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A36033 Pious annotations, upon the Holy Bible expounding the difficult places thereof learnedly, and plainly: vvith other things of great importance. By the reverend, learned and godly divine, Mr. Iohn Diodati, minister of the gospell; and now living in Geneva. It is ordered this 11. of Ianuury, 1642, by the committee of the House of Commons in Parliament, concerning printing, that this exposition of the book of the Old and new Testament, be printed by Nicholas Fussel, stationer. Iohn White.; Annotationes in Biblia. English Diodati, Giovanni, 1576-1649.; Hollar, Wenceslaus, 1607-1677, engraver. 1643 (1643) Wing D1510; Wing D1509A; ESTC R5893 1,521,231 922

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hee wipes of this scandall shewing how that Gods promises were neverthelesse firme towards them to whom they were destined by him at the first in his secret counsell namely to all true Israelites in spirit created and framed by him to bee his true people Aud that therein appeared Gods Soveraigne power to be adored with all humilitie in chusing from everlasting and saving in his due time those which were acceptable unto him from amongst the whole masse of humane generation which was corrupted and lost in Adam Leaving the rest to the rigour of his justice against their sinne brought up to a fulnesse in many by a voluntary and obstinate refusall of the remedy of his grace Whereby the one have no reason to complaine of Gods justice nor the others to extoll themselves thorow pride Seeing that lying in the same perdition they are delivered out of it thorow meere mercy And therefore hee exhorteth the Gentiles who are called in stead of the Iewes to a deepe humilitie perseverance and holy use of Gods grace And on the other side he comforteth the Iewes because that even from that time God verified his promises towards many of them called and converted to the faith and would at his appointed time restore and bring againe the whole body of the Nation together with the Gentiles into the possession of his covenant Then he goeth on to exhort to Christian duties as well towards God as in themselves and towards other men brethren or enemies Princes and Magistrates weake members of the Church in knowledge and faith especially concerning the use of Mosaicall ceremonies concerning which there were great contentions and scandalls in the Church in those dayes And in conclusion he recommends them to the grace of God and himselfe to their prayers CHAP. I. VERSE 3. WHich was made namely in his humane nature which is a meere creature and was assumed by the sonne of God in unity of person see Joh 1. 14. Gal. 4. 4. V. 4. declared as by asolemne and soveraigne sentence Psalm 2. 7. to be the true sonne of God against all false judgments calumnies contradictions and doubts of the world Luke 1. 35. 1 Tim. 3. 16. According to namely according to his divine nature called Spirit 1. Tim. 3. 16. Heb. 9. 14. 1 Pet. 3. 18. which was before covered under the infirmity of the flesh but in his resurrection and after it manifested and shewed in power of divine glorie by effects which we are in altogither to bee admired V. 5. Grace namely this singular gift of beeing his Apostle Or the guifts necessarie for so eminent an office for obedience to cause the Gentiles to Submite unto and receive the Gospell by faith thorow which Gospell Christ raigneth over men all nations namely the heathen ones whose Apostle especially Saint Paul was acts 9. 15. Gal. 1. 16. 1. Tim. 2. 7. 2. Tim. 1. 11. for his name the Italian by his name to cause him to be acknowledged Or by him in his name by his authoriie and comimssion V. 6. Called manifest ye are para●rkers of his covenant and members of his Church by his word directed to us and made effectuall by his spirit V. 8 Through Jesus Christ who is the means of this great good for which I give thankes and in whose name all prayers ought to be presented to God if we intened to have them heard and all our thanks-giving if wee mean they shall be acceptable to him the whole amongst the church Scattered overall the world V. 9. With my spirit the Italian in my spirit namely in my soul which is as it were the spirituall truth in which God is served by beleevers Or with my spirit that is to say with mine heart and intimate affection V. 13. That I might have that I might cause my ministerie to bring forth fruit amongst you to the advancement of Christs glorie and the salvation of his Church V. 14. Deb●our namely bound by mine office of Apostle to procure the salvation of all men and to communicate unto them the talent which for that purpose I have received of God to the uttermost of my power without any destinction of nations or conditions V. 16. The power namely the only most effectuall means to save man so he have faith in Christ who is therein proposed whereas man in his owne nature was not sufficient thereunto Rom. 5. 6. and the law of God it self was weak through the flesh Rom. 8. 3. to the Jew to which nation the Gospell was first to be preached See acts 13. 46. to the Greek under this name are comprehended all the Gentiles whereof the greatest part and nearest and best knowne to the Iews were native Greekes and spake the Greek tongue V. 17. For therein is the he proves that by the Gospell man obtaines life and salvation namly because it presents unto 〈◊〉 the onely meanes and cause of life namely the true righteousnesse which is Christ imputed to man through grace and imbraced by him by a lively faith whereunto Habakuks saying hath a relation who attributing the meanes of obtaining and professing a spirituall life unto faith doth consequently also attribute unto it the meanes of obuining righteousnesse which is the onely cause of the said life Gal. 3. 26. So that faith vivifieth in so much as it justifieth Now this righteousnesse is called Gods righteousnesse because he is the supreame Author of it having appointed his sonne who was true God for to fulfill and acquire it and that hee out of his meere grace bestoweth it upon his elect and accepts of it for their absolution and that it alone can subsist before his judgement Dan. 9. 24. and finally because it is the accomplishment of all his promises Gods righteousnesse being oftentimes taken for his loyalty and mercy Rom. 3. 26. From saith that is to say more and more according as the faith increaseth and groweth strong so it doth more and more enjoy the benefit of this righteousnesse Or the revolution of his righteousnesse is receaved by a continuall act of faith which never ought to cease unall it be come to its fulnesse and accomplishment in the life everlasting V. 18. For the he proves that men have need of this imputed righteousnesse for to bee ssved because that of themselves they are all unrighteous as it appeareth by Gods evident judgements upon all mankinde From Heaven as from the throne of his justice Seeing the effects thereof can no way have a relation to inferior causes or evidently as comming down from heaven Ungodlines and unrighteousnesse these are the two kinds of sin wherof the 〈◊〉 is against the first Table of the Law and the other gainst the second Who hold as being in bondage to their owne perversitie and malice by which they binder the truth from having dominion over their actions The truth namely all that light knowledge of God and of his nature judgment and will as hath remained in them after sinne ver 25. See Rom. 2.
because that the Law of Moses gives a man no strength nor helpe towards the accomplishing of it and yet doth inexorably require perfect obedience the Law of Christ contrariwise worketh in man the power of doing that which it commands and besides commandeth with mildnesse tempered according to mens weaknesses and ignorances In regard of the end because Moses his Law is to gain a right to life or to be condemned by it the Law of Christ to frame and direct man to the exercise and actions of life which is already given him by grace V. 20. I am I participate of his death as well in the expiation of my sinnes as in the gift of his Spirit which mortifieth in me the strength of sin and ingenders a new life in me of which Christ is the Root and Spring and that by vertue of the communion which I have with him as member of his bodie the band and tie whereof in this life is faith Ephes. 3. 17. V. 21. I do not that is to say I teach this that the Doctrine of Gods grace in Christ which is the onely cause of salvation may remain safe and untouched Rom. 4. 14 16. Righteousnesse namely the meanes whereby man is justified before God By the Law either wholly according the Pharisees opinion or in part according the error of those false Doctours now these two meanes of Faith and of Workes cannot either by Gods order or by the nature it selfe of the things be mixed together in causes of justification Rom. 4. 4. and 5. 6. 11. Wherefore if the least cause of righteousnesse and life be attributed to Workes it must wholly be attributed unto them and so Christ profiteth nothing Gal. 5. 2 3 4. And so likewise whosoever hath a recourse to Christ must absolutely renounce all considence in his own proper Workes Phil. 3. 8 9. CHAP. III. VER 1. SEt forth lively represented unto you with his death and passion and with the vertue and use thereof V. 2. Receiv●d you you have not received the spirit of regeneration from God nor the miraculous gifts thereof by meanes of the Jewish doctrine of Workes nor by your endeavouring to do them nor your adhering to them but by meanes of the Gospell embraced by faith then seeing that God hath ratified this Doctrine onely by this divine seal you ought not any way to doubt of it and you do very ill to varie therein V. 3. Begun the course and state of your vocation in Christianitie In the Spirit namely by faith regeneration and other effects of the Holie Ghost in which consists the substance and truth of the Gospell Iohn 4. 23. 2 Cor. 3. 6. 8. Made perfect you let the false Apostles perswade you that you may receive some addition of perfection by the observation of legall ceremonies as by a thing necessarie to mans righteousnesse and holinesse By the flesh by externall and corporall things such as those ceremonies were especially after their figurative and sacramentall use was nullified by Christ to establish new Sacraments See Phil. 3. 4. Heb. 7. 16. and 9. 10. V. 4. In vain namely for a Doctrine which now you renounce for the Jewes sakes who were the first authours of the Christians persecutions or without any fruit for the reward is promised to them which persevere If it be and not rather to your greater condemnation being that the abandoning of the truth after such great progresses therein and such strong proofes cannot chuse but be imputed for a far greater fault as there being greater violence and ruine therein as in a building alreadie raised to a great height more malignitie ingratitude towards God and more scandall towards men V. 5. Miracles the Italian powerfull workes that is to say high and noted miracles which in those beginnings were frequent in the Churches See 1 Cor. 12. 10. V. 7. Know yee the Italian yet you know that is to say this Doctrine is clear and resolved upon amongst Christians that the true children of Abraham comprehended in the covenant which God made with him and his posteritie are not the carnal Jewes which are borne of him or joyned to him by circumcision and by the professing of their ceremonies but all such as according to Abrahams example do renounce all confidence in their own proper Workes and put it wholly in Gods promises and grace in Christ as Abraham was made a father example and paragon of faith to all those to whom the covenant made with him was to appertain Of faith namely of the number and on that good side of those which follow that onely meanes of salvation See Rom. 4. 16. V. 8. The Scripture namely God speaking by it Rom. 9. 17. Gal. 3. 22. did formerly reveal his intent to Abraham to call the Gentiles at his appointed time through faith in his Son Preached before the Gospell namely he did propound unto him this Euangelicall promise In thee namely in so much as they shall be thy children and joyned to thee by communion and imitation of faith V. 10. For as many seeing there never were but these two meanes of obtaining Gods blessing but Workes and Faith and that through sin man hath made himselfe utterly uncapable of the first and therefore remaines accursed there is no way for him but either to remain in perdition without redemption or to have recourse unto the other meanes which is Faith Of the Workes namely of the number of their opinion and of their side who found the confidence of the righteousnesse and life upon their own Workes Rom. 4. 4 and 10. 3. For it is he doth presuppose it as a clear thing that no man after sin can persevere that is to say can accomplish the course of obedience in all its heads V. 11. But that no man let no man deceive himselfe in believing that the aforesaid sentence is onely pronounced against wicked men who are altogether given to evill the most righteous and holie do not live before God and consequently are not justified but onely by Faith seeing that righteousnesse is the onelie and perpetuall cause of life See Rom. 1. 17. as it appeares by this passage of Hab. 2. 4. V. 12. And the Law the Italian but the Law let everie one also beware of thinking to mix both the meanes together namely of Workes and of Faith in causes of life and justification for in this regard and for this effect Workes have no communitie with Faith neither in their own nature seeing they present to God mans own righteousnesse and Faith receives Christs righteousnesse for a gift nor by Gods order which makes these two meanes incompatible one with the other Rom. 4. 4 5. and 10. 5 6. and 116. But the man that is to say the substance and sum of the Law consists in mans own proper Workes contrarie to this reception by Faith in meer gift V. 13. Christ now he comes again to shew how a blessing comes upon the spirituall children of Abraham by Faith v. 9.
Gospel preached by Christ man and by the Apostles The world he ●als the state of the world ●o being by Christ restored from its ruine and spoil which through sin and death had befallen it as it had been foretold by the Prophets that it should be under the Messias the accomplishment whereof shall not be till his last comming Isai 65. 17. and 66. 22. Rom. 8. 20. Rev. 21. 1. V. 6. But one that is to say he hath subjected it to man in Christs person as it appeares by that passage of the Psalmist What is man See the Exposition of this upon Psal. 8. 4. V. 7. Thou madest him Though the humane nature which Christ hath taken upon him of it selfe be inferiour to the Angels who are spiritual creatures more sublime potent and glorious than man yet the universall Kingdom is attributed to Christ Man and not to the Angels A little this if it have a relation to Christ signifies the time of his humiliation V. 8. For in that in this universalitie of things which are subject to Christs Kingdom the Angels themselves are comprehended But now though for the present we do not yet see the accomplishment of this Kingdom the Church being as yet not wholly gathered together nor glorified nor joyned with God nor all her enemies beaten down and destroyed yet Christ reigneth powerfully and fulfilleth every thing from time to time according to his will and pleasure V. 9. We see by the high effects made manifest and considered by faith For the See upon Phil. 2. 9. That he now he proceeds to set down why Christ was made man namely that he might suffer death for sinfull men By the grace which is the first cause of salvation by Christ which he gives unto man for the price of his redemption and likewise accepts of it for satisfaction of his debt Should taste should die and should feel the extreme paines of death as it is joyned with Gods wrath and with his curse upon sin for which he had made himselfe a suretie and therefore is likened to a bitter cup Matth. 20. 22. and 26. 39. 42. For every man namely for every one of them whom his father hath bestowed upon him in which is comprehended the universaltie of his bodie and of his Kingdom John 6. 45. and 10. 15. and 12. 32. Rom. 5. 11. V. 10. It became it was a thing conformable and agreeable with his justice that Christ should make satisfaction for the sinnes of men Him for namely God the Father who is the soveraigne Authour and cause of all things and chiefly of the Elects salvation to whose glorie all things ought to be directed and referred as to their last end Rom. 11. 36. whereupon for the glorie of Christ our sureties great righteousnesse and of his infinite mercie towards men this meanes of salvation hath been most fitting and convenient To make the Italian to consecrate● namely to make him perfectly fitting and sufficient to be the Authour of eternal salvation to the Elect by the sacrifice of himselfe Isai 53. 10. and by it install him in his Kingdom a terme taken from the ancient consecrations of Priests Exod. 29. The Captain the Italian the Princé namely Christ Jesus who by his Priesthood hath obtained right to everlasting salvation for Gods chilrden and by his Kingdom brings them to the perfect fruition of it V. 11. For As he had in the former verse declared that it was convenient that Gods justice should receive satisfaction so now he further sheweth that it ought to be done by one who was likewise of humane nature as he was to whom the Law was given He that sanctifieth namely Christ according to the flesh in whom and by whom the guilt of sin hath been expiated and the corruption purified And they namely Gods elect Are all are all come from one father namely Adam V. 13. I will put my trust because David in all that eighteenth Psalme was the figure of Christ these words of the Psalme also ought to be applied to Christ to shew that he is not onely become Man but hath also taken the condition of Man upon him by being subject to the Law and bound to fulfill it upon confidence of the reward promised therefore Gal. 4. 4. Or to a man in a lowly estate weaknesse and miserie who did not for the present enjoy those goods which he expected and depended upon God and craved for assistance from his power and rested upon him And again in this passage Isai his children were also a figure of Christ being given by God for a token and assurance of a temporal deliverance which was the figure of the Everlasting which is promised together with it Isai 8. 10. V. 14. The children namely Isai his children Are partakers the Italian were partakers were very men subject to the same chances and dangers and were tokens pledges of a deliverance and not Angels nor glorified men He also that is to say Christ hath likewise been very man as we all are to be not onely the signe or token but also the Authour and Foundation of salvation Through death that by it having expiated the elects sinnes and appeased Gods wrath he might disannull the devils power over them which he exercises onely to death and destruction as minister of Gods wrath upon sin V. 15. Them the Italian all them this must be restrained onely to the elect as verse 9. Rom. 11. 32. Col. 1. 20. Through fear who even in this world carried the devils bonds and prison in their consciences by the terrours of everlasting death the true fore●unners of hell torments which was figured by the besieged Jewes terrour Isai 7. 2. to whom Isai with his children were sent to encourage them Isai 8. 12. 18. V. 16. For verily He confirmes that which he had said verse 14. of Christs communion in the selfe same humane nature for it is never said in the Scripture that he took upon him the nature of Angels in a personall union as he is foretold and represented true Man the Son of David and of Abraham V. 17. Wherefore seéing he hath made himselfe true man to save us it behoved him also to put on all our conditions not onely the natural ones but also those that are come upon us by reason of sin excepting sin it selfe That he might be that being touched with a lively feeling of the miseries of humane nature he might the rather be induced to free it from them by the sacrifice of himselfe and by his intercession wherein he should shew great mercie towards men and perfect loyaltie and obedience to God in performing the taske which was imposed upon him Pertaining to every Priest being a M●diatour between God and men to offer unto God sacrifices prayers and intercessions and to do all other religious actions Heb. 5. 1. and to bring men tidings of Gods peace and grace and to blesse and instruct them in his Name See Exod. 18. 19. V. 18. For
these besides Wife That is to say Concubine verse 6. 1 Chron. 1. 32. Such women were marryed by the custome of inhabiting together but were not partakers of their husbands dignity and estate as the true wives called Ladies An abuse of Gods first Ordinance tolerated in those dayes Gen. 30. 4 9. V. 2. Zi 〈…〉 ram These were the heads of many people of Arabia and neighbouring Nations V. 3. Ashurim See concerning these names that have a plurall termination Gen. 10. 4. V. 5. Gave Made him his full and generall heire V. 6. The East Country Called afterwards Arabia which people were called the children of the East or Easterne in regard of Palestina See Judg. 6. 3. and 7. 12. Job 1. 3. V. 8. Gathered See upon Gen. 15. 15. V. 13. According As they have beene set down in their Registers and Genealogies and their names as being heads of Nations have remained to their posterity Nebaioth The Nabateans and the Chadarens named in histories amongst the people of Arabia descended from these V. 16. By their That is to say the names of these heads were given to the places where their p●st●rity dwelt which through the craggednesse of the Countrey were either strong castles or unwalled townes V. 18. And he dyed c. The Italian hath And his Countrey fell to him before all his brethren As well that which he first inhabited as that which hee afterwards usurped V. 20. Padan Aram was a part of Mesopotamia where Charran was V. 22. Struggled By an extraordinary and prodigious kind of moving which was by Rebecca her selfe found to be such If it be so fore-seeing by this prodigi● that her burthen was of two breth●e● which should hate and hurt one another To enquire By some Prophet or by some divine revelation in a dreame or by some Angels message obtained by prayers and devotion V. 23. Two nations The heads of two nations the one blessed and the other rejected Shall be stronger bodily the people issuing from Jacob the younger shall bring into subjection the other which issued from the Elder 2 Sam. 8 14. 1 King 22. 48. and spiritually the Church little and weake in the world shall overcome by the word and by the spirit and by the power of God the world and its kingdome represented by the wicked Idumeans perpetuall and capitall enemies to Gods people Shall serve Being by me bere●● of his right of first borne which was to command his brethren and all the house under his Father Gen. 4. 7. and 49. 3. See concerning this accursed slavery Mal. 1. 3. V. 25. R●a That is with a red hayre all over his body Esau That is to say a man of his hands valiant and of deeds as ordinarily your red and hairy men are Or a man already wholly formed because that when a body is hairy he is a man already and not like a new borne babe V. 26. Tooke hold A miraculous signe to signifie that Jacob should in a manner strike up Esau's heels by getting away his birth-right and that the Church by the only power of the spirit should overthrow her enemies though mightier than she Iacob That is to say supplanter or a wrestler that striketh up ones heeles V. 27. Hunter The qualities of the Children of the world to be violent and fierce and of the children of God to be simple and milde are here pointed out by the two different natures of these two brothers See Gen. 10. 9. Of the field A man having a sociable civill and homely life loving to live in the fields Dwelling homely stayed and peacefull V. 29. Sod All this was brought to passe by a secret providence of God which doth not for all that cleare Jacob from all manner of deceit and evill cunning yet makes Esau his prophanenesse evident in despising that which was taken from him by Gods decree v. 23. V. 30. Edom That is to say red Gods people used this name more than the other Esau in remembrance of this voluntary sale which justified their contention against the Idumeans their perpetuall emulators and adversaries Amos 1. 11. deriving this name more from the red pottage than from his haire ver 25. V. 31. Thy Which in those dayes carryed the Patriarchship with it and the first degree in the blessed race and the dignity of the sacred function See Gen. 4. 7. Exod. 19. 22. Num. 8. 16. to this is answerable the spirituall birth-right of the Church Exod. 4. 22. Jer. 31. 9. Ja. 1. 18. V. 32. I am at That is to say I am mortall and any manner of living doth daily expose me to a thousand dangers why should I then debarre my selfe of a present pleasure for this imaginary dignity Here is his prophanenesse found noted in him Heb. 12. 16. whereby hee despised the signes and earnests of the spirituall graces 〈◊〉 V. 34. He did eat This plaine relation shewe● 〈◊〉 Esau his security and astonishment in his sin CHAP. XXVI VERS 1. VNto thee To thy person will I now presently give the use and peaceable and sure enjoying of it and to thy posterity the possession and proprietie V. 5. Because that God doth fulfill his promises for the same reason by which he was moved to make them which is nothing else but his meere grace and not mans works Rom. 4. 4. But because between the promise and the accomplishment hee hath ordained the way of faith and obedience on mans side Gen. 17. 9. The Scripture doth often attribute the effect not to the Soveraigne and only cause but to means well observed See Genesis 22. 16. to incite man to his duty V. 8. Sporting Using some pleasant familiarity of a husband V. 14. Of servants Or a great deale of land to manure V. 16. For thou Because thy great number of people is a hinderance to us and thy power and wealth breeds a jealousie wherefore for our security and to the end we may continue friends it were good thou shouldest go● further from us V. 20. Ezek That is to say strife V. 21. Sitna Enmity hatred opposition V. 22. Reh●both Making of roome He shall be The Italian hath it We being or we may be fruitfull in the land or as we shall increase V. 24. Sake Alwayes regarding what I promised to Abraham and his progeny the conditions of which promise hee hath faithfully kept So that the blessing of his off-spring proceedeth alwayes from this h●ad or fountaine V. 29. That thou wilt The Italian hath it if ever thou shalt A manner of swearing amongst the Jewes the execration being alwayes understood to bee meant to which hee was to bee subject that did forsweare himselfe Thou art The Italian hath it Thou who a●t Hee like a prophane man attributeth unto himselfe to bee partly the cause of Gods blessing as if it had laine in his power to hinder it V. 33. Called it That is to say confirmed the name which Abraham had given it before See the one and twentieth Chapter of Genesis
