest more nor enjoy thy pleasures more as thou hast done So they thought of death but as an end and determining of their bravery here But the Resurrection must determine of their state for ever hereafter And if Solomons whips be whips Rehoboams whips are scorpions If death be so sharp to them to part them from their present delights what will the Resurrection be that will state them in a state undelightsome for ever Oh! how many sins might we have avoided in the course of our lives if we had had the serious remembrance and apprehension of the Resurrection And how many might we yet avoid In the midst of all our security and mirth and musick to have this as Belshhazzars hand writing upon the Wall in our eye But will this hold in the day of Resurrection Will this follow me in another world In the midst of our Pride and Bravery to think shall I be so drest at the Resurrection at the last day And will this Gallantry stand me in any stead in that day I cannot but fancy how a Sadducee that denies the Resurrection or any that are mindless of it will be surprized at that day He thought none should ever rise from the dead at all and he himself will be raised whether he will or no. Oh! let me lye still in the dust will his heart cry Let the earth cover me and the Mountains and rocks lie upon me No will the alarm of the great Trump sound Arise thou wretch and come to judgment And thou must come and no avoyding Eccles. X. 9 Know that for all these things God will bring thee to Judgment He will do it and thou canst not hinder him And so much concerning the first Article that a Sadducee put out of his Creed He II. would not own that there will be