Towards thy holy habitation That is to say the land of Canaan where thou hast determined to set thy holy temple and the habitation of the signes of thy presence in grace and power V. 14. Shall ●eare The Italian Have heard it He speaketh of times to come in words signifying times past according to the manner of Prophets V. 16. As still The Hebrew hath it quiet and mute See Gen. 35. 5. Psa. 76. 6. V. 17. The mountaine that is to say the hilly countrey of Canaan which thou hast chosen for the place of thy service and for the habitation of thy people Deut. 32. 8. 9. especially mount Moriah destinated for the building of the Temple Psa. 75. V. 20. The Prophetesse See Num. 12. 2. A timbrell according to the manner of publick rejoycings Judg. 11. 34. 1 Sam. 18 6. Psa. 68. 26. Danc●s That is to say mounting motions of the body in token of rejoycing exultation and rapture of the mind without any lasciviousnes or lightnes See 2 Sam. 6. 14. 21. others translate it Flutes V. 21. Answered In manner of an antheme as 1 Chron. 16. 41. 2 Cron. 5. 18. Esdras 3. 11. Jer. 33. 11. V. 23. Marah That is to say bitternesse or a bitter thing V. 25. Atree Either that this naturall property was in the wood increased peradventure and strengthen'd by miracle or that all the vertue proceeded immediatly from God and that the wood was but only a token appointed by Gods will as 2 Kings 2. 20. and 4. 41. to which it pleased him to joyne his power to exercise the peoples and Moses faith and obedience Made he began to give them straiter lawes of obedience having by the meeting with these waters had a triall of their perversenesse and by the miraculous changing of them given them sufficient cause to depend wholly upon his providence Exod. 16. 4. Deut. 8. 16. V. 26 Diseases And other plagues Healeth Or preserveth 2 Cron. 30. 20. CHAP. XVI VERS 3. BY the hand by these miraculous plagues wherewith the Lord smote the Egyptians V. 4. From Heaven a food created by God in the aire wherefore it is called the corne of Heaven and Angels Psa. 78. 24 25. and 105. 40. V. 5. Prepare Because that Manna might be prepared diverse waies V. 23. Num. 11. 8. which was forbidden on the Sabbath day Ex. 35. 3. Bring in for the Sabbath dayes meales V. 6. That the Lord and not we of our own proper motion V. 7. The glory A miraculous effect of his soveraign power namely Manna V. 9. Before towards the pillar of cloud which was a token of Gods presence V. 10. The glory Some extraordinary and divine brightnesse Lev. 9. 6. 23. Num. 14. 10. V. 12. At even The Italian hath it Betweene the two evens see upon Exo. 12. 6. V. 13. The dew The Italian hath A floure of dew this was a superficies of a liquid and aereall substance which through the coolenes of the morning was congealed into little co●nes which were Manna V. 14. Gone up The Italian Vanished that liquid body beeing turned into cornes V. 15. Manna It should seeme that at that time Manna was the name of the airy honey or honied dew which to this day is to be found in diverse places like to that of the wildernes which was always so called by the Easterlings But Moses presently sheweth the difference namely that this was produced and sent by miracle for the time of their pilgrimage in the desert whereas the other is naturall and falleth only in certain places and at certain seasons V. 16. ●o his eating That is to say his own and his families An Omer A kind of measure containing the tenth part of an Epha v. 36. V. 20. Left of it either through distrust or curiosity V. 22. Same this sheweth that the people made this provision of their own accord to the end that they might observe the Sabbath and that Moses had not as yet declared unto them Gods command concerning that in the v. 5. wherefore the rulers feared the people had transgressed the commandment which was to gather no more but an O●●er a day V. 23. Bake For Manna was to be dressed these two ways Num. 11. 8. V. 25. Unto the Lord Dedicated to his service laying aside al other businesses V. 29. Let not man go out To gather Manna or to do any servile work because he was to be at the holy assemblies Lev. 23. 3 4. and it was lawfull to go a Sabbath dayes journey Act. 12. to walk upon lawfull occasions V. 33. Said unto After the Tabernacle was set up a Pot which was of gold Heb. 9. 4. Before the before the A●ke which afterwards was the expressest and holiest signe of Gods presence V. 35. The testimony That is the Arke called of the testimony because that within it were the Tables of the Law Exo. 25. 25. Deut. 10. 5. wherein the Lord hath testified that is to say declared his will concerning mans duty and the Tables thereof are the sacred monument of his covenant Deut. 31. 26. CHAP. XVII VERS 1. Commandment Declared unto them by the standing still or moving of the pillar Exod. 13. 21. Now between Sin and Rephidim there were two resting places in Dophea and Alus Num. 33. 12 13. V. 2. D● ye tempt Make a rash triall of his power and truth through incredulitie and of his patience through malice and boldnesse The Lord the son of God who was personally present in the middest of the people and did conduct them See Exo. 13. 21. 23. 21. and so the Apostle expound it 1 Cor. 10. 9. V. 5. Elders See Exo 3. 16. Now they were to bee eye witnesses of the miracle which was denied the people either by reason of their incredulity or to cause them to beare more reverence to the wonderful works of God see Exo. 24. 1. 9. V. 6. I will stand I will cause the pillar to stand there in token that in that very place I will shew forth the power of my presence V. 7. Massa and Meriba Temptation and strife see another Meriba Num. 20. 13. V. 9. I will Thou Joshua shalt do what belongeth to a Captain and I will look to my office of Prophet to mediate with God for his assistance and to use the rod the instrument of his miracles to dispense that grace and supernaturall power unto thee which I shall have obtained by my prayers V. 10. H●r which sheweth that he was the head of the tribe of Judah which had the precedency of the other see Exo. ●4 14. 1 Chron 2. 19. So Hur was under Moses the chief politick magistrate as Aaron was chief of the Ecclesiasticall order and by these three was represented the whole body of the people when they joyned in prayer for the publick welfare V. 11 Held up with the rod in it For a token as well of the perseverance and fervour in prayer as of Gods action which followed in saving the people As
spirit to a deep reverence but the revelation and word of God were specially joyned to the milde and quiet signe to signifie unto us that Gods saving revelation of himselfe is in the Gospel onely which soundeth grace and comfort and not in his terrible Law see Exod. 19. 16. Heb. 12. 19. 24. V. 13. Wrapped through feare and a trembling respect and also because he was not able to endure the splendor of Gods majesty V. 15. Annoint the story doth not say that Elias annointed either Hazael or Iehu but that the Kingdome was promised to Hazael by Elisha 2 King 8. 13. that Iehu was annointed by one of Elishas disciples 2 King 9. 1. Whereby it is credible that the meaning of this Commandement is that Elias should give order that these things might bee done at their appointed times Vnlesse that Elias did performe these unctions and that they were afterwards reiterated at the time of their accomplishment V. 17. That him that this is not spoken according to the order of times for Iehu was before Hazael see 2 King 9. 24. and 10. 6. and 13. 3 but plainly to intimate that either of them should doe this execution Elisha though indeed Elisha used none but spirituall weapons of prayers threatnings curses which did all most certainly and infallibly come to passe see Hos. 6. 5. V. 18. Every mouth an act of adoration either pious Psal. 2. 12. or idolatrous Hos. 13. 2. V. 19. And cast for a signe of his being called to be a Prophet and successor in his office whose ordinary badge was a certaine kinde of mantle 2 King 1. 8. Zach. 13. 4. And it is likly that hee did therewithall annoint him and declare Gods will unto him V. 20. Kisse that is to say let me take my leave of them see Luke 9. 61. what have I take notice that what I have done to thee is a sacred token from God which bindeth thee to follow this vocation V. 21. And took in sign that hee gave over all his f●re employments and did take his leave of his friends CHAP. XX. VERS IIII. I Am thine I acknowledge my selfe to be thy vassall and am ready to doe thee hommage V. 5. Although I doe not meane as thou sayest I will be master and possessor of all thou hast V. 6. Yet I will the Italian Or else to morrow or but to morrow V. 7. Seeketh mischief he will stand to no reasonable agreement but will utterly destroy us denied him not I durst not deny him any thing before I had heard your advices Wherefore if you advise me I am ready to suffer any thing for the publike safety Or else you must prepare to defend your selves stoutly V. 10. If the dust words of proud boasting The meaning is I will come into Samaria with so many men that when I have brought it all to dust they shall not every man have their hands full V. 11. Let not him a proverb according to the common phrase thus We ought not to sing nor boast of a triumph before such time as wee have got the victory V. 12. Set your selves or make ready your Engines to batter it V. 14. Who shall Order who shall set upon the Camp after it is disordered by the young men V. 20. His man whomsoever hee met or encountred with V. 22. What thou dost not onely to provide thy selfe with humane meanes but also chiefly to obtaine the help of God and his gracious assistance through repentance prayer faith c. V. 24. Take the Kings away who are no souldiers and did cause disorder thorough their disobeence V. 30. A wall fell by some earthquake or other miraculous cause an inner chamber the Italian from chamber to chamber he got into some closet study● or inner chamber V. 32. He is Kings through good will and by reason of their equality in degree use to call one another brothers Now this elemency in Ahab was nought being contrary to the will of God vers 42. whether that will were declared to him by the Prophet or whether it was to bee understood by the miraculous victory granted by the Lord against a fierce and cruell invader V. 34. Streets the Italian Piazzaes or Places they might bee some Courts or Privi●edged places in Damascus where the Israelites had their Iudges and Magistrates depending upon the King of Israel without any dependency upon the King of Syria Or some Markets out of which the King of Israel had the tolls and other dues V. 35. Of the Sons there were certaine Schooles or Colledges of Prophets where Schollars were taught and did exercise themselves in holy Studies to prepare themselves for Prophetick Revelations and those Schooles were governed by certaine principall Prophets called fathers 1. Sam. 10. 12. and 19. 20. 2 Kings 2. 12. in the word declaring unto him that such was the will of God whereof the other was also inwardly certified Now by this example God shewed Ahab his error and the punishment which should follow it V. 38. VVith asher the Italian with a swathe or a capp or with dust V. 40. So shall that is to say I adjudge and condemne the to doe one or the other For i● the other were thy equall thou confessest that of thine own free will thou madest such a covenant with him And if hee was thy Master Captain o● superior thou were bound unto it by duty So Ahab condemnes himselfe as David did 2. Sam. 12. 5. for the Lord had put Benhadad into his hands to make him sure for his peoples safety and hee having freed him for his own particular profit deserved to be punished for it V. 42. Thy life according to the Law of the accursed thing Deut. 7. 26. Ios. 7. 12. CHAP. XXI VERS III. The Lord forbid for God had forbidden the alienating of possessions see Levit 25. 23. Ezec. 46. 18. V. 7. Doest thou thou art not worthy to be King being of such a dejected mind to be grieved at this refusall making no use of the absolute power which is in thine hands V. 9. Proclaime as if some grievous sin had been committed for which it was necessary to appease the wrath of God V. 15. Take possession not by any way of sorfeiture which was not used amongst Gods people but by a tyrannicall usurpation for though Naboths children had been dead 2 Kings 9. 26. yet had hee no right unto it as unto a voyd inheritance for it was to goe to the next of Kinne V. 18. Which is or who w'll be namely when thou comest to him hee returning from Iezreel where he now is taking possession of that vineyard V. 20. Thou hast thou hast given thy selfe over to all manner of wickednesse as a bondman who selling himselfe submits himselfe to doe whatsoever his master willeth see 2. Kings 17. 17. Rom 7. 14. V. 23. The wall the Italian the ditch such a one as wee now call a ditch with a false bray V. 25. None like amongst the Kings of
but one may gather by the Iewes practice that in the thirteenth day of the moneth which day the slaughter of the people should have been they did ordinarily fast in remembrance of the danger V. 32. In the book of the statutes and observations of the Iewes besides Moses Lawes CHAP. X. VER 3. SPeaking peace or speaking of peace to all c. studying and appointing such things as belonged to the prosperity and safety of them THE BOOK OF IOB The ARGUMENT THis Book containeth a true History and not as some have believed a fiction or morall parable as appeares by the Scripture it selfe Ezech. 14. 14. and Iam. 5. 11. The time when this hapned seemes to be when the people journeyed in the wildernesse after their deliverance out of Aegypt whereof there are manifest tracks in this book as of a thing newly done and yet fresh in mens memories The most common opinion is that Moses hath been the authour of it having written the narration in prose and the discourses which were held upon this subject in heroick verse fitting with the dignitie and gravity of the matter There bee therefore two parts in this book one is the history of what hapned to Iob an Edomite by Nation but faithfull in his religion and holy in his conversation who from the very heigth of an exceeding great happinesse which he enjoyed with a very pure conscience was by the Devills inducement and Gods permission upon a sudden plunged into an abisse of miseries corporall and spirituall internall and externall for the space of divers Months with a long and exceeding stronge tryall of his faith and pietie which had been calumniated by the Devill and termed mercenary Hypocrisie in which tryall and combate he at last remained victorious through his faith and perseverance though much shaken and tottered in the f●esh through its thoughts and motions And after he had been approved of by God hee was miraculously raised and super abundantly rewarded The second part containeth the opinions motions disputes and discourses of Iob and foure friends of his upon this subject The summe whereof is that Iob fully cetified by the holy Ghost of Gods grace in the promised Mediator apprehended by a lively faith a treasure preserved in a good conscience cannot reconcile this harsh outward usage with that inward seale And therefore hee most bitterly torm●nts and grieves himselfe and complaines of God to God himselfe urging him either to admit him to come before him to justifie himselfe or to know the causes of this so unaccustomed and strange manner of government Wherein though he shew the invincible force of his faith and uprightnesse of his conscience yet can he not be excused from excesse in his termes and words Contrariwise three of his friends grave and wise persons which came to comfort him seeing his tragicall and terrible calamities and hearing his immoderate discourses accuse him to have been a prophane and wicked man or a dissembling hypocrite seeing that Gods providence and justice which rewards every one according to his works did punish him with evident tokens of revenge beyond the temperatenesse and measure of the corrections and proofes of the faithfull And therefore they exhort him to convert himselfe to God and give glory to him in all humility and so to expect his deliverance from him But Iob re●ells these temerary accusations and absolutely denies their maxime namely that God doth alwayes make the rewards and punishments equall to mens deeds which is contradicted by the common expeience of all Ages He also refuseth to acknowledge himselfe to have been a wicked man contrary to his own conscience for that would have been a denying of the seale and witnesse of Gods Spirit in his heart depriving himselfe of the onely stay and comfort he had in all his evils and casting himselfe headlong into dispaire And therefore he granteth unto his friends that as he is a creature he will not nor cannot contend with his Creator if he please to treat with him in his Majesty and according to that soveraign right and power which hee hath over his creatures and also as a sinner by his own nature he yeeldeth unto the rigor of Gods Law if he will proceed against him as a Iudge but if he please to seat himselfe upon the throne of grace and from thence heare him as a sonne and a believer he is ready to lay himselfe open unto him and maintaine his innocencie and beare away the victory on his side And having thus stopped the mouth of his three frends Elihu the fourth stepts in reproving the three other for not having rightly debated this controversie and for being by that meanes forced to abandon Gods cause which they had undertak●n to defend And takes another way namely to leave to God and Iobs conscience to judge of that part of his life which was past and doth rebuke him for his present excesses and unreverences against Gods Majesty shewing him that it was no way incompatible but rather a very ordinary thing to be faithfull and yet grievously punished by God for triall and exercise or for correction and extirpation of some internall vice and defect not known or unequally weighed in mans own conscience Therefore he exhorteth Iob to silence humility and profound adoration of Gods judgements Finally Iob opposeth his faith and certaine assurance of Gods grace to his so severe visitations His three friends doe oppose the profession which hee made of piety faith and innocencie by reason of these his afflictions Elihu contrariwise maintaines that the one may subsist with the other and that in such perplexities the onely remedy is quietly to put ones selfe into the hands of God without any murmuring and contradiction approving of all that he dot● as most just Which also is the true and certaine decision of the question To which Iob submitting himselfe with silence the Lord appeares and doth stronglier confirme it by his sentence calling Iob and his three friends to a godly correcting of their opinions and to a friendly concord of wills CHAP. I. VER 1. OF Vz a part of the countrey of Edom Lam. 4. 21. which took its name from and was inhabited by the children of Vz of Esaus race Gen. 36. 28. see Ier. 25. 20. V. 3. His substance the Italian his cattell or his wealth and that as hee had houshold his number of servants as Gen. 26. 14. or husbandry of the East in respect of the land of Canaan as Judg. 6. 3. 1 Kings 4. 30. V. 4 Went at certaine times of the yeere they met at feasts of charity and brotherly conversation V. 5. Sanctified them prepared them by ceremoniall exercises and purifications as fasts abstinences and washings as Exod. 19. 10. and especially by internall and spirituall ones of prayers mortifications and meditations Gen. 35. 2. that they might without pollution or uncleannesse bee partakers of their fathers offerings burnt offerings see Lev. 1. 3. cursed God the Italian spoken evill of
bridle or mous●e for my mouth his meaning is I will bridle my inward motions and swellings so that my tongue shall not run out which is the first and suddenest budding of sin Iam. 3. 2. 3. is before me I will see him flourish and prosper abusing Gods patience with insolency and persecuting of the godly V. 2. Dum●● to not mur●●ure nor withstand Gods providence from good namely from that which was lawfull and reasonable for mee to speake in my sufferances for defence of mine innocency which was to complaine unto God and desire justice at his hands V. 3. Was ●●t seeing I could not evaporate my passion in words I doe inwardly boile through impatience V. 4. Make mee to know seeing mine afflictions are such that it seemes they can have no end but only with my life I pray thee let mee know the prefixed time of it that according to it I may provide my selfe with patience Or doe thou shorten it that I may not be quite overcome V. 5. Behold hee seemeth herein to correct his former wishes or desires as if hee said But why doe I thus grieve at the lastingnesse of my miseries seeing that mans life is so short cannot I comfort my selfe in the shortnesse of my life which will also shorten my miseries see 2 Cor. 4. 18. an hand breadth or foure fingers breadth which is one of the least geometricall measures at his best state the Italian though hee stand that is to say though hee be alive or in a prosperous and well settled state altogether vanity he is like an abbreviate or compound made of all that is brittle transitory and decaying in this world V. 6. Walketh the Italian goeth and commeth this vanity of man is not only discovered at his death which is so sud●en but in the whole course of his life also which is like unto a flying shaddow see 1 Cor. 7. 31. they are disquieted or tossed to and fro the Scripture often joyneth trouble and vanity together and also confounds the termes see Hos. 8. 7. an irrigular tossing to and fro being proper to light and empty bodies V. 7. And now Lord though I know very well by the discourse of reason that death will end my miseries yet that is not my true comfort which consists in nothing but only in thy grace and salvation V. 8. The foolish that is to say the worldly man who is preoccupated with false and erroneous opinions transported with vaine passions and drunken with his own prosperity see Psal. 14. 1. V. 9. I was dumbe the Italian I grow dumbe now that I have through faith set my soule in peace and leaving aside mine enemies who a●e but secondary causes of mine evills I am come up by vertue of thy spirit to thee who art the supreame cause I can voluntarily keep silence and have patience which before naturall reason could not induce mee to doe V. 11. For iniquity namely when corrections are sent by thee for an expresse punishment of sin either in fatherly severity to thy children or as a judge for a punishment to the wicked like a moth which is easily crushed and killed see Iob 27. 18. Psal. 58. 8. or by a secret kinde of consumption as a moth gnaweth or fretteth a garment and makes no noise see Ioh 13. 28. Isa. 50. 9. Hos. 5. 12. surely in the violent and fierce wrath of God mans vanity is plainly discovered which is not so well perceived in the slow and unperceivable decay of nature V. 12. A stranger I am to make but a short stay and abode in this life by thy sufferance therefore doe thou that art the everlasting Lord use that mercy towards mee which thou commandest to bee used towards strangers that are pious persons Or regard mee as a poore stranger who am come under thy roofe for protection as all I doe acknowledge my selfe to be in the same state of misery as all my predecessors were ond therefore I desire the same grace and favour as thy hands as they had before mee V. 13. Spare mee mitrigate the violence of mine affliction recover strength by faith in spirit that I may 〈…〉 ish my course and the good fight obtaining the victory through a happie death after which there is no more beginning againe be no more in regard of this life in which the fight continueth and is ended by death PSAL. XL. VER 1. I waited patiently the Italian I waited long Heb. in waiting I waited V. 2. Horrible pit that is to say out of horrible and unavoidable dangers and calamities Psal. 18. 16. and 69. 1. 2. a phrase taken from high falls of waters V. 3. A new song see Psal. 33. 3. and feare shall by these wonders bee brought to an humble reverence and worship of God and to trust in his goo●n●sse V. 4. Respecteth not doth not stay to build his hopes and enterprises upon the Kings and Princes of the world Psa. 62. 10. 118. 8. 146. 3. nor upon any meanes or assistauce of prophane and idolatrous men Others he turneth not af●er those c. doth not imitate those who trust in their own powers or deceitfull wisdomes which are the two kinds of carnall confidence which are blamefull V. 5. Thy thoughts no man can iustly acknowledge nor yeeld thee sufficient thanks for the singular acts of thy providence which are infinite in number and surpassing in greatnesse All that can be said or known is but only in part and in generall V. 6. Thou didest not for all these kindnesses thou desirest no other sacrifice but the true and spirituall sacrifice of new obedience and thanks-giving without which and in respect of which all externall sacrifices are of no esteeme in thy sight Heb. 10. 5. this hath a relation to the abolishment of the sacrifices of the law by Christ either by allusion or by the declaration of some secret meaning revealed to the Apostle by the spirit hast thou opened the Italian hast thou boared by thy spirit thou hast opened my heart and mine understanding to make mee know love and desire thy law see Isa. 35. 5. Acts 16. 1● Some think David had a relation to the law Exod. 21. 6. to boare or pierce his care who voluntarily did yeeld himselfe to perpetuall bondage and that the meaning is I of mine own accord have dedreated my se●fe to be thy servant and thou hast accepted of mee V. 7. Then said I namely after thou hadst disposed mee to thy obedien●e Ioe I come I answer to thy call and obey thy command I am ready to doe what thou pleasest this is also some intimation of Christs comming in the flesh in the volume Heb. in the roll according to the manner of ancient writing upon great long peeces of paper which were afterwards rolled up upon a little stick see Isa 34. 4. Ezec. 2. 9. it is written I doe submit my selfe to the obedience of thy law as if it were written particularly for mee Or to mee only and
to all thy regenerate elect doth thy law speake with fruit and efficacie producing in them the true effect of obedience and not to unbeleevers to whom it is unprofitable and doth oftentimes increase their rebellion V. 8. Within my heart the Italian in the middest of my bowels it is rooted in my heart not only by knowledge but also by a lively lo●e my heart is imprinted with it and it is written upon it see Ier. 31. 33. 2 Cor. 3. 3. V. 9. I have this is the second kinde of spirituall sacrifices namely of thanksgiving Hos. 14. 2. Heb. 13. ●5 righteousnesse he meaneth the● vangelicall righteousnesse which is no hing but Gods gr●ce and all the effects thereof accord●ng to his justice and loyalty in all his promises and convenant see Psa. 22. 3. Rom. 3. 21. 22. V. 11. VVith-held not doe not hinder them from comming ●●owring down upon mee preserve m●e doe thou employ them in protecting of mee V. 12. Mine iniquities the punishments of them have suddenly overtaken me see Num. 32. 23. Iob. 8. 4. faileth mee through horror and feare of thy judgement V. 15. Aha scorning and insulting over my miseries V. 16. Such as love that doe fervently desire it and use the right meanes to obtaine it PSAL. XLI VER 1. COnsid●reth the the Italian carrieth himselfe wisely towards the as well in judging soberly and charitably of the hidden causes of their affliction as in words and acts of humanity and mercy the Lord this is a promise of requiting the mercifull Mat. 5. 7. Or a reproof of mens false judgements and a comfort to the faithfull contrary unto their said judgements to whom David promiseth in Gods name that they shall bee a●ed and have a happy issue V. 3. Make the Italian turne a figurative terme taken from the making of a bed for a poor sick man that is to say thou wilt stirre up his bed Others thou wilt change his bed namely from a bed of sicknesse to a bed of rest V. 6. Speaketh va●ity the Italian speaketh lyingly that is to say maketh a false shew of friend-ship and good will gathereth out of all that he seeth or perceiveth in mee hee gathereth matter of evill and sinister thoughts V. 9. Mine own familiar hee speakes of some perfidious traitour who was the figure of Iudas lift up a figutative terme taken from the kicking of beasts V. 10. Requite them as I am a King and lawfull magistrate I will by way of justice requite their wicked treacheries and not out of any private passion which is alwayes condemned V. 11. Because mine because thou hast already abated his pride and confounded his hopes by beginning to restore mee V. 12. In mine my sicknesse and calamities have not endammaged nor diminished mine estate before thy being alwayes under thy safeguard and care as thy servant V. 13. from everlasting the Italian from one age that is to say in all ages to the end or from this present age to that which is to come that is to say from this time evermore PSAL. XLII THE title Maschil see Psa. 32. of Korah Heman one of the three heads of the holy musicians was one of Korah the Levites posterity 1 Chron. 6. 33. and 25. 5. 6. And these three Psalmes beare his name not that hee made them but because they were particularly sent to him for to keep them and play and sing them when his turne came to waite upon Gods service V. 1. The hart at all times by reason of his hot and dry nature which makes him extreame thirstie at a certaine season of the yeare but especially when hee is hunted my soule I servently desire to bee in thy tabernacle before thine Arke where thou art present in the tokens and effects of thy grace and vertue whereas I am now farre from them by reason of mine enemies persecutions and especially Sauls see Sam. 26. 19. V. 3. Where is seeing hee appeares no where to thy reliefe it is a signe that either hee hath no power or that hee hath cast thee off and is no longer thy God and that therefore if thou hopest in him thy hopes are all vaine V. 4. I power out that is to say my spirits are scattered and emptie themselves in teares and sorrow see Iob 30. 16. for I had gone with when I went to the house of God with a great company of people rejoycing according to the manner of solemne feasts see Isa. 30. 29. V. 5. For I shall yet I doe assure my selfe by faith that hee will give mee new cause to praise him when hee shall in grace turne towards mee whereon dependeth the salvation of all his elect Others expound it I will yet praise him and his salvation c. Or for his salvation V. 6. Remember thee I take comfort representing unto my selfe by faith in spirit thy presence and grace in thy Temple from which I am now absent from the land from the countrey which is neere the heads of Iordan meaning that great row of hills which is generally called Hermon Num. 34. 7. where David lay hadden during Sauls persecutions Missar the name of a hill not mentioned elsewhere V. 7. Deep calleth unto a figurative description of his calamities the meaning is that as after the thunder in the clouds there fall great showers of raine so thy wrath is followed by a whole deluge of afflictions which shower downe one after another without cease or end V. 8. VVill command the Italian will send that is to say I hope that after this fullnesse of calamities hee wi●l send forth a commission and con mand of grace sor to set mee free Psal 44. 4. and 68. 28. whereby the day shall be filled with his loving kindnesses and the night shall be employed in meditating upon them acknowledging them and setting them forth of my life the only author defender and preserver of it V. 9. I will say now in the state of affliction wherein I sinde my selfe at this present I will persevere in prayers expecting hereafter the effect of my Faith V. 11. The health the Italian the compleate safety the only author and perfect cause of my deliverance through which I hope yet one day I 〈◊〉 all be able to lift up my head freely and shew my countenance cleared through gladnesse and honour PSAL. XLIII VER 3. SEnd out according to the truth of ahy promises let mee againe behold the brightenesse of thy countenance namely of thy grate and favour which may disperse all the clouds of my calamities and may bring mee againe into thy Church out of which I am now driven by the violence of mine enemies PSAL. XLIV VER 〈◊〉 ANd cast them out the Italian and caused our fathers to grow that is to say thou causedst them to prosper and grow like vines or other plants which doe grow and spread abroad V. 3. Their own sword which though they did employ with much valour by Gods command yet it could not have wrought
he For all this it is not lawfull for man to contend with God But he ought with all humility to desire of him the assistance of his Spirit and grace V. 11. Seeing there be many things that the Italian When there is abundance of things they This s●●ue of covetousnesse is not beaten downe nor put out through the abundance of goods no more then fire i● quenched with the abundance of wood but waxeth greater and greater therefore true content cannot consist in that abundance V. 12. For who knoweth The chiefe cause of this error nemely of gathering together without any end● is mans ignorance which will not suffer him to limit his desires within the bounds of the shortnesse of his life but causeth his thoughts to range after the infinitenesse of time to come which he having no knowledge of it is a folly in him to seek to provide 〈…〉 it As a shadow which hath no substance and van 〈…〉 in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 leaving no signe where it hath been CHAP. VII VERS 1. A Good Now he sheweth that besides wordly goods the fruition of which he hath commended there are other goods which the faithfull man ought to look after namely eternall to which one must passe by death the meditation of which serves to direct the living to that happy end Name the Italian Fame Namely the true and sound na●e of faith and holinesse which confirmed by his death doth last afterwards Of death Namely of him that is a beleever and a childe of God and dieth in his favour V. 2. That is namely death which is the cause of that mourning the consideration of which causeth living men to think upon making themselves fit for it V. 3. Is better This meditation of death though it be sorrowfull is better for the salvation of man then all his m●●th seeing he doth by that mortifie his flesh and rendeth his heart from the world and lifteth it up to eternall goods Of the countenance of man in his naturall estate which is called the outward man 2 Cor. 4. 16. The heart That is to say the soule and the inward man Is made better spiritually V. 4. Of the wise Which looke after the end of things and think upon eternity whereas fooles are onely guided by sense and thinke no further th●● things present V. 5. It is better This meditation of death is indeed harsh to the flesh being a rough curbe to the vanities of the world but even as the severe reproofes of wise men are to be preferred before fooles tricks and jests So an humbling and correcting sorrow is more to be desired then alluring and be witching pleasure V. 6. For as the That is to say even as the fire which consumes the thornes causeth them to crackle for a small time so the spirit of this world which leads men to perdition transports them into an excesse of a false and short joy and by that meanes hindreth them from thinking upon repentance and a due preparation for death V. 7. Surely Now follow some particular precepts belonging to that wisdome which he hath spoken of before and first he sets downe some vicious passions which darken the lustre of it Oppression Namely the inclination and evill habit of doing wrong to other men in matters of justice whether it be through corruption or his owne proper passion of otherwise V. 8. Better The wise man looketh after the end of things according as he foreseeth it by the light of Gods Spirit and according to it he regulates himselfe and all his actions and will not be blinded with the false appearance of the time present See Deut. 32. 29. The proud That through a certaine pride and disdaine is moved at every small offence And he makes mention of this other passion of wrath as contrary to the peace and quietnesse of minde and to the moderation of true wisdome V. 10. Say not Be not so foolish as to say that the times of themselves are better or worse to impute the vices and calamities of the world unto the age But doe thou say that the times are such as the men are and that to amend the times the men ought for to amend themselves 11. Wisdome There are three things of singular value life an inheritance that is to say all things to maintaine life and wisdome for to governe it Meaning that the wise man should take a lawfull care for either according to his vocation V. 12. A defence the Italian A Shadow Riches indeed have this community with wisdome that they doe save a man out of many dangers and disasters yet the principall subsistency and true happinesse of mans life consists in wisedome V. 13 Consider Be wise in discerning the various wayes of Gods providence for to second them with thine affections of joy or sorrow See Ecclesiast 3. 1. 11. For who Since Gods will cannot be withstood nor the effects thereof bee altered wisedome would have a man submit himselfe quietly unto it V. 14. Consider For to have such a feeling as God calleth thee unto by his visitation Hath set he hath in this life mixed good with evill so that the one is a remedy and a curbe for the other To the end To direct man by th●se different meanes of mildnesse and severity unto a happie death for after that there are no more vicissitudes nor varieties all things are perpetuall neither is there any place for repentance or amendment Nothing Like to what befalleth him in this world After him Namely after his death V. 15. All things The Italian All this This may be referred as well to the precedent as to the subsequent things Of my Namely of my fraile and transitory life That perisheth Runnes into diverse mortall dangers and inconveniences In his Righteousnesse The Italian For his justice either being persecuted by Tyrants or misconstrued and calumniated or too indiscreetly and hatefully used The wise mans meaning is to shew that wisdome ought to bee joyned with uprightnesse in the guiding of mans life Wickednesse covered over with art and cunning or used with politicke craft V. 16. Righteous overmuch That is to say a too severe reprover of every petty error or too much bent upon a thing which of it selfe or in thine opinion is just without yeelding any way either in charitie or wise innocenccie to the opinion of others to the necessitie of times to common custome or to humane frailty Destroy thy selfe Making thy selfe as it were the very marke of publicke hatred V. 17. Be not Have also a greater care of loosening the raines too much to wickednesse which provoketh Gods suddain judgment Before thy The Italian Out of thy Before the 〈◊〉 of 〈…〉 all course and out of it by some violent and 〈◊〉 end which may carrie with it the tokens and signes of Gods expresse vengeance See Job 15. 32. and 22. 16. Psalm 55. 15. Prov. 10. 27. V. 18. That thou shouldest take hold That thou shouldest follow the middle way between Gods
Saviour as in time they they will make it fully appear V. 16. They shall be namely the Babylonians and other idolatrous people V. 17. Be saved he chiefly meanes the deliverance which Christ obtained for his Church whereof the deliverance from Babylon was but a figure and gage V. 18. To be inhabited by men who reaping benefit from all the other creatures ought also in the name and behoof of all the rest to obey and acknowledge the Creator V. 19. I have not the promises which I have made to my people are publikely and openly made wherefore when I shall have accomplished them there will bee no cause to doubt of mine eternall deitie see Isaiah 41. 23. and 43. 9 12. and 48. 16. Seek ye me looke after me onely and not after idols Righteousnesse in constant loyalty without any fraud or variation V. 20. Draw neer let all men that remaine in the world after Gods great judgements come in the time of the Messias and hear the voice of the Gospel which shall condemne and beat downe all manner of idolatry Revel 14. 7. That set up the Italian that carry in pompe and procession upon your shoulders V. 21. Take counsell to defend the idols cause if they can Isa. 41. 28. Declared this namely the Churches deliverance by Christ. V. 22. Look by faith conversion and service forsaking idolatry V. 23. In righteousnesse namely by a decree which hath the force of everlasting Law and is the rule of all manner of justice and righteousnesse see Isa. 42. 6. Shall sweare shall acknowledge me for the onely true God whose name alone is and ought to be taken in all lawfull oaths Gen. 31. 53. see Isa. 19. 18. and 65. 16. V. 24. Shall men come to yeeld unto him and to acknowledge him V. 25. Seed of Israel namely of the Israel according to the Spirit and Faith which is the whole Church of Gods Elect. Be justified that is to say they shall obtain remission of their sinnes and right unto everlasting life by vertue of the Son of Gods righteousnesse which shall be applied to them by faith to justification of life CHAP. XLVI Vers. 1. BEl Nebo names of chiefe Idols of Babylon Isaiah 21. 9. Jer. 50. 2. and 51. 44. Is bowed down that is to say the Babylonians seeing their City taken have thought to save their gods taking them down and speedily loading them upon beasts of carriage V. 2. They sloop namely all those idols They could not namely the Babylonians Others the idols themselves Themselves namely the idols which the heathen were wont to carry away captive together with the conquered nations 1 Sam. 5. 2. Jer. 43. 12. Dan. 11. 8. Hos. 10. 6. V. 3. Which are I have not born you as idolaters do bear their idols but I have borne you my selfe that is to say have taken you even from your first beginning into my care and protection see Exo. 19. 4. Deut. 1. 31. Psal. 22. 10. and 71. 6 18. Isa. 63. 9. V. 4. I have made and not you me as the idolaters do their gods Now this ought to be understood as well of the naturall creation as of the spirituall regeneration see upon Isai. 29. 23. V. 5. That we may or to make us alike or equall one with the other V. 8. Remember hee directs his speech to the people of Israel which were run into idolatry exhorting them to conversion Shew your selves men the Italian be upon good ground forsaking the vaine prejudices of customs examples traditions and opinions take the word of God and true reason for the grounds of your discourses and resolutions V. 9. Former things namely the workes and miracles formerly done for the deliverance of my people by which I have shewed my selfe to be the true everlasting God V. 11. From the East namely out of Persia which is easterly from Babylon Bird namely Cyrus who shall fall upon Babylon like a Falcon or some such like ravenous bird My counsell whom I have chosen in my counsell or who shall put my decree in execution Have purposed it namely appointed and determined it within my selfe V. 12. That are far who through your misdeeds make your selves unworthy to be dealt withall by me as innocents with favour and clemency and to be defended by me V. 13. My righteousnesse namely my grace and good will which in Scripture is often called righteousnesse CHAP. XLVII Vers. 1. COme down thou shalt be beaten down from thy great and flourishing Empire and shalt never have any power to rise again see Jer. 48. 18. Uirgin the Scripture calleth often so those Nations and States which had continued as they were at the first under their naturall Princes and had never been subdued nor conquered by others There is no namely for thee nor for thy Nation for after the taking of Babylon by Cyrus the Chaldean Empire did never rise again though the City subsisted a long time after V. 2. Take the thou shalt be brought into subjection and as a slave shalt grind at the hand-mils Exod. 11. 6. Judg. 16. 21. Math. 24. 41. Uncover like unto bond-women which went with their haire loose and bare-foot Isa. 20. 24. Passe over to goe into captivity into a far Country V. 3. Shall be an ordinary disgrace done to women prisoners see upon Isa. 20. 4. Jer. 13. 22 26. Will not meet thee I wil use thee as an enemy in wrath and as God in my power without any moderation see 2 Sam. 7. 14. Isa. 13. 6. 27. 7 8. V. 5. Sit lay downe thy pomp and pride and bring thy selfe into a vile and abject state V. 6. Polluted I tooke away from her all that should make her holy and inviolable namely my presence grace and vertue and did use her like unto a prophane and uncleane thing see Isa. 43. 28. Thou didst shew thou didst mixe thine owne proper passions of cruelty and inhumanity with the execution of my judgements and didst not take example by me to use mercy and clemency see Psal. 69. 26. The ancient under which name are comprehended all other wretched persons see Deut. 28. 50. V. 9. The losse of by children he seems to meane the people and by the husband the King For the multitude that is to say notwithstanding all thy divellish arts which thou makest use of to keepe thy selfe up For sorcery was frequent amongst the Chaldeans Dan. 2. 2. 5. 7. and Southsayers did beare a great sway in the publique government vers 13. V. 10. None seeth I know no Godhead to whom I should give any account Thy wisedome namely these unlawful arts which thou hast termed wisedome in which thou hast trusted V. 11. It riseth Heb. the morning thereof by which may also be understood the day in which it should happen V. 12. Stand now a scoffe for the Chaldeans vaine confidence V. 14. They shall be that is to say both they and their accursed arts perished and could not save themselves nor bring any ease
which lived in those dayes Others that it is a fained name to signifie the qualities of Gods people as well in grace for it may signifie perfection as in judgement for it may be taken for the end or finall extermination Diblaim the reason of this name which seemes also to be figurative is very obscure Some have held it to be the name of some wildernesse Ezek. 6. 14. to shew the Churches wretched beginning in its own nature As Cant. 3. 6. Ezek. 16. 7. V. 4. Izreel it seemes that by those three Children was figured the ruine of the kingdome of the ten Tribes which was effected at three severall times The first was when the progeny of Jehu was extinguished 2 Kings 15. 12. The other two was when the King of Assyria did invade them 2 Kings 15. 29. 17. 3 6. The blood namely the executions done by Jehu in Izreel 2 Kings 9. 24 31. 10. 11 17. which were commanded by God for the re-establishment of his service which Jehu not performing they are imputed unto him for so many murthers See 1 Kings 16. 7. Will cause to cease for by the rooting out of the line of the line of Jehu the kingdome of Israel receaved such a wound that it could never rise againe V. 5. Breake I will beat down the power of Israel I will take away from them all means of defending themselves and of subsisting against their enemies by the losse of some battell or by some other accident not mentioned in Scripture In the valley of which See Josh. 17. 16. Judg. 6. 33. V. 6. Lo-ruhamath that is to say one of whom no mercy is had Rom. 9. 25. But I will because I have pardoned them enough already V. 7. Of Judah in which the covenant remained and the service and Church of God By the Lord by my selfe miraculously or by vertue of the everlasting Son of God perpetuall Head and Saviour of his Church V. 9. Lo ammi that is to say one that is not my people Rom. 9. 25. Your namely your God according to the enterchangeable condition of the covenant V. 10 The number this may be understood of the increase of this people in all their dispersions untill the time of their conversion In the place the Italian Instead that is to say by the Gospell which they shall at last receive they will obtaine a more firme covenant and conjunction with God being made not onely his people and subjects but his children by adoption of grace and regeneration of Spirit and holy spirituall liberty V. 11. The children that is to say at the last all Israel shall acknowledge and accept of Christ for their head and shall be altogether re-united to his Church Rom. 11. 12 15 25. 2 Cor. 3. 16. See Isay 11. 13. Jer. 3. 18. Ezek. 37. 16 22. Come up they shall separate themselves from the world to joyne themselves to the Church and so goe on the way to the Kingdome of heaven The day That time shall be admirable by reason of the gathering together of the Israelites which before seemed rather to be an Izreel that is to say a people dispersed by God then an Israel CHAP. II. Vers. 1. SAy yee unto Thou Hosea and all other believers which are amongst these people doe not hold them to be altogether rejected to forsake them to their owne lusts but call them to repentance setting before them what is the duty of Gods people signified by Ammi that is to say My people towards whom God hath not yet shut up the entrals of his mercy which is signified by Ru-hamah V. 2. Plead with Reprove the body of your Nation openly She is not She doth not keepe her faith which she hath promised me and I have already good cause to put her away which I forbeare to do through my great patience Let her therefore put away Let her dispose her selfe to true chastity and spirituall purity using no more lascivious baits and practices to draw prophane Nations on to trade with her in Idolatry see Jer. 2. 33. and 4. 30. V. 3. Lost I strip her Lest I take away from her all my bodily and spirituall graces and bring her to extreme misery see Ezek. 16. 39. and 23. 26 29. She was borne See Ezek. 16. 4. With thirst that is to say With the scorching heat of my wrath not tempered with any grace or comfort Jer. 2. 15. Ezek. 22 24. Amos 8. 11 13. V. 4 Upon her children Namely Upon the particular members of this people Of whoredomes that is to say Bastards having no part in the regeneration of the heavenly Father to holinesse of life but being altogether corrupted like their mother see John 8 44. V. 5. My lovers Idols and Idolatrous people by whose gift and benefit and not the true Gods I have plenty of all good things v. 8. 12. See Jer. 44. 17. V. 6. I will hedge I will enclose her up with difficulties and extreme distresses that shee shall not be able to run out at her owne pleasure see Job 3. 23. and 19. 8. Lam. 3. 7 9. V. 7. She shall follow She shall seeke for favour and aid at their hands but all in vaine they shall all forsake her and shall change their ancient love into mortall hatred Jer. 2. 36. Ezek. 16. 27. To my first namely to God V. 8. Which they In making of Idols or in serving and honouring them see Ezek. 7. 20. and 16. 16. Hos. 8. 4. V. 9. In the time namely At the time which I have appointed or in Harvest-time and Vintage-time I will take away her increase of corne and wine and give it for a prey unto her enemies V. 11. Her feast dayes Which were dayes of publike rejoycing Numb 10. 10. and were observed even amongst the ten tribes in imitation of those of Judea 1 King 12. 32. V. 13. Decked her selfe A terme taken from lascivious women which decke themselves to allure men whereby are meant the Israelites prophane pomps in their Idolatries V. 14. Therefore Because she hath quite forgotten me and will never be converted of her selfe I will prevent her by my mercy recalling her mildly by my Gospel Which is referred to the last conversion of Israel And bring her I will bring her unto me bringing her home from her banishment through many miseries as I brought my people out of Egypt into the land of Canaan through the wildernesse V. 15. From thence namely From the head of the wildernesse The meaning is that as my people comming out of the wildernesse came into a most fruitfull countrey so mine elect comming out of an extreme spirituall misery shall enjoy mine abundant blessings Others translate it from that time forward The valley of Whereof mention is made Jos. 7. 26. Isa. 65. 10. It was a most fruitfull place at the entrance of the countrey so soone as they were come over Jordan and by it are meant the first favours which God bestowed on his when they enter into his
draw his humane nature to sinne either of impatience and diffidencie in his voluntary obedience or of pride and presumption without vocation o● necessitie or of rebellion against God V. 4. By every not only by things appointed in nature to nourish man but by all such things as he through his free-will doth attribute such power unto And likewise by his only power and will without any meanes at all V. 5. Taketh him up by some swift motion but without any hurt and that by the permission of God and of Christ himselfe the holy a title very frequently given to the Citie of Ierusalem by reason of Gods being present in his Temple and because it was a Citie cons●crated to his service see N●h 11. 18. Isaiah 48. 2. Matth. 27. 53. a Pinnacle the Italian the edge of the ro●se the roofe of the Temple being flatt according to the fashion of those times and places there was round about it a certaine edge or hemme or corner jetting out as well for Ornament as to convey away the raine Water and there it should seeme the Devill did set the Lord. V. 8. Sheweth him by some vision or illusion as it appeares by Luke 4. 5. V. 10 Get thee or according to some texts goe behinde me V. 12. He departed by a divine conduct and inspiration he went to make his ordinary abode and to exercise his charge of teaching publikely in those borders amongst poore and abject people to condemne Iudaea and Ierusalem whether hee went but only at festivall times V. 13. The Sea Coast namely by the lake of Gene●areth or of Tibe●ias V. 14. That it that Country which had formerly beene desolated by the Assyrians Isa. 8. 7. and grew afterwards degenerate in matters of Religion and was mixed with heathen customes and Nations was through Gods Soveraigne mercy chosen by Christ for the place of his ordinary abode according to the same Prophets prophesie Isa. 9. 1. to bring into it the light of life of grace and of truth and to give a beginning to the vocation of the Gentiles V. 18. Two brethren who had beene John the Baptist his Disciples to whom Iesus had revealed himselfe even in his time and therefore this History of Saint Matthewes ought to have a relation to their calling to the Apostle-ship and that of John 1. 40 41. To their calling to knowledge and doctrine V. 19. Fishers of instruments of converting and drawing men to God out of the Sea of the world and sinne and out of the abysse of death and perdition V. 23. Synagogues a Greeke Name which signified the particular assemblie of the Iewes for the exercises of Pietie and the places where they were kept severall from the Temple of Jerusalem where the generall assemblie was kept preaching bringing them the h●ppie tydings of the comming and manifestation of the Messias his spirituall Kingdome in light justice and life promised to the Fathers and so long looked for Ver. 24. Syria which bordered upon those places V. 25. Decapolis it was a little province so called because it contained tenne Cities and was upon the confines of Palestine drawing towards Syria Make 7. 31. CHAP. V. VER 3. THe poore an Hebrew phrase Prov. 16. 19 and 29 23. Isaiah 57. 15. to signifie the humble and meeke hearted before God who have confidence in themselves when they feele their miseries or Gods visitations opposi●e to pro●d presumptuous and cruell men Kingdome they only are well prepared and qualified to receave the Gospell and to be members of the Church which is Christs Kingdome in grace and in spirit and that way to enter into the Kingdome of glory in Heaven see Matth. 18. 3. and 19 14. V. 4. That mourne by a lively displeasure for their sinnes and by a volu●tary mortification Or by an humble patience in visitations and tryalls which God sendeth Psalme 34. 18. V. 5. For they They shall be re-established into the right which Adam had namelie of being lawfull possessors of all Gods creatures as they are Gods children the use of which shall be granted them by their heavenly Father and shall afterwards bee raised up into the everlasting Kingdome above all other creatures Whereas violent men though they have and possesse much yet they are but usurpers who shall be dispossessed of all by death See Rom. 4. 13. V. 6. Which doe hunger which fervently desire of God to obtaine the gift of the true Evangelicall righteousnesse which is in Christ and in the operation of his spirit which is the food necessary for eternall life Rom. 3. 22 26. V. 8. The pure The holy righteous and sincere not spotted with the love of sinne of some predominant vice of malice and of hypocrisie Shall see shall be admitted to the fruition of Gods glory which will appeare at full in the Kingdome of heaven opposite to the small and obscure participation which beleevers have in his grace in this world by faith 1 Cor. 13. 12. 2 Cor. 5. 7. 1 Iohn 3. 2. V. 10. For righteousnesse sake For the love and defence of right and chiefely for Gods cause his truth glory and pure service The Kingdome for a reward of their labours and a Crowne of their fights according to Gods free promise V. 13. Yee are Words directed to the Apostles and ministers of Christ. The meaning is I have conferred my gifts upon you and have placed you in the office of Pastors of my Church that by your doctrine example the world might be cleansed preserved from corruption and seasoned with righteousnesse and holinesse if that thorow your owne corruption you lose this power over others whence shall the amendment of your selves be expected In such a case all dignities and titles are of no value V. 14. The light As by the preaching of the word you are like unto lights in the worlds darkenesse So by your life you should bee like Candle-stickes to set that light up on high and shew it to all men A Citie the eminencie of your office shall cause all the good and evill that is in you to be manifest to all men either for example and edification in good things or for scandall and subversion in badd V. 16. Glorifie By converting and submitting themselves to Gods truth whose efficacy shall be penetrated into their hearts by your holy examples See 1 Cor. 14 25. V. 17. To destroy to derogate from their authoritie to cause them to be thought false or unprofitable to propound a doctrine contrary to them To fulfill observing the Law in all points my selfe and bringing to passe all that was foretold by the Prophets and pulling in force the right and promise of the Law to give life to them that fulfill it which is effected in me alone for all my Church And finally causing by my spirit of regeneration which I have gotten and doe communicate to all beleevers the Law to be by them voluntarily receayed in its spirituall sence though not in an absolute perfection
corporall favours did rather hinder then further Christ in h●s chiefe end which was the eternall salvation of men To the Priest to be searched according to the Law and being judged cleane to have permission to come againe into the company of men and of the Church For a Testimony that thou mayest witnesse that I am true God and that during the time of my humiliation I doe keep and cause Moses Law to bee kept which were the two chiefe heads whereupon the Iewes used to contest with Christ. V. 5. A Centurion A Roman and a Heathen but instructed and inwardly enlightned V. 9. A man And thou God I am a subject and thou a supreame Lord how much more than shall thy command be fulfilled V. 10. He marvailed He used some externall gesture of wondering to cause the Centurions faith to be so much the more commended and esteemed not that he was ignorant of the causes of it nor that it was a faith beyond Christs Capacitie which are the two ordinary causes of true admiration V. 11. Many Namely of the Gentiles such as the Centurion was Si● downe shall enjoy the fruits of eternall life with the holy Patriarches being by faith and in spirit become their children heires of the promises made to them and their posteritie V. 12. The Children Namely the Iewes who by the prerogative of Gods Covenant seemed to be the true heires of this Kingdome Darkenesse in the extreame misery confusion horror and torment of those who are eternally banished out of the Kingdome of heaven Gnashing the noise the rage and the blasphemies which are alwayes coupled to the everlasting torments of the damned Roma●● 16. 9. 11 21. V. 14. His Wives mother For Peter had a wife 1 Cor. 9. 5. V. 16. With his word using no othre mane● but only his meere command V. 17. It might be fulfilled That he might verifie that which Isaiah speaketh in that place Namely that he is the only Saviour of soules and bodies according to the charge which he hath taken upon him and by the merit of his voluntary sufferances by which having appeased Gods wrath he hath cut o● the cause of all our evills and hath obtained his favour for us which is the fountaine of all good and happinesse V. 18. The other side Namely of the lake of Genesareth V. 20. The Foxes This is spoken either for a tryall of the truth of the Scribes protestation or for a preparative for him to keepe it being in time instructed in the condition which is in separably annexed to the Gospell namely the crosse without any constant proprietie of goods and without any peace or rest in the world Nests or places to go and shelter themselves in The Son Christ calls himselfe so oftentimes in the Gospell to signifie the truth of his humane nature and the excellencie of his person above all other men As who should say That man which hath in all ages bin foretold expected desired and seene by the Prophets in their visions as particularly Dan. 7. 13. for a prelude of his manifestation in the flesh V. 21. Bury that is to say assist him in his extreame old age untill the end of his life V. 22. Let the dead being called to the ministery of my word leave off these duties belonging to a mortall life to those that live and have their callings and places therein that thou mayest readily and without disturbance follow the duties of the spirituall life which are now at this present incompatible with the duties of a temporall life V. 26. Rebuked A kinde of speech very frequent in Scripture to signifie Gods power to appeale the commotion of any of the creatures especially if they rise against his elect whom they ought to serve V. 28. Gergasenes it is thought to be the ancient nation of the Gergashites Gen. 10 16 which afterwards were called Gerashites where the Citie of Gadara was whereupon Saint Marke and St. Luke call this Country of the Gadarenes V. 29. To torment us driving us out of that little light and libertie which is left us to wander up and down the world working our wills and shut us up in the darknesse and paines of hell as it shall be after the last judgment Before the time namely of the last judgment which they might know was not yet come V. 32. Into the Sea Namely into the lake of Genez●reth V. 34. They besought him not for any hatred they bare to him but for feare of that divine power which they only considered in him Luke 8. 37. An ordinary motion of a mans conscience not yet confident in Gods grace when he feeles his Majestie nigh him See Deut. 5. 25. 1 King 17. 18. Luk. 5. 8. CHAP. IX VER 1. INto his owne namely Capernaum where he made his ordinary abode Mar. 2. 1. V. 2. Thy sins which are the cause of thy disease sinne being the cause of all those evills that befall man V. 3. Blasphemeth attributing unto himselfe the power of pardoning sins which belongeth to God alone V. 5. Whether is according to your carnall judgment it is a higher and more difficult thing to heale this diseased man by my word then to forgive him his sinnes now I will doe that which you judge to be the most difficult and is sensible to shew that I can doe that which you esteeme to bee lesse and is spirituall and hidden both depending upon the same divine and supreame power V. 8. Unto men such as they thought Christ to be being not yet instructed concerning his eternall God-head V. 9. Matthew and Levi also Luke 5. 27. V. 10. In the house Namely of Matthew as St. Luke saith V. 13. And learne you hypocrites do set all your pietie and righteousnesse in ceremonies and an externall discipline and hold them to be prophane and unworthy of your conversation which doe not follow you whereas by this saying of the Prophet you might have learned that the most acceptable service to God is that mercy which I use towards poore sinners procuring their salvation and amendment by my familiarity with them seeing that grace by the Gospell which I am Mediator for and distributer of is but onely for all Repentant sinners V. 15. Of the Bride Chamber namely the bride-groomes most intimate friends and companions Iohn 3 26. The meaning is I will not disturbe the joy my Disciples conceave by reason of my presence after my departure out of the world they will have afflictions and sorrowes and time enough to feele them V. 16. No man besides this cause I have also a reg●rd not to oppresse the weakenesse of those which are mine with too rigorous a discipline in these beginnings New cloth the Italian rough cloth as ●t commeth out of the weavers hand neither dressed nor fulled and therefore very unfit for any use especially to mend or patch clothes V. 18. Ruler they were certaine superior Ecclesiasticall persons which did preside in the Iewes particular Assemblies and there did
is to say he hath in effect showne the care he hath of them V. 69. Raised up he hath given the Church cause to triumph by reason of the spirituall victory which the Messias hath had over all his enemies See concerning this manner of speech 1 Sam. 2. 1. Psa. 75. 4. and 89. 17. V. 76. Shall be called thou shalt not onely be so indeed but shalt be acknowledged to be such by publike testimony V. 78. Day spring namely Iesus Christ the true Sonne of righteousnesse Mal. 4. 2. V. 79. Of peace of perfect happinesse V. 80. In Spirit namely in the gifts and graces of the holy Ghost which proportionably to his age manifested themselves to be in him wrought daily more powerfully and maturely in him Of his shewing that he began to exercise his office by Gods expresse command CHAP. II. VER 1. AL the world a popular kind of speech that is to say the whole Roman Empire which as falsely as ambitiously was termed universall according to the stile of those great Empires Isay 13. 5. and 14. 26. Ier. 34. 1. Dan. 2. 39. Taxed that the number of persons and their wealth should be set downe as the custome of the Roman Empire was to doe oftentimes V. 2. Was first for under the same Cyrenius there was another tax mentioned Acts 5. 37. Governour in this first taxation he was not the ordinary Governour but was extraordinarily deputed with a most ample power in that Province to make this taxation V. 3. Into his owne this ought to be especially understood of the Iewes who by their ancient divisions had their Tribes Nations and Families with their inheritances in certaine severall Cities in which they held their freedome of being Citizen though they dwelt elsewhere V. 4. Nazareth where their habitation was though they came from Bethlehem where they were Citizens Of David namely the City where he was borne and where the ancient seat of his family was 1 Sam 16. 1. Iohn 7. 42. V. 7. In a manger of the stable of that Inne where they were lodged In which Inne all other places were taken up by reason of the great concourse of people either by such as were first come or such as were of more note and esteeme V. 9. The glory namely an admirable and heavenly light which was wont to accompany the apparitions of Angels V. 13. Heavenly host an ordinary name of holy Angels V. 14. Towards or amongst men V. 19. Pondered them examining gathering together and comparing them one with the other to strengthen her selfe more and more in knowledge and faith See Acts 17. 11. 1 Cor. 2. 13. V. 21. For the circumcising Christ would be circumcised for the same reasons for which hee would also be baptized and participate of the other Sacraments See upon Mat. 3. 13. V. 22. Of her purification namely of Marie Now some texts have it of their purification namely of Iesus and his Mother for the infants were reputed to participate of their mothers legall uncleannesse V. 24. A paire which was the offering for the poorer sort of people Lev. 12. 8. V. 25. Devout or religious and fearing God Waiting for at that time the mindes of true beleevers were attentive to look for the comming of the Messias See Marke 15. 43. Luke 2. 38. The Holy Ghost that is to say he was endowed with the spirit of prophesie V. 26. Christ the Greeke name answerable to the Hebrew name Messias that is to say annointed and consecrated for eternall King and Priest Psal. 26. Isa. 61. 1. Dan. 9. 24. Ver. 27. The parents the Italian The Father and mother namely Ioseph according to the common opinion See Heb. 7. 3. After the custome which was to present him to the Lord and ransome him Exod. 34. 20. V. 29● Lord now even at this time that thou hast accomplished thy promise unto mee and that I have with mine eyes seene the Saviour of the world I die happie and contented See Genesis 46. 30. V. 31. Prepared that is to say ordained and appointed from everlasting to make it knowne in the appointed time to all Nations without any difference to make them partakers of it Ver. 32. To lighten or which must bee revealed to all Nations Ver. 33. Marveiled not but that they perfectly knew it by the Angels Revelation but because they saw this light was also communicated to others and and did spread it selfe abroad Verse 34. This child is set or sent that is to say God hath established him to be the fundamentall stone of salvation to all those that shall receive him by a lively faith who shall by him bee relieved from the fall of sinne and condemnation And contrariwise to bee a cause of a greater and more irreparable ruine to those who thorow their owne perversenesse shall reject him For a signe as a miraculous person approved by all the infallible signes of truth and vertue to bee as it were a pledge and signall set up of salvation Isaiah 11. verse 10. whom the world notwithstanding shall oppose thorow incredulity and hardnesse of heart V. 35. A Sword such shall the opposition bee that thou thy selfe who art his mother must prepare thy selfe to bee pierced with extreame griefes and anguishes That the thoughts that is to say God shall suffer and bring all this to passe to the end that by the preaching of the Gospell may bee discovered the impietie and rebellion of Gods open enemies Which is never so fierce as against the Gospell And the hypocrisie of the false Children of Gods house who under the profession of his name and service doe reject the onely meanes of knowing him to salvation and of serving him in truth And finally to shew the internall difference of soules whereof some thorow grace beleeve in CHRIST the others reject him thorow their owne malice See 2 Corinthians 2. 15 16. Ver. 36. Had lived this seemeth to bee added for to commend this womans Chastitie and devotion Who being left a widdow in the flower of her age had continued so to dedicate her selfe wholly to workes of piety in the Temple according to the manner of many holy women in those dayes Exod. 38. 8. 1 Sam. 2. 22. Verse 39. They had Namely IOSEPH and Mary Verse 40. Waxed strong whereby is showne That the fulnesse of the gifts of the Spirit shewed it selfe in him and brought forth extraordinary good effects according to the progresse of his age and the increase of his bodily strength hee being every way made like unto man except sinne The grace that is to say it plainely appeared that GOD did love him in a speciall manner directing keeping and blessing him in all things V. 41. We 〈…〉 carrying Iesus along with them according to the Law At the feast the Law appointed all Males to come to the Temple at the three solemne feasts Exod. 23. 17. Deut. 16. 16. and because here was nothing commanded concerning women Some have thought that it is here specially
righteousnesse and life is thorough grace it must bee so absolutely and purely without any intermeddling of mens righteousnesse or the Law for these two meanes cannot agree with one another Romanes 11. 6. Galatians 3. v 12. 18. The promise which in these passages is alwaies taken by the Apostle for the free and Evangelical promise and not the legall V. 15. Because that is to say it is cleere that these two meanes of obtaining life and righteousnesse cannot consist together for the law is altogether rigorous requiring perfect obedience or denouncing death and condemnation to the transgressors whereas contrariwise the promise is but a messenger of grace and reconciliation For where this is proved because that man doth not truly know his sinne nor doth not feele the mortall sting of it but only by meanes of the Law working effectually upon his conscience Verse 16. Therefore because that first means of obtaining righteousnesse by the law which God hath granted unto men hath thorough sinne beene made not onely unprofitable but even quite contrary and deadly wee must of necessity have recourse unto the other which is faith which onely amōgst other vertues can in this case agree with Gods meere grace seeing that the operation of faith is not to acquire or merit but only to receive what is given to us Iohn 1. 12. Bee sure as grounded upon God and his immutable pleasure and Christs perfect and everlasting righteousnesse and not upon mens variable will and inconstant obedience See Ezek. 16. 61. Rom. 9 11. 11. 19. To all namely to the spirituall seed according to the faith of which God intended to speake in that excellent promise I will bee thy GOD and of thy seed after thee Genesis 17. 7. Not to that onely not onely to the nationall believing Iewes who have been kept under the Pedagogie of the Law and under a directour to Christ without trusting therein for their righteousnesse and salvation Verse 17. Before him with a spirituall and divine paternity which consisteth in example of faith according to which God can make whom he will Abrahams childe Matth. 3. 9. as he of nothing created all things and raiseth the dead and according to his paternity hee judgeth who are Abrahams true children which he approveth of whereas in mens iudgements the Iewes onely ought to bee so According to others the meaning is that as God is not onely father in grace of those which are alreadie but of all such likewise as he shall hereafter create by his omnipo●ent word Abraham likewise by some correspondency hath beene reputed father of the Gentile● who had neither spirituall life nor quality such as was required for to be his children Ephes. 2 12. And calleth that is to say by his word hee makes them to be and as if one should say to appeare for that end for which he hath appointed them as he did in the creation of all things and in the miraculous resu●rections wrought by Christ Let there be light ●azarus come forth c. Vease 18. Who namely Abraham Now hee sheweth by example of Abrahams beliefe touching the particuler promise concerning Isaack what the true faith of al his children should be concerning the general promises of grace Against hope against all causes arguments and appearances of naturall hope In hope that is to say concerning a firme spirituall and supernaturall hope by reason of Gods promises Verse 19. Hee c●●si le●ed not he stood nor stopped not upon the order of nature ●ccording to which all hope of issue was taken away from him So true ●●●th overcomes all apprehension of a mans owne impotency thorough the lively perswasion of Gods promises Verse 20. Giving by acknowledging his Soveraigne truth and infinite power above all inferiour order or contrary difficulty glory being set upon the highest point of emmency above all other things Verse 22. It was God by reason of his faith held him to bee as sufficiently disposed to obtaine the ●ccomplishment of the promises as if he had had all the righteousnesse required by the law to receive G●ds Benefi●s Verse 23. For his as if it had been some peculiar act or privi●edge of Abrahams whereas it was a d●cumen● and an example of iustifying faith common to all his spirituall children Verse 24. On him namely in God who in Christs m●st glorious resurrection gave an e●●ay of his power to raise spiritually all beleivers and hath in the same resu●rection placed all the causes of their resurrections Rom 6. 4. Verse 5 Delivered namely to death by the will of God For our to make an exp●atio● for them by his death For our justification namely to shew unto us how wee were absolved as it were by manner of solemne iudgement CHRIST our surety being returned to life after hee had made an ●nd of satisfying for us for a certaine argument that God was fully reconciled to us and that life was gained for us which could not have beene is hee had remained dead for the continuation of the payment would alwaies have shewed the imperfection of it See 1 Cor 15. 17. CHAP. V. VER 1. WEe have that is to say God is made propitious unto us in Christ who by the faith which hee creates in us causeth us to enjoy this reconciliation by vertue whereof our conscience is so firmely grounded that wee doe it as it were by anticipation in this world by a lively hope that eternall glory which is prepared for the children of God without being moved by any temptations or ●e●●en downe by any terrour or confusion Verse 3 Not onely wee doe not reioyce unspeakabl● and gloriously 1. Pet. 1. 8. onely by reason of the hope of future glorie but also by reason of our present afflictions which are an assured proofe unto us thereof 2. Co. 4. 17. Phil 〈◊〉 28. That tribu●ation that the holy Ghost ●oth thorough tribulation frame us to patience in which God doth from time to time give us assured proofes of his grace and protec●●on whereby we conceive a sound hope in him grounded upon the love which hee ●e●reth unto us which he hath given us large cause of feeling and hath lively sealed it in our hearts by his spirit of adoption V. 5. Maketh not ashamed that is to say doth not deceave one nor prove vaine nor proveth not to be as an illusion V. 6. For when the greatnesse of this love of God is shewed therein that he did shew it when we were deprived of all power of rising againe of our selves being wholy dead in sinne In due time in the point of the worlds extreamest●eed when the misery and cu●●e thereof was come to the up shot when all people even Gods owne people were altogether corrupted And even just at the time which God had appointed V. 7. For scarcely a redoubling of the same reason because that God loved 〈◊〉 th●n wh●n we● w●re altogether not onely unable to get salvation but also utterl● un●o thy of it V 8 Comm●nde●h
makes it more glorious and se●● it in greater esteeme amongst men Sinners that is to say guilty and c●lpable having not as yet rece●ved he gift of absolution and pardon and being yet under the king●●me of si● V. 〈◊〉 By 〈◊〉 namely by vertue of th●t satisfa●●ion● which he hath made to God by his death 〈◊〉 wrath namely from eternall damnation and punishment Matth 3. 7. Rom. 2. 5. The meaning is that as it is more easie to keep a man from execution that is freed and absolved by the judg then for to get a guilty man absolved and freed by the iudge so after we have received pardon which is the greater we ought much now to be perswaded that we shal be freed from the punishment which is the lesser and that we shall have all good things Rom. 8. 32. V. 10. By his life namely by him living and raigning and communicating his life to all his members Iohn 6. 5. 7 and 14. 19. 2. Cor. 4. 10. 11. V. 11. And not onely besides that we gloriously triumph over all afflictions thorow a certain confidence of the everlasting crowne Wee have also whereof to boast our selves to bee happy in the whole course of our lives by the present feeling of Gods grace V. 12. Wherefore a generall conclusion of the presedent treatie of justification by faith in which the Apostle breifely running over those things which he had said doth withall set doune the ground of them which is that God hath of his owne good will established Christ to be the head of grace and the spring of righteousnesse and life to all his elect thorow the impution of whose righteousnesse they are restored into Gods favour and concequentlie sanctified and glorified as Adam was made the naturall head and root of all mankind whereupon by his sinne imputed to al his Seed it was all under Gods curse deprived of originall righteousnesse corruption its whole naturall and subiect to death V. 13. For untill this originall corruption is verified by the effects of all mens actuall Sinnes in al ages even before the law of Moises which sheweth that there was before that another generall law namely that of nature the reliques of which doe yet remaine in man Rom. 2. 14. 15. against which Adam having actually sinned hath enfolded all his posteritie in the same fault and hath propagated originall sinne in it is not imputed that is to say is not reputed to be truely sinne which is nothing but a transgression of the law Rom 4. 15. 1. Iohn 3. 4. nor man is not called to account upon it to be therefore condemned to death V. 14. Neverthelesse he doeth moreover shew that there was an universall defect in all mankind against the said law which was imputed unto him to condemnation seeing they are all dead and that death is the reward of sinne Rom. 6 23. over them namely over little children who weare not come to the age of iudgment and consequently could not bee guilty of an actual deliberate and voluntarie sinne such a one as Adams was and yet for all that they are dead wherefore wee must conclude that there was in them some other sinne which is the originall sinne of him namely of Christ the second Adam the head of the spirituall off spring of this elect as Adam was the natural head of all men Now the conformitie of them both consisteth in this that either of them by the order of God justification hath communicated his estate to all his V. 15. But not though these two Adam the head of sinne and death and Christ the head of righteousnesse and life doe agree in this prosperity of communicating their conditions to those who are theirs yet there is great deale of difference between them First in that in Christ the power is all divine and therefore infinitely more active and effectuall and then also in the excellencie and abundance of gifts and good things which he communicates to his above all that which man had lost in Adam manie bee namely all men the children of Adam v. 12. The grace namely Gods mercie and good will which is the Soveraigne cause the gift namely the application and free imputation of Christs righteousnesse which is the meritorious cause by grace for love and by vertue of that perfect righteousnesse and obedience which Christ yeelded his father in his humane nature by which he hath merited and possesseth all his grace and love Matth. 3. 17. Iohn 1. 16. Ephes. 1. 6. Vnto many namely to all believers Gods spirituall children in Christ whereof he had spoken before V. 16. And not there is likewise another difference namely that Adam did indeed by his offence make all his posterity guilty but they have aggravated their iudgement by their owne proper and voluntary sins But Christ iustifieth not onely from the sin which proceeded from Adam but likewise from all other personall sins The judgment namely God proceeding as a iust iudge hath imputed this one offence of Adams to all his posteritie and hath condemned it to lose the state of originall righteousnesse and consequently life The free gift the Italian The grace the same God proceeding in his grace hath absolved all his elect from al their sinnes for to behold them just and innocent V. 17. For if this ought not to seeme strange for God hath infinitely more beene appeased in Christ then hee was offended and provoked by Adam Of righteousnesse namely Christs righteousnesse which is given that is to say imputed out of meere grace to all believers V. 18. By the righteousnesse of one by Christs perfect obedience God hath poured out his free mercy upon all men to absolue them from sinne and give them right to eternall life vpon all to all manner of persons indifferently though not to all universallie Or he means all those which belong to Christ. v. 15. 17. V. 19. Mary see v. 15 were made that is to weare reputed for such and doe as such appeare before Gods judgement Shall manie henceforward Christ having ben manifested and his righteousnesse fulfilled and preached to the world by the Gospell all those who shall receive it shall be reputed righteous before God in him V. 20. The law because he had said v. 13. that before the law of Moses sinne had raigned against the law of nature he doth now obviate an objection wherefore then was Moses his Law added Hee answeareth because the Law of nature might be restored to its naturall light and vigor and repaired in the breaches which ignorance forget fullnesse evil manners and erroneous opinions of men had made in it And that by this light of Gods law renewed in man and yet with stood by him with a greater malice then before his wickednesse should appeare to be growen up to the height whereby he might have no other way of restauration but onely to 〈◊〉 to Gods grace in Christ whose power overcomes all the power of sinne V. 21. Unto death shewing its
for this universall terme whosoever which he hath added in the precedent verse to the passage of Isaiah where it is not expressed Lord namely Iesus Christ by his death and Resurrection hath gotten him a title to bee Lord over all men and to bee the head of all his Elect a middest all nations to distribute the graces of his spirit unto them Yet is it not with him as it is with men for hee is no whit empoverished by the multitude of them who have part în his goods neither is there before God any other difference amongst men but onely of those that acknowledge him and call upon him and of those that doe not as it is proved by the ensuing passage V. 14. How then he proves the said indifferencie of nations because that the meanes to attaine to salvation by the true invocation of God hath beene made common to them all and consequenty faith and so from time to time the hearing of Gods Word and preaching and according as the one is occasioned by the other and at last every thing resolves it self into the Soveraigne cause of Gods good will and pleasure Who hath also accompanied these subalternall meanes with his power to produce their lively effect of faith and confession Without a because the Gospell is but a publication of Gods secret will which cannot be knowne unlesse he reveale it himselfe V. 15. And how this preaching being an embassage of grace and peace presupposeth a sending from God well verified and authorized by himselfe As it is these passages of the Prophets may be referred to this sending or mission of the Apostles to preach grace which no man knew of nor had any power to being tydings of it without the expresse declaration and commision of the offended Soveraigne V. 16 Not all as there is indisterency of nations so there is a great deals of difference of persons some believing and some not as Isaiah foretelleth and so making the prea●●ng unprofitable See Heb. 4. 2. V. 17. By hearing that is to say it is not grounded nor doth not resolve it selfe into naturall 〈◊〉 ●●●ks nor into discourse of reason no● into humane 〈…〉 hority nor into apprehension of the understanding but onely into the declaration which is made thereof to man which also hath neither truth nor power but onely by its faithfull relation and c●n ●●mity to Gods originall word V. 18. But I say as for the Iewes that have not beleeved what can bee said of them It is because they have heard nothing of the Gospell No for like the Sunne Psal. 19 4 it hath runne over all the world Col. 〈◊〉 6 23. shall wee then say that the de 〈…〉 was in them who have rejected the light of the ●●ving knowledge of the Gospell which the Gentiles have accepted he answereth v. 1● that it cannot be gainesaid seeing that Moses did formerly protest the same V. 20. Very bold and wi●h a holy freedome without bearing so much respect to this nation or to the vices of it That sought mee not to shew that all the Gentiles advantage was out of especiall grace and an effect of their free election But that God did exercise the rigor of his justice towards the Iewes upon their hardened rebellion CHAP. XI VER 1. HAth God ought one therefore to say or thinke that God hath taken away his grace or cut off all his people Israel from his covenant and for ever God forbid that can not bee said neither of all the people whereof I am one and others with me chosen by God in whom his covenant is ratified nor of the body of the people for ever for the time will come that they shall bee re-established ver 11. V. 2. Fore knew that is to say chosen and ordained from everlasting to salvation Rom 8. 29. V. 6. And if this seemes to be inserted against those Iewes who being become Christians did notwithstanding repose some part of their righteousnesse and confidence in the workes of the Law which Saint Paul sheweth could by no meanes be done for these two wayes of righteousnesse and salvation are incompatible the one with the other Rom. 4 4 5 Gal. 5. 2. 4. Ver. 7. What then my discourse commeth to this that the body of the Iewish Nation seeking their righteousnesse by the Law have not obtained of God to b●e reputed just and to have right to everlasting life Rom. 9. 31. and 10 3. The election namely that small number from amongst them which is chosen by God by vertue of this election hath bin endowed with the spirit of faith in the Gospel which propoundeth Christs only righteousness The rest the common people have taken occa●●on to harden them selves in their tebellion being scandalized at the Gospel which is contrary to then fleshly understanding See Rom. 9 18. V 8. Of slumber the Greeke word signifieth the deadly slumber of those who have beene stung with some venemous beast V. 9. Let their table may all blessings and chiefly the proffer of the Gospel which they have hitherto abused prove an occasion of ruine and perdition to them for a iust punishment of their ingratitude V. 10. Bow doune make them unable to lift up the eyes of the spirit to thee and to thy Gospel or to rectifie themselves by conversion of heart or to doe any thing that is right or good and contrariwise burthen them with thy curse like to a heavie but then or with fetters of bondage with which the Hebrew terme of the Psalme which saieth make their loynes continually to shake a greeth very well V. 11. Isay shall it then be said that the body of this nation hath taken such a fals subiect of scandall against the Gospel that it is therby fallen irreparab●ly into a finall apostasie God so bid God hath revealed i● otherwise to me namly that he will yet on day call the Iewes againe and restore them to his covenant which in this meane tyme as upon an occasion Acts. 13. 42. he will communicate to the Gentiles that in his appointed time he may make use of this favour bestowed upon the Gentiles as aprick of holy realousy to the Iewes to prick them on to take part in this everlasting benefit V. 12. Now if the fall if God hath made use of the Iewes reiection for an occasion of powering out the riches of his grace thorow out the world and if the number of beleeving Iewes being much deminished a great multitude of Gentils hath bin converted how much more abundant shall Gods grace be and the number of beleevers increased even amongst the Gentiles themselves when the body of the Iewes here called fulnesse being re-established in Christ shall fill the world with wonder shall raise up all mens hearts to God shall induce unbeleevers to believe shall confirme beleevers and shall sett the Gosple in its full lustre and Christ into the fruition of his universall Empire of the world He addes this to induce the Gentiles to desire and
namely because by the same they receive Christ who being pay-master for them to God hath borne his wrath and curse for them to give satisfaction to it and free them from it and to obtain Gods grace for them which is the spring of all blessing by his perfect righteousnesse 2 Corinthians 5. 21. V. 14. Of Abraham namely promised to Abraham and to his spirituall posteritie onely The Gentiles the Italian the Nations namely to all believers of all nations indifferently Through Iesus Christ that is to say by vertue of him and through the communion with him by Faith That we might that being so restored into Gods grace he might communicate his gifts unto us and especially that of the holie Ghost to regeneration which had been so often and so solemnly promised by the Prophets Isai 32. 15. and 44. 3. I●r 31. 33. and 32. 40. Ezek. 11. 19. and 36. 27. Ioel 2. 29. Zech. 12. 10. V. 15. After the manner taking example from that which is by common reason observed amongst men in their covenants and contracts V. 16. The promises he hath a relation especially to that solemne forme of covenant which was made with Abraham Genes 17. 7. long time before the Law was given by Moses He saith not upon occasion of that passage he sheweth that seeing all nations at the appointed time were to have part in that blessing as they were Abrahams posteritie which is but onely one the naturall Jewes and the Gentiles who were children in spirit were to be united together now that is not done by conformitie of ceremonies nor by them the proselites which were of the Gentiles were incorporated into one and the same carnal nation with the Jewes but by the spiritual gathering together which Christ as Head makes of all his Believers into one sole bodie of a Church which is Abrahams true off-spring V. 7. See Ephes. 2. 14 15. and 3. 6. Christ namely his whole mysticall Bodie which is the Church which hath all its life and being from him and also participates of the glorie of his Name see 1 Cor. 12. 12. V. 17. In Christ that is to say of which covenant Christ already appointed and promised for a Mediatour was the onely foundation shewn and apprehended by the fathers The Law namely Moses his Law with all its dependencies The promise namely that Euangelicall promise of blessing to all nations and other such like which are all free promises Rom. 4. 13 14. V. 18. Forif we ought to suppose it would make the promise of none effect indeed if the inheritance and the blessing were by the Law for these two meanes are incompatible one with the other The inheritance namely the heavenly inheritance of which the Land of Canaan promised to Abraham and his seed was a figure Rom. 4. 13 16. V. 19. Wherefore namely seeing the blessing and the inheritance are absolutely given through grace and are received by faith the Law being no cause thereof neither in whole nor in part Because of namely to regulate mens lives and to represse the licentiousnesse and frequencie of misdeeds or to discover the horror and seal the condemnation thereof to drive men to seek the remedie of grace in the promised Messias Romans 3. 20. and 5. 20. 1 Tim 1. 9. Till the the use of this servile pedagogie w●s to last so long as the Church was yet in its infancie subject to fall easily into sin through weaknesse or ignorance but it was to cease at Christs comming in the flesh who gathering together the whole bodie of his Church from amongst the Jewes and the Gentiles and endowing it with abundant graces of his Spirit in knowledge and vertue hath made it by effects be known to be the blessed seed of Gods children V. 26. driven to love him and obey him by the spirit of adoption and libertie and not by the spirit of terror as it was anciently see Rom. 8. 15. It was ordained the Italian it was published God in the externall manner which he observed in giving his Law did shew that thereby man had no accesse to his Grace to obtain life and inheritance for God did then appear extremely terrible which was a qualitie contrary to a treatie of confederacie and because that at the peoples request who were not able to endure those terrours a signe of the guilt of their consciences Moses was fain to come in between as a mediatour of word and communication Exod. 20. 19. Deut. 5. 5. Acts 7. 38. Hebr. 12. 19. he was therein the figure of Christ the onely Mediatour of propitiation by whom we have accesse to God in confidence Hebr. 12. 24. By the Angels who were also mediatours on Gods side as Moses was on the peoples side V. 20. A Mediatour that is to say the Office which Moses then performed and which is not used but onely amongst disagreeing parties sheweth that by the Law God and man were contrary to one another as the delinquent and the Judge Is one he doth not varie one jot in his soveraigne justice which he hath set down in his Law and therefore these two parties could not be united but onely by the full satisfaction of Christ the Mediatour as the Apostle had said V. 13. V. 21. Is the Law By the foresaid things it appeares that God giving his Law by Moses would not bring in a meanes of acquiring righteousnesse and life which should be contrarie to his covenant of Grace but onely to guide men thereby to Christ For if he gives a reason why the Law hath not been contrarie to the promises of Grace namely because neither of it selfe nor by any order from God it had any power to restore man wh● was dead in sin to life nor consequently to justifie him whereupon we ought to conclude that God would not imploy it to any disproportionable use to the prejudice of his Grace to which he had reserved that absolutely V. 22. But the Law is so far from having been given to justifie man that contrariwise it shewed and sealed to the very Jewes who were Gods people their condemnation Rom 3. 10. 20. and 4. 15. The Scripture namely God by his Law and Word Rom. 9. 17. Gal. 3. 8. hath declared that all men generally are sinners and in state of damnation to the end that the elect laying aside all confidence in their own righteousnesse might have recourse to Christ to obtain by faith in him the blessing and inheritance which are the subject of Gods promise V. 23 ●aith namely the time of the full manifestation and of the free exercise of Faith under the Gospell We namely the Church which was then restrained within the Jewish nation onely Kept under that is to say the severitie of the Law and the subjection to so many painfull observances kept us like children at school in perpetuall labours and discipline still attentively expecting Christ to keep us from going astray either in religion or in life and conversation beyond the bounds
Are justified namely that pretend and believe to be partly justified before God by the Law Fromgrace from Gods grace which before you made profession of accepting in Christ. V. 5. For we that is to say you separate your selves from Christ withdrawing your selves from the common meaning and belief of the Church whose whole hope is to be absolved at the last judgement and enter into everlasting life by the meanes of One onely Jesus Christ. Through the spirit namely taught and inspired by the holy Ghost or following the spirituall meanes which the Gospell propounds in Christ and in his Spirit and not the carnall and elementall ones of the ceremonies of the Law Heb. 9. 10. V. 6. Which worketh namely which is a true and lively faith and sheweth it selfe to be such by the fruits of a new life comprehended under the love of God and of ones neighbour Rom. 13. 8. of which faith is the root because it joyning a man with Christ drawes his Spirit from him and tha● Spirit is the soveraigne cause of all good workes See Iohn 15. 4 5. Iam. 2. 17 26. V. 7. Did run you were in a good way of faith and were gone happily forward towards the marke of your heavenly calling See Phil. 3. 14. V. 8. Of him namely of God V. 9. Leaven that is to say a little false doctrine Matth. 16. 12. doth easily corrupt the good minde of a man in the rest or a small number of heretickes may infect the whole Church V 10. Through the Lord namely through his grace and power No otherwise than I have at other times taught you and now confirmed unto you in this Epistle V. 11. And I for a personall proof of this truth consider that if I would retain the Mosaicall ceremonies I might avoid the persecutions of my nation which are raised against me onely for that cause and therefore seeing I do refuse to do it you may conclude that my conscience which may serve for example and rule to your consciences doth not consent to it See 1 Cor. 15. 30. The offence namely the occasion of the persecutions which do so much offend and alienate the world from the Gospell is cut off seeing they are at this time stirred up onely by the Jewes through a false zeal to their ceremonies see Gal. 6. 12. Phil. 3. 18. V. 12. Cut off wholly separated and banished out of the communion of the Church in the bodie of which they are like unto so many plagues and cankers V. 13. For brethren the reason of this my desire is because that they remaining amongst you disguised in sheepes clothing do hinder the course of your vocation burthening you with the observances of such things as are contrary to Euangelicall libertie by which the holy Ghost carrieth Believers couragiously on to their supernall end To the flesh namely licentiously to satisfie your fleshly and vicious appetites under pretence that those ancient forbidding Lawes are disannulled By love the Italian for charitie have a care you do not offend the weak brethren in indifferent things using your libertie undiscreetly and unbridledly Rom. 14. 13 15 20. 1 Cor. 6. 12. and 8. 9. and 10. 24 32. V. 14 The Law from which though Christ have taken away the power of judging the faithfull before God yet it is left unto them for a perpetuall rule of true obedience and conformitie to the will of God their father V. 15. Ye bite he hath a relation to the controversies which were bred amongst Christians concerning the Jewish ceremonies maintained with great instance by some and by other some violently rejected Rom. 14. 13 1 Tim. 1. 4. and 6. 4 5. 2 Tim. 2. 25. Ti● 3. 9. One of another namely that in stead of receiving the Jewish ceremonies for fear of being persecuted by the Jewes you do not upon the same occasion ruine one another without any persecution V. 16. Walke in Order your whole life and actions according to the instructions and motions of the holy Ghost as well in the spirituall forme of Religion which is proper to the Gospell as in holinesse of life Not fulfill that is to say withstand the reliques of the old man and the naturall cor 〈…〉 tion which yet remaineth in you Rom. 7. 18. 〈◊〉 3. V. 17. Tor the he gives a reason for what he had said that following the spirit one ought to renounce the flesh namely because they are two beginnings and motions which are directly contrary in their qualities and actions So that ye the Italian that you may not do whatsoever you will I speak this concerning the strife between the flesh and the spirit which is in every believer to the end that under pretence of Euangelicall libertie or of the presence of the spirit you do not take leave to do whatsoever you please seeing that there may be some motion of the flesh therein which is contrary to the motion of Gods Spirit It may also be translated so that you do not the things that you would as much as to say so that you are hindered from doing good in that perfection as you desire Romans 7. 15 19. V. 18. Under the Law namely under the servile and scrupulous pedagogie of the ceremoniall Law nor yet under the morall Law which doth severely command and inexorably condemne but under that milde and most effectuall conduct of the holy Ghost working in you V. 20. Heresies the Italian Sects or heresies which are also effects of the corruption of sin as well in the affected ignorance of the understanding as in the perversenesse of the will fixed upon its own opinions lover of singularities and vainglorie rebellious against the truth failing in charitie c. V. 23. Against such the Italian against such things that is to say the Law of God that is so harsh and terrible to all men that are in the state of sin is not so to Gods children who do no more fight against it of pure malice nor are not fought against by the curse of it but do voluntarily submit themselves to it and it through the spirit of grace becomes to them a milde mistresse of their actions and guide of their life and is no longer an inexorable forme of judgement against their persons V. 24. And they though the root of the foresaid vices be also in believers and in the members of Christ yet by his spirit Rom. 8. 13. and by imitating his crosse Rom. 6. 6 they mortifie it suppresse the endeavours and smother the effects of it Rom. 6. 12. V. 25. In the spirit being by it regenerated into a new life V. 26. Provoking spighting and purposely doing acts of offence and prouocation against other men CHAP. VI V erse 1. OVertaken that is to say discovered to be guilty or have runne into it inconsiderately and not out of any deliberate malice Ye which are namely the bodie of believers in whom the worke of the holy Ghost remaineth safe without being spoiled or spotted by any grievous
the members and they likewise in right and in vertue of the infallible cause and in certainnesse of hope are already raised up and glorified and at the appointed time shall be so in effect 1 Cor. 15. 12 15 20 22. Through Christ namely in the benefit of our redemption through him V. 8. By grace which holds the place of principal cause as faith is the meanes on mans side to receive and applie unto himselfe the feeling and fruition of that salvation which is presented unto him in Christ. Of your selves of any merit worth invention or worke of yours V. 10. For we are He proves that our own workes cannot be the cause of our salvation for we our selves that do them have been made that is to say regenerate and sanctified by his grace and have been made fit to do them by his Spirit besides that the use of them is not of merit to acquire right to salvation but onely a way to come to the fruition of it Before ordained to worke them in us and to be wrought by us God having by one and the same will and councell ordained the end of salvation and the meanes to attain to it V. 11. Wherefore seeing God hath done us al in generall so many favours you Gentiles who were furthest off and most unworthy of them ought to thinke your selves most obliged for them In the flesh wanting the circumcision in your flesh which was the Sacrament of Gods Covenant and therefore likewise under the name of uncircumcised you were abhorred of the Jewes who for their honour were called the circumcised people so that you had no part nor communion with Gods Church neither outwardly nor spiritually v. 12. V. 12. Ye were ye had neither union nor communion with Christ Head of the Church Founder and Mediatour of the Covenant and Spring of all spirituall and everlasting blessings Aliens and therefore separate from the bodie of it namely of the Church to which onely he communicates his grace and which at that time was restrained within the Jewish nation onely See Ezech. 13. 9. Strangers Having no interest nor portion in the goods promised in the Covenant of grace which was made with Abraham and so many times reiterated and confirmed Of promise namely of grace See Rom. 4. 13 14. and 9. 8. To hope of salvation and eternall goods Without God without any knowledge or worship of the true God 1 Corinth 8. 5 5. wherein consists the interchangeable dutie of those who are in this covenant V. 13. In Christ not onely by his meanes but also by vertue of the union which you have with him by faith Farre off namely from God from his Covenant and from the Church as he had said vers 12. By the blood by his death which he suffered for you and hath been applied unto you by faith you have been reconciled to God and re-united into one bodie of a Church with the believing Jewes this seemes to be added to shew that the Gentiles were no more engrafted in the Church by circumcision and by ceremonies as anciently the proselites were but by Christs passion shadowed by those figures V. 14. Our peace the tie and foundation of the true union of the Gentiles with the Jewes into one and the same Church The middle wall He hath questionlesse a relation to the wall which was in Solomons Temple between the peoples and the Gentiles court which hindred all manner of passage sight or communication between them Ezech. 42. 20 the meaning is that the Gentiles have by the Gospell gotten free accesse to the Church and the goods thereof being no more held to be prophane persons V. 15. In his flesh namely in the sacrifice of his bodie by which he hath disannulled all ancient ceremonies which were a signe and a meanes of the separation of the two people Gentiles and Jewes and the occasion of great hatred betwixt them the Jewes detesting the Gentiles and their manner of worship as unclean and prophane and the Gentiles abhorring the Jewes and all their observations as absurd and contrary to those of all other nations Acts 10. 28. To make the Italian to create that is to say to make by a manner of new creation these two nations regenerated by his Spirit a new bodie of a Church united in Christ who is the Head thereof and the Foundation of all its subsistencie V. 16. In one being so united to shew that none can have part in Gods peace unlesse he be united to the Church seeing that there being but one covenant and one head thereof namely Christ it is impossible it should be made with men that were divided By the crosse namely by his sacrifice upon the altar of the crosse Slain having by vertue of his death which was the destruction of the kingdom life of sin Rom. 6. 6. Gal. 6. 14. taken away the cause of Gods enmitie with sinfull men and of the Church with life of unbeleevers and heathens which is no other but only the uncleannesse of sin and hath established the true foundation of peace which is righteousnesse and holinesse considered in its reall truth of Faith and Spirit and no more in the ancient outward signes of Mosaicall Ceremonies Gal. 6. 15. Thereby the Italian in himself namely in his own death or in it namely in the Crosse. V. 17. And came in his own person by taking upon him humane flesh and the office of a messenger of pence and afterwards by sending his Apostles Luke 24. 47. see 1 Pet. 3. 19. Unto you namely to the Gentiles in generall who were separate from God from his covenant and salvation To them to the Jews a people joyned to God by a speciall covenant V. 18. For through he proves that peace is truly made with God because he now admits all nations indifferently unto him to present their prayers and worship to him By one namely by vertue of the holy Ghost which is one and the same in all beleevers and works all the foresaid things in them by the same consent and will V. 20. Are built your faith by which you subsist in the communion of Saints hath for its foundation for infallibility immoveable rule the doctrine of the old and new Testament the principall subject whereof is Christ who in his person is the essentiall foundation as it were the corner Stone in which consists the chief strength of a building binding the two walls together which are the two nations of the Jews and the Gentiles whereof the Church is composed and alwayes bearing and withstanding all manner of dangerous encounters which are more dangerous at the corners of buildings then at any other part of them see Cant. 8. 9 10. V. 21. In whom upon whom or by vertue of whom and of the conjunction with him Groweth advanceth and raiseth it self untill it come to its perfection in Heaven Revel 21. 3. V. 22. In whom this seems to be added to shew that whilest the mysticall Temple
Christ See upon Rom. 8. 9. V. 20. My earnest expectation the Italian mine intent namely my care Ashamed comming to faile in these tryals against that glorious profession of persevering which I have alwaies professed upon the assurance of Gods invincible power Shall be magnified laying open in me his divine powers and verifying his promises In my body in me whilst I live in this life and in regard of my patience in these bodily afflictions V. 21. For to me he gives a reason of this his hope because that having had no other object nor imployment for his life he should at his death receive the reward for it gayning thereby a glorious and immortall life V. 22. I wot not weighing on the one side mine owne particular profit which would be to be gathered in to mine everlasting rest and on the other side the profit of the Churches which seemes yet to require my presence V. 23. In a strait perplexed and ambiguous between these two thoughts and desires To depart namely to returne to my proper habitation 2 Cor. 5. 6. 8. 9. 2 Tim 4. 6. Or to be set at liberty and freed as from a prison or a keeper V. 25. I know it is likely that the Apostle said this at his first comming to Rome and that then i● was revealed to him that his life should as yet be prolonged to him as it was for two yeeres Acts 28. 30. at the end of which he was divinely warned that his death was approaching 2 Tim. 4. 〈◊〉 Others beleeve that he speaks only according to likelihood by humane discourse and not by any revelation Abide in this world With you in the communion of this life not onely temporall but spirituall also And ioy that being borne up by my presence and ministery your comfort and spirituall joy grounded upon faith in Christ may be confirmed increased V. 26. Your rejoycing the Italian Your boast that you may have the greater cause of rejoycing and glorifying your selves in Gods grace which he communicates unto you by me your Pastor and that you may for a long time boast of having had me to be your Apostle By my comming it is likely that Paul having knowne by revelation that his death was not yet at hand he did from thence by humane discourse gather this consequence that he yet hoped once againe to see the Philippians for it appeares by the following verse that he spake it doubtfully V. 27. In one namely by his power Or in a holy union whereof Gods Spirit is the author and bone Striving standing to all trials assaults and difficulties Jude 3. V. 28. Which is the opposition wherewith they oppose you and the assaults which they give you are unto them a most certaine argument of eternall damnation Of Salvation in that by the community in Christs sufferings and by his Name and Truth they have a certaine pledge of their conformity to his glory and that he is just before God in giving rest to those that are afflicted for his cause 2 Thes. 1. 7. And that for God hath established the foresaid order Or not by your own power but by meanes of Gods grace who bearing you up in your afflictions gives you thereby a certaine argument of the accomplishment of your salvation V. 30. Ye saw he seems to mean the persecution which he suffered at Philippi Act. 16. 22. CHAP. II. Vers. 1. IF there be seeing you have been witnesses of mine affliction and that the communion of Christs members requires that they should enterchangeably comfort themselves through charity and be united together by the same spirit and to have the bowels of affectionate compassion open to one another doe you shew your selves thus godly affected towards me comforting me through your holy concord V. 2. Fulfill ye following that which you have happily begun and continued untill this time V. 5. This mind or affection V. 6. Who being not onely true God coessentiall with his father but also appearing to Angels and men no otherwise but in divine glory and Majesty Thought it not that is to say he was without any usurpation truely equall to God and had his right by nature See John 5. 〈◊〉 V. 7. Made himselfe of no the Italian Made himself of nothing that is to say he brought himselfe as it were to nothing hiding his divine glory for a time and abstaining from the use and manifestation of it and contrarywise having ●aking upon him humane nature and making himselfe knowne in it Which nature in comparison of God is nothing and in that nature also subjecting himselfe to a most abject and wretched condition The forme namely an apparent quality and condition of a meere servant obedient to his father and subject to his Law John 6. ●8 to be judged and rewarded according to the merit of the worke not for favour or for dignity of the person Esa. 53. 11. Gal. 4. 4. subject to worldly power Esa. 49. 7. and wholly devoted to mens benefit and service having no regard of himselfe Matth 20. 28. Rom. 15. 3 8. In the likenesse in all things like unto man excepting sinne Heb. 2. 17. and 4. 15. V. 8. Being found that is to say having shewed himselfe in the world as farre as could be descried by the senses as plain man which is spoken in opposition to that which faith did spiritually judge and see namely that he was the everlasting Son of God 9. Wherefore as he hath made himself subject to the Law so because he had perfectly satisfied it God hath given his humane nature the reward of a glorious life promised by the Law in a most eminent degree correspondent to that of his abasement and by means of this exaltation hath installed him in the glorious possession and administration of his heavenly kingdom in which his divine Majestie which before lay hidden doth shine at full which it expressed by the words following A name that is to say a dignity glory ●nd power V. 10. That at the to bring all creatures either to a forced or to a voluntary obedience and adoration of this Soveraigne King as trembling to hear him but once named Things in heaven this distinction is either more expresly to comprehend all creatures whatsoever or by the heavenly he means the Angels Hebr. 1. 6. By those on earth men by those under the earth the devils which are abissed in hell Luke 8. 31. 2 Pet. 2. 4. Jude 6. who are also constrained to tremble at the name of Jesus and reverence it see Mark 5. 6. V. 12. Work out the Italian accomplish bend all your endeavours and strength to come to the mark and to the accomplishing of your salvation see 2 Cor. 〈◊〉 1. With fear with holy reverence humility and care V. 13. For it is he gives a reason why they should so imploy themselves namely because their labour shall not be in vaine but Gods grace shall assist them and powerfully cooperate with them See Rom. 6. 13 14.
his judgement In him ingrafted in him by faith and united to him by the spirit and as it were all wrapped up and covered with his righteousnesse See Rom. 8. 1. By faith the Greek phrase doth signifie a condition required as Acts 3. 16. V. 10. That I may know that being justified by faith in Christ I may feel and prove the vertue of his Spirit and operation in me in the mortification of my flesh and of sin and in the raising again and vivifying of the new man in holinesse of life by vertue of the conformitie of the death and resurrection of Christ. See Rom. 6. 4 5 6. Others referre this to the last and perfect knowledge and fruition of Christ which believers shall have in Heaven by the resurrection of the members in vertue and to the resemblance of Him who is the Head after we have been partakers of afflictions and death in this world as Rom. 8. 11. 17. 29. 2 Tim. 2. 11 12 V. 11. If by any meanes this terme doth not implie any doubt but a strong endeavour and desire I might if by a continuall mortification I could attain to blessed immortalitie in which I shall be wholly raised up from sin to live to God alone which is as a signe and reward of my spiritual race V. 12. Not as though Let no man believe that I am as a divine man or an Angel and that I am arrived to the end of my race and of my combates See 2 Cor. 12. 6. Either were this other terme is taken from those who amongst the Heathen after many purifyings and preparations made themselves capable of the sight and participation of certain great idolatrous mysteries Am apprehended this other terme is taken from those who run a race who sometimes did drag after them and helpe to run some friends of theirs to make them win the second wager or reward or from the custome of compelling men which they met by the way Mat. 5. 41. the meaning is Christ hath taken me and possesseth me with his Spirit See Cant. 1. 4. John 6. 44. and 12. 32. V. 13. Those things namely the world and the concupiscence thereof and whatsoever is contrary to Gods kingdom and all Pharisaical righteousnesse and such like meanes which I heretofore followed all which I have renounced to presse with all my strength towards the marke of salvation by the race of faith in Christ. V. 14. In Christ Jesus that is to say I strive thus by the power which Christ lends me or Christ being the onely meanes for to attain to this end V. 15. Perfect See upon 1 Cor. 2. 6. Be thus minded to forsake all other meanes and confidence of salvation to cleave unto Christ onely Otherwise minded through weaknesse of faith or unaffected ignorance there being in those beginnings many believers that did bear great devotion and did much reverence to those Jewish ceremonies Reveal will enlighten and strengthen you in the knowledge of the pure truth of the Gospel V. 16. Neverthelesse Let us live peaceably and regulately in a well tuned harmonie notwithstanding this diversitie of mindes in such things agreeing in the rest of the doctrine of which being fully perswaded we have gone together thus forward in it V. 17. Marke them take it for an assured signe of good pastours when they studie to conforme themselves to mine example in all things V. 20. For our He proves that such as set their hearts upon earthly things cannot chuse but fall into eternal perdition and ignominie namely because the propertie and glorie of all believers to whom onely salvation belongeth is to live in this world as if they lived in Heaven where they sit with Christ Ephes. 2. 6. and therefore they do bend all their thoughts and desires that way Matth. 6. 20 21. Others reade it But we live c. CHAP. IIII. Vers. 1. ANd crown your faith and conversion and the happy estate of your Church which was founded by me do give me great cause of ioy and my Ministerie is singularly honoured thereby and I have reason to glorie in the Lord. Stand fast as you do at this present or as I have said before In the Lord namely in all that is conformable to his Truth and will or not in a civil and worldly concord but in a Christian and spiritual one V. 3 True yoak-fellow He speakes to the chief Pastour the Apostles Epistles being directed to them and afterwards read by them in the publike Assemblie Which laboured which have imployed themselves with me in the advancing of the Gospel having been partakers of the combats and difficulties which I have suffered at the hands of the enemies of it V. 5. Moderation the Italian mildnesse or equitie or modestie V. 7. The peace the true spiritual and incomprehensible rest and tranquillitie of minde which God creates in the hearts of his by his Spirit shall keep and free you from all terrour anxietie and disturbance to persevere in peace in Christs communion or shall keep you in Christ that is to say by his power V. 8. Praise namely any praise-worthy action V. 10. In the Lord namely with a spiritual motion and joy whereof Christ is the onely Authour and giveth a cause for it to those that are his Hath flourished again that you have wakened and are grown vigorous others that you have caused your care of me to flourish again V. 12. I know how that is to say I know how to make use of such vertues as befit these different estates V. 13. All things namely that belong to my dutie and calling Through Christ by his power grace and Spirit which he communicates unto me by vertue of my spiritual union with Him V. 15. Now ye you are witnesses unto me how that what I speak is truth Of the Gospell when it began to be first preached in your coasts But ye As much as to say ye onely have alwayes had the credit of being my providers so have you begun and so you persist V. 17. Not because the cause why I rejoyce so much in your liberaltie and that I thus accept of it is not so much in regard of my selfe as in regard of you that ye 〈…〉 nding in the fruits of Gods grace he may double them unto you and give you a large and ample reward according to his holy promises V. 18. An odour namely an act most pleasing to God A terme taken from the ancient Sacrifices See Gen. 8. 21. Exod. 29. 18. V. 19. In glory these words may be annexed to the word riches as saying the riches of Gods glorious grace Rom. 〈◊〉 4. and 9. 23. Or with the word shall supply in glory that is to say powerfully and gloriously Or in everlasting glory By Christ namely by his communion Or by vertue of him V. 21. In Christ Iesus namely those that are members of Christ Or salute them in Christ. That is to say with a spirituall affection Rom. 16. 22. V. 22. Houshold whereof
appeared nor the glorious manifestation thereof all that is yet in safe custody with God in Christs person Strive therefore to attaine to that Soveraigne end by a continuall exercise of holinesse Phil. 3. 11. 12. 14. V. 4. Who is our namely in the communion of whose Spirit you subsist in this state of spirituall life whereof Christ is as it were the root and spring which gives and preserves it V. 5. Your members namely all the affections motions and concupiscences of corrupt nature whereof is composed all that masse of vice which is called the body of sinne Rom. 6. 6. Col. 2. 11. Or by members he meanes all the vicious actions of the body Rom. 8. 13. V. 6. The children See upon Eph. 2. 2. 5. 6. V. 7. Walked that is to say which you sometimes practised Ye lived when you see all your heart and delight in them and were wholly given to them as men in whom sin raigneth V. 10. Which is renewed the renewing of which is not fulfilled in an instant but goeth forward by degrees in holinesse according as the lively enlightening of the Holy Ghost encreaseth by meanes whereof all the remainder of the worke of regeneration is accomplished Rom. 12. 2. 2 Cor. 3. 18. Eph. 4. 23. V. 11. Where there is in which worke of sanctification all these regards conditions and qualities doe neither availe nor hurt And God in producing of it hath no respect unto them But Christ Christ alone apprehended by faith for the remission of sinnes is the onely spring and cause of all good and salvation to all believers and living and working in them by his Spirit to regeneration V. 14. Above all these the Italian instead of all these to the end that you may worke all these particular things Get you a habit of charity which is the root of all these vertues The bond namely the only meanes of a true and perfect union which ought to be between believers aboue all humane conjunctions and which containeth perfectly in it selfe all the duties whereby men are joyned with God and one with the other V. 15. Of God namely that holy tranquillity in your Spirits and that spirituall concord which God requires and creates in his beleevers Rule namely governe and temper all your affections so that they may all yeeld and have a relation thereunto In one body namely in the communion of the Church which is Christs body Thankefull for the benefits received from God and men V. 16. Let the word namely the doctrine of the Gospell have a firme seate in your hearts and in the middest of your Church and as the soule dwels in the body to preserve it alive to cause it to grow and operate by it So let this active truth be in you in abundant fruits of good workes With grace in a godly gracious manner which may allure and edifie the hearers See Luke 2. 52. Acts 2 47. Ephes. 4. 29. Colos. 4. 5. In your hearts by a lively feeling of the soule and not with the lips onely V. 17. In the name calling upon his holy Name and according to his command and to his honour and service V. 18. In the Lord namely as it is fitting for women that are in Christs communion as members of his Church Or according to his command Or in respect and by vertue of him V. 20. In all things which belong to the right of parents and whereunto children are lawfully bound Ephes. 5. 24. V. 21. Lest they be lest they put off all manner of affection and desire of being thankfull to you Despairing through your immoderate rigor of obtaining your good wils Or lest they lose all joy of heart and so run into precipitate resolutions V. 22. In all things as v. 20. According to the namely your corporall and worldly masters As Eph. 6. 5. Eye service See upon Eph. 6. 6. V. 24. Of the inheritance namely the heavenly inheritance which though beleevers doe obtaine meerely by vertue of their adoption yet it is promised unto them likewise by the name of reward and guerdon for to incite them to doe well The Lord who being the Soveraigne Lord of all giveth and appointeth to every one his vocation and thereby exerciseth his command in the world CHAP. IV. Vers. 1. EQuall that is to say all enterchangeable duties of masters to servants V. 2. Watch being alwaies attentive and ready and fittingly prepared to present them unto him V. 3. Unto us as to other Apostles and Evangelists who are not prisoners as I am A doore namely that he will give us opportunity and occasion to preach his Word being at libertie V. 5. Without namely infidels and those that are strangers to the Church to give them no cause of offence or of hating persecuting and slandering the Church but rather to gaine them to you and edifie you V. 6. With grace with holie and spirituall mildenesse and in a fitting manner With Salt namely with wisedome and discretion or with good understanding which may excite and please the taste of the hearers See Marke 9. 50. V. 7. In the Lord in his worke or in the communion of his mysticall body V. 9. Onesimus some thinke it is the same as is spoken of Philem. 10. V. 11. Of the that are Jewes converted to Christianity These onely are Or mine onely workecompanions In Gods Kingdome which have been c. That is to say those that are with me and are worthie workmen The Kingdome namely in preaching the Gospell by which God gathers together and governes his Church and distributeth his everlasting goods V. 12. Labouring servently the Italian fighting assisting you in your troubles and oppositions with his servent prayers to God Perfect being no longer children but of full age in strength and understanding to know and performe the will of God See Matth. 5. 48. 1 Cor. 14. 20. V. 13. Laodicea these two Cities were neere Colosse Col. 2. 1. 16. From Laodicea it may be understood of some Epistle that the Apostle writ to the Laodiceans which was to be communicated to the Colossians and is now lost like divers more 1 Cor. 5. 9. Phil. 3. 1. yet without any diminution of the perfection of holy Scripture which consists not in a certaine number of bookes but in the full revelation of all the doctrine which is necessary to salvation and questionlesse hath in other places the same doctrines as were contained in those Epistles which are lost V. 17. In the Lord namely in his worke and service Or looke to the degree of service which thou holdest in the communion of his body V. 18. Remember that you may assist me with your prayers to confirme you in the faith by mine example and to give me occasion of comfort by your perseverance and other vertues Grace namely the grace of God in Christ. THE FIRST EPISTLE OF St. PAUL the Apostle to the THESSALONIANS ARGUMENT SAint Paul as Saint Luke reports Acts 17. had by his preaching converted divers Iewes
and many Gentiles in Thessalonica a City of Macedonia But by reason of the violent persecution which was there stirred up against him by the Iewes he was constrained suddenly to depart from thence Whereupon having a little while afterwards heard how that poore infant Church was grievously molested through persecutions He had sent Timothie to them from Athens to strengthen it and encourage it to persevere and having heard from him of the happy and laudable state it was in he writes this Epistle to it Wherein at the very first he gives God thankes and praiseth the Thessalonians for their readinesse and alacrity in receiving the Gospell and for their faith charity and patience in the profession of it according as he had taught and preached it to them with all loyalty study efficacy and hearty affection Then he comforteth them in their afflictions by Christs example and by his owne and that of the Churches of Iudea And tels them that being hindered from performing his hearty and fervent desire in visiting them he had sent Timothie unto them by whose relation he had been singularly comforted And againe gives God thanks praying him to encrease their gifts and to confirme them unto the end Then he exhorteth them to holinesse charity and peace and to bestow their times in laudable exercises and to forbeare lamen●ing and grieving excessively for the dead And to comfort themselves in the assured hope of a blessed resurrection the manner of which he sets downe teaching how that though the time of Christs comming to judgement be hidden yet it ought hourely to be expected with watchfulnesse and holy preparation and at last after divers holy exhortations he saluteth and blesseth them CHAP. I. VER 1. SIlvanus some hold it was the same as is called Silas in the Acts of the Apostles Which is which through faith in Christ is in Gods grace and covenant and is engrafted amongst his true people V. 3. Your worke namely the fruits and effects of your lively and working faith not of a dead and idle faith Gal. 5. 6. Jam. 2. 17. Labour namely the duties of true charity performed by you not sparing your selves in troublesome and dangerous times and occasions Patience namely your voluntary and constant patience in the crosse which is maintained by the certaine hopes of everlasting goods which are promised for it See 2 Cor. 4. 17 18. In the sight namely every time that we present our selves before God to pray unto him Or I speake truely as in the presence of God 2 Cor. 12. 19. Gal. 1. 20. Or this is added to shew the truth and sincerity of these vertues in the Thessalonians V. 4 Knowing finding and knowing that you are Gods true elect by this certaine proofe namely that the holy Ghost hath imprinted in your hearts the Gospell which I have preached to you ●nd hath engendered a lively faith in you V. 5. In power with a divine efficacy of the holy Ghost V. 8. Sounded out the fame thereof hath by your meanes been spread over all the neighbouring Provinces V. 9. They themselves namely the believers scattered all the world over What manner of how our persons and our ministery have been received by you and how Gods word hath taken place amongst you CHAP. II. Vers. 1. IN vaine unprofitable and fruitlesse as would have been if we had for feare of persecutions forborne to Evangelize unto you V. 2. In our God namely trusting in his assistance and vertue Contention namely oppositions persecutions and cares V. 3. Uncleannesse namely from any infamous or vitious affection as from sordid avarice infamous flattery or dishonest dealing See 2 Cor 6. 6. 7. 1. V. 4. To be put in trust as faithfull Stewards V. 5. A cloake or a pretence that is to say hidden and dissembled waies to worke our owne gaine and profit V. 6. Burthensome taking of you such things as we have need of which we have not done vers 9. 2 Cor. 12. 13. V. 13. Worketh bringing forth in you all manner of Christian vertues and especially constancy in suffering afflictions for the Gospell V. 14. In Christ that is to say Christian and by faith in Christ engrasted into the Church which is his owne body As they have namely the beleeving Jewes V. 16. Fill up the Italian addeth fill up the measure namely so full as Gods patience hath limited it should be filled See Gen. 15. 16 The wrath as Gods judgement hath been extreamely provoked by them so is it fully fallen upon them See Job 36. 17. V. 17. Taking front you as a father from his children The more this short absence hath not one whit lessened mine affection but rather enflamed and encreased it 19. For what have not I cause to love you thus dearly seeing your conversion is such an excellent fruit of my ministerie by which it hath been made glorious and hope besides my present joy to be therfore crowned with everlasting glorie at Christs comming Even ye As well as other Churches which have been founded and taught by me CHAP. III. Vers. 1. FOrbear Endure the discomfort of your absence and the desire I have to see you To be left It is likely that this hath a relation to what is spoken Acts 17. 15. and that after Timothie was come back to the Apostle in Athens he sent him backe to Thessalonica V. 2. Timotheus to supplie in part by him what we could not performe by our presence V. 3. Appointed And placed by Gods vocation to be conformable to Christ as well in afflictions as in glorie Rom. 8. 17. 28. A terme taken from souldiers that are sentinels in their watch-house and to other duties belonging to martial discipline V. 8. We live notwithstanding all our miseries and death which is present before us we are safe and sound and very chearfull if that ye stand firme and sound in your faith in Christ. V. 9. For what this so happeneth unto us because God gives us in you incomparable cause of joy and comfort for which we cannot thanke him sufficiently Before our that is to say spiritually or with a hearty joy of which he is a witnesse or acknowledging the cause thereof to proceed from him onely and giving him thankes therefore V. 10. Perfect Instruct and confirme you more fully in Christian doctrine and finish the establishment of your Church which shortnesse of time would not suffer me to do at my first comming V. 13. Establish that by meanes of the gift of charitie which is the spring of all good workes you may persevere in true holinesse approved by God without any voluntary offence or malice At the comming that you may be known to be such by Christ himselfe at the last judgement or untill his comming With all his this may have a relation either to the establishment in holinesse in the communion of all believers as Ephes. 3. 18. Col. 3 4. or to the last comming of Christ accompanied with his holy Angels Zech. 14. 5. Matth.
for to maintaine them First to shew before the Church he burdened therewith v. 16. V. 5. That is worthy of such a name and of the respect that is due to such V. 6. Is dead in regard of the feelings motions and actions of the spirituall life which hath no vigor but when the flesh is brought low and mortified V. 7. These things besides such things as have been spoken of before chap. 4. 11. V. 8. But if any he confirmes that which he had spoken v. 4. Hath denied he doth an act utterly incompatible with the Christian faith of which he makes profession Infi 〈…〉 who oftentimes through a plain naturall light doe performe these duties and those which doe faile therein are more excusable then mercilesse Christians because they are not so well enlightened nor instructed V. 9. Be taken into namely into the number and colledge of such as giving over their owne particular affaires did dedicate themselves to the service of the poore the sicke and of strangers and they themselves were also maintained by publique almes See Acts 6. 1. Rom. 16. 1. Under three 〈…〉 as well to avoid all subject and suspition of scandall as likewise because that the poore should not want assistance if the younger widdows chanced to be married on a sudden Having been the wife that hath not been divorced from her husband without a lawfull cause and married another Marke 10. 12. Others understand it so that sh 〈…〉 hath remained a widdow after the death of her husband which was a 〈…〉 e of continencie and mortification as Luke 2. 36 37. V. 10. If sh 〈…〉 if she have shewed care charity patience in bringing up her family after the death of her husband or according to some if she have given them the breast her selfe If she have wished according to the custome of those times and places when one had been a journey and under this act of charity are comprehended all the rest V. 11. Refuse exclude them from this office and publique benefit When they have after they have renounced the inward mortification of the concupiscences of the flesh which the Spirit of Christ ingenders in all his true members and by which the soule is joyned to Christ as unto her true bride-groome they doe also pretend to cover this incontinencie with the vaile of matrimonie V. 12. Having they make themselves comdemnable beyond excuse in that having of their owne accord consecrated themselves to the service of the Church they doe impudently call backe their vow to satisfie their lust Or because that having beg 〈…〉 well by spirituall acts of faith and piety they end by acts of the flesh and lasciviousnesse which is the onely cause of these marriages whereupon they are also prophaned V. 13. And withall besides this first vice of incontinency the 〈…〉 is also that being by their Deaconship freed from the houshold cares and employments of mothers of families they bestow their idile times in these following vices V. 14. I will I doe appoint it to be so by Apostolicall authority 1. Tim. 2. 8. That the younger this is but onely to shew what is most convenient for that age and condition yet not to binde any one absolutely to doe so but with a lawfull respect to all circumstances 1 Cor. 7. 8 9. To the adversary namely to the divell and all his instruments deadly enemies of the Church 1 Tim. 3. 7. V. 15. Are already by running into luxurie whereof the divell is the chiefe authour Or by falling away from Christian Religion to abandon themselves the more licenciouslie to their owne lusts V. 16. Have widdows any daughter mother sister or other kinswoman that needeth helpe but hath not the qualities of Ecclesiasticall widdows V. 17. The Elders whereof some onely looked to the government and discipline of the Church the other both to preaching and government Do 〈…〉 e above any other member of the Church or above the Deacons and Deaconnesses vers 3. and under the name of honour is also comprehended honest maintenance as it appeares by the following verse V. 18. The labourer a proverbiall kind of speech and commonly used by the Lord himselfe V. 19. Receive not doe not lightly give credit to any such accusation to come suddenly to Ecclesiasticall censure and corrections before the fact be fully verified for this office is more subject to 〈…〉 ders and being sacred ought to be respected more then sleight suspitions or evill reports and such persons ought not prejudicately be thought capable of any grievous faults without certaine proofe● V. ●0 Them he seemes particularly to meane the foresaid Elders That sinne namely that commit any scandalous fault or notorious offence Before all in the full Assembly of the Governours of the Church Matth. 18. 17. 2 C●r 2. 6. Gal. 2. 14. V. 21. Without without passion and without being persecuted by any favour or affection or any disfavour not judge according to such passions but according to the righteousnesse and merit of the cause without preferring one before the other V. 22. L●y hands doe not easily install any one into any Ecclesiasticall Office without sufficient examination and triall of his life and conversation Neither be partaker deale not in such sort that the dammage comming upon the Church by reason of persons indiscreetly promoted may be imputed to thee Or if others be the authours of this rashnesse do not thou consent unto it but rather oppose thy selfe V. 24. Some mens this is a confirmation of what he had said vers 22. namely not to runne headlong in disposing of Ecclesiasticall Offices for there are some whose former faults and vices ought to exclude them and in others they are more obscure and need to have longer time to discover them And likewise the piety and goodnesse of some is tryed in such sort that they may presently be received without feare of erring And some there are who are not so well approved of and delay will not any way cloud their vertue but wil cause it to be more manifestly shewen Psa. 37. 6. Mark 4. 22. Luke 8. 17. CHAP. VI. Vers. 1. BE not as if God by his Gospel were the authour of rebellions and of the subversion of order and civill bonds V. 2. Brethren namely spirituall brethren in Christ for that doth not disanull the degrees and states of the world Beloved of God and therefore ought to be served not onely through feare and constraint but for love and good wil. Partakers of namely that have by faith embraced Gods grace in Christ. V. 3. Wholsome which are not onely pure and sincere but doe also bring life and spiritual holinesse to the soule Psa. 19. 7. 1 Tim 1. 10. 2 Tim. 1. 13. Titus 1. 9. Which is which is conformable to the true service due to God and hath its whole relation thereunto 1 Tim. 3. 16. Tit. 1. 1. Heb. 5. 13. 2 Pet. 2. 22. V. 4. Doting the Italian languishing as on weake in Spirit through a
and foment this light and this fire of the gift of the holy Ghost and especially of those gifts which have a relation to the holy ministery See 1 Thes. 5. 19. 1 Tim. 4. 14. By the putting for God did joyn his grace and power to his sacred Ceremony which was appointed by Christ did then likewise begin the miraculous gifts of his Spirit Act. 8. 17. 19. 6. Of my hands it should seem that by the imposition of St. Pauls hands Timothy received the miraculous gifts and by the imposition of the Colledge of Elders hands 1 Tim. 4. 14. he was installed in the ministery with a publique blessing V. 7. For God the meaning is kindle up Gods gift and doe not let it goe out nor be smothered up through bodily feare For such a kinde of feare is no wife the worke of Gods Spirit but is quite contrary to it Which is here said because that peradventure the Churches afflictions and especially St. Pauls had terrified and affrighted Timothy Of love namely a holy love of God and of Christ with which the beleever being enflamed doth freely suffer all manner of adversities Of a sound mind by which the holy Ghost restoreth the troubled soule to tranquillity and keepes away such turbulent passions as feare it Others of moderation wisedome and of a sound understanding V. 8. The testimonie of the Gospel or of the free profession and preaching thereof Be thou partaker dispose thy selfe to beare couragiously thy part of the crosse which is joyned to the profession of the Gospell Or professe them publiquely that in the Gospels cause for which I suffer thou hast all things common with me According to being upheld by the strength of his Spirit or making use of his power therein and not trusting in thine own strength nor in worldly means V. 9. An holy by a Divine and Heavenly and not by a humane calling or by which we are sanctified Given us which hath been used towards us in our everlasting election In Christ See upon Eph. 1. 4. V. 10. Abolished hath perfectly freed his from eternall death so that for them there is no more death he having abolished the cause thereof which is sinne and also taken away from corporall death the sting of curse and the power of keeping his members and beleevers perpetually under it 1 Cor. 15. 54 55. Through the Gospel seeing that in it is set down not onely the knowledge of this spirituall life but also the fruition of it by faith V. 12. That which I have committed that is to say the right to the crowne of eternal life is already mine through his grace though I am not yet possessed of it but he himselfe keepes it safe for me to give it me at his appointed time 2 Tim. 4. 8. Or he meanes according to the Hebrew phrase the soule departing out of the body Psal. 31. 5. Against that day or untill that day namely untill Christs comming to judgment V. 13. The forme namely the doctrine which I leave as a patterne or example for all men to imitate as wel in the substance as in the manner of teaching it See Rom. 2 20. 6. 17. Sound See 1 Tim. 6. 3. In faith by these words he signifieth either the two principal parts of Christian doctrine Or the two vertues by which the Apostle had taught it as 1 Tim. 1. 14. or by which Timothy was to keepe it Which is namely the spiritual faith and love which Christ teacheth and frameth in all the true members of his body V. 14. By the holy Ghost namely by his power and grace which thou oughtest carefully to employ to this effect V. 15. Which are in namely the Christians of Asia who until that time had kept company with Paul See a Tim. 4. 10 16. V. 18. Of the Lord namely of him himselfe or of the Lord for Jesus Christ his sake Unto me or generally to the whole Church CHAP. II. Vers. 1. IN the grace in the lively feeling and firme apprehension of Gods grace by vertue of the reconciliation made by Christ or in the gifts and in the power of the holy Ghost which are bestowed upon all those who are members of his body Or in the sacred calling which thou hast in Christs service as Rom. 1. 5. Eph. 3. 8. V. 2. The things namely the doctrine of the Gospel and the precepts of the sacred ministery Commit thou namely in teaching and maintaining them in the publique office of Pastors V. 3. Thou therefore this is spoken in the sequel of verse 11. V. 4 With the affaires namely in other affaires and employments of an ordinary course of life which might draw him away V. 5. Strive for masteries 〈◊〉 publique sports and exercises as Fencing or Wrestling c. Lawfully namely according to the laws of the exercise accomplishing all the actions therein required even to the last V. 6. Must be first as I exhort thee to be faithfull in thy labour so I do assure thee of the reward according to Gods infallible promise V. 7. The Lord give thee he confirms this exhortation because that Timothies endeavour should not be in vain but being upheld by the Apostles prayers it should be blessed by God with a great increase of lively light and understanding Or he means I do desire this of God for thee do thou therefore likewise endeavour thy self therein that my desire may not prove vain by thy neglect V. 8. Remember so that by the hope of thine own blessed resurrection which depends upon Christs thou mayest be strengthned and born up in all thy troubles 2 Cor. 4. 13 14. V. 9. Wherein namely in the preaching and ministery whereof Is not cannot be stayed nor hindred Phil. 1. 12. V. 10. Therefore namely through the faith and hope I have which is grounded upon Christs resurrection For the Elects sake not onely for having preached the doctrine of salvation to them but likewise to give them a lively example and confirmation in faith patience and perseverance 2 Cor. 1. 6. and 4. 15. Which is whose foundation and onely cause is Christ and cannot be obtained by any other means but by the union with him through faith V. 11. It is a lawfull namely that a Christian ought voluntarily and constantly to suffer for Christ as he hath said before V. 13. He abideth that is to say this deniall on Christs side doth not make him any way fail in his duty but in him is an act of loyall righteousnesse which he alwayes performeth whereas in men it is perfidiousnesse V. 14. Before the Lord calling him to be a witnesse of this command and a judge against the breakers of it see 1 Tim. 6. 13. That they strive not that in matters of faith and religion all vain curious and sophisticate disputations and all passionate altercations may be avoided which produce no edification V. 15. Dividing the Greek terme is taken from the laying straight of high wayes or from drawing the lines of
Sinnes for punishment and reformation whereof the Lord hath punished him with sicknesse V. 20. Shall save that is to say Shall be the instrument of another mans salvation and of grace for himself because that the Lord will reward this his charity by a more expresse and abundant feeling of his pardon towards him who peradventure is laden with many sinnes see Rom. 11. 14. 1 Corimb 9. 22. 1 Tim. 4. 6. ❧ THE FIRST EPISTLE generall of St. PETER the Apostle ARGUMENT THis Epistle containeth three principall heads the first is a large representation which the Apostle makes to the Iews which were turned Christians of the inestimable benefit of redemption and salvation which having been destinated for them from everlasting was acquired and accomplished by Christ and communicated by the Gospell and possessed by them in the hope of everlasting life and glory The second is a strong perswasion to the fruits of faith and holinesse of life as well in the generall calling of all beleevers as in the particular callings of each person and condition The third is a lively exhortation to patience and constancy in afflictions and persecutions for the glorious cause of the faith and of the Name of Christ. CHAP. I. Vers. 1. TO the namely to the Jews dispersed out of their own countrey into those Provinces and converted to the Christian faith V. 2. Elect separated from the world by Gods effectuall calling which is the execution of the eternall election The foreknowledge the Italian preordination the Greek foreknowledge that is to say A decree made by Gods knowledge and judgement Rom. 8. 29. Through sanctification sanctifying you really by his Spirit to whom it belongs to make Gods vocation firm and effectuall 2 Thess. 2. 23. Unto obedience that by faith making you obedient unto the Gospell you may be partakers of the benefit of the Lords death for the remission of your sinnes Or he declares the two ends of the beleevers vocation which are the justification in the blood of Christ and the new obedience through the sanctification of the Spirit V. 3. Unto a lively hope namely to conceive a lively still growing and operating hope of celestiall goods by meanes of the spirituall regeneration which is the true seed and pledge of eternall glory By the resurrection namely by vertue of Christs resurrection which is the fountain of regeneration Rom. 6. 5 11. Coloss. 2. 12. and likewise the foundation of our future glory 1 Cor. 15. 18 20 21. Ephes. 2. 6. V. 4. To an inheritance to gain us the right unto it and make us capeable thereof as being made the children of God Incorruptible by these titles he sheweth How that as celestiall goods are everlasting and without any impurity of sinne beleevers ought likewise to be such by the gift of the holy Ghost which causeth them to put off these two qualities namely of sinne and finally also the weak conditions of a sensuall life see 1 Cor. 15. 50. V. 5. By the power by his power which onely works effectually in this defence against all assaults and deceits of the enemies John 10. 29. and is lent man by meanes of a true and lively faith Are kept that is to say Preserved against all dangers of losing their salvation John 17. 11 12 15. Jude 1. Unto salvation namely to be made possessours of the chief end and perfect fulnesse of it V. 6. Wherein namely in the certainty of this inviolable safegard of God and in the earnest which he hath given you of the promised salvation by means of your regeneration If need be whereby the necessity of God will must impose upon you the Law of ●●voluntary obedience Temptations that is to say Trials and exercises of afflictions Iames 1. 2. V. 7. The triall namely your faith well tried and standing to any souch Might be found before God V. 9. Receiving having even in this very world the first fruits of the fruition of salvation after which undoubtedly shall follow the fulnesse thereof V. 10. Have enquired by a fervent desire and expectation That should come the Italian that is come or that was received for you or which was to be communicated unto you V. 11. Of Christ which is that Spirit by which all the Prophets were inspired and have spoken and which proceeds from the Father and from the Son and whose gifts presence and power have at all times been dispensed by Christ head of the Church and supreme Prophet of it see Eccles. 12. 13. Acts 16. 17. 1 Peter 3. 19. V. 12. That not namely that they foretold and preached the mysteries of the Gospell the full manifestation and fruition of which should not happen in their times but in ours With the holy Ghost that is to say Being inspired by it Which things that is to say Which things are so admirable and excellent that the full knowledge thereof is much desired and is wonderous amiable even to the very Angels who cannot be satisfied with the contemplation and the height thereof with extreme wonder and rejoycing V. 13. Wherefore namely seeing you are come to that holy and so much desired time see Rom. 13. 11. 2 Cor. 6. 2. Gird up being continually free from worldly cares and affections and prepared for the race and voyage of the heavenly vocation a terme taken from travellers of those dayes in which they used to gird up their long garments that they might be the more fitting and ready for travell but particularly it is taken from the Israelites when they came out of Egypt Exod. 12. 11. V. 15. Hath called you to unite you unto him which cannot be done unlesse you be holy as he is Psal. 5. 4. V. 17. Of persons namely of their outward qualities of titles shew or condition but looks onely to the reality of true holinesse and obedience Of your journeying namely this present life which is an absence from our true heavenly countrey In fear with all reverence care and heavenly humilitie V. 18. That ye were not and consequently that so great a gift requires an equall gratitude From your vain from your unfruitfull works of darknesse Ephes. 5. 11. and from all false doctrines and religions V. 19. As of a namely who is the substance and the truth of that figure of the Paschall Lamb by whose blood the Israelites were delivered V. 20. For you namely for your salvation V. 21. By him Christ manifesting the Father unto us by his word and creating faith in us by his Spirit and also he only having made him propitious unto us that we might put all our confidence in him That your he saith so because that by Christs exaltation the Father sheweth that he is pleased with us which would not be if Christ had remained dead 1 Cor. 15. 14 17. and also because that being fulfilled in the head we are certain that it shal likewise be so with the members and because that Christ ascended into Heaven he makes intercession for his beleevers to