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A35537 An exposition with practical observations continued upon the thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth, and thirty-seventh chapters of the book of Job being the substance of thirty-five lectures / by Joseph Caryl ... Caryl, Joseph, 1602-1673. 1664 (1664) Wing C776; ESTC R15201 593,041 687

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and Lightning In Thunder and Lightning the Law was delivered to Moses on mount Sinai Exod. 19.6 And to affect the peo●le of Israel when they had provoked God by their peremptory and discontented way of asking a King Samuel coming to deal with them about it 1 Sam. 12.16 17 18. said Stand and see this great thing which the Lord will do before your eyes Is it not wheat-harvest to day I will call unto the Lord and he shall send Thunder and Rain that ye may perceive and see that your wickedness is great And the Lord sent Thunder and Rain that day even while Samuel was speaking for their conviction and humiliation as the next words shew and all the people greatly feared the Lord and Samuel Thus possibly while Elihu was about to speak of Thunder for the humbling of Job God commanded it to Thunder for his deeper humiliation and if so the cause why Elihu trembled is apparent enough The terrible Thunder-claps which then rent the Clouds and even shook the earth might well cause him to tremble Secondly We may understand these words at this my heart trembleth with reference to the whole matter which Elihu had before him what he had begun to speak and was further to speak of Gods dreadful power might shake his heart with astonishment The due apprehensions of the greatness of God may soon strike man into a fit of trembling it did Job as himself confessed at the 21th Chapter of this Book v. 5 6. Mark ye and be astonished and lay your hand upon your mouth for when I remember I am afraid and trembling takes hold of my flesh as if he had said Quoties mihi divinae majestatis abyssus in mentem venerit expaves●it ●or meum c. Brent while I duly consider the great things that I have spoken those greater things if greater may be that I am about to speak I cannot but tremble and stand as one filled with astonishment How was the Apostle Paul amazed at that most mysterious dispensation of God in casting off his ancient people the Jewes the seed of Abraham his friend for so long a time Rom. 11.33 O the Depth c. At this my heart trembleth that is I am heartily afraid The heart is here put for the whole inner man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Motus commotus fuit corpore aut anima ex cura aut metu mali 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept. or for all the powers of the soul and the word rendered to tremble notes a disturbance of the whole man both of soul and body the Septuagint render it by the same Greek word used Math. 2.3 where upon the wise mens coming from the East to inquire concerning the King of the Jewes it is said When Herod heard this he was troubled and all Jerusalem with him That news of a new King put them into a grievous fright they knew not what to make of it nor which way to turn themselves in such a turn of affaires in such a new world as that new-born King might make This word is else-where in Scripture used to note the suddenest surprize and the strongest possession of fear Thus when Isaac through the subtilty of Rebekah had given the blessing to Jacob which he intended for Esau 't is said that upon the appearance of his mistake he trembled exceedingly Gen. 27.33 Doubtless it did wonderfully astonish the good old man to think that God should carry him beyond and beside his own purpose to bless the yonger brother instead of the elder This strange disappointment by the over-ruling providence of God put him to a stand and troubled his thoughts more than a little especially because he was now taught that by his carnal affections to Esau he was running quite cross to the mind of God revealed Chap. 25.23 Read the same force of the word Exod. 19.16 to which the Apostle re●e●●ing saith Heb. 12.21 So terrible was the sight that Moses said I exceedingly fear and quake Read also the same impo●tance of the word 1 Sam. 4.13 Chap. 14.15 Such was the Condition of Elihu he was deeply affected t●embling ●ook hold of him The Spirits run to the heart in a time of fea● or upon a sudden f●ight as Ci●iz ns to the Castle in a day of danger and then the outward members being dese●ted by the spirits grow cold and tremble There is a natural infirmity called The palpitation or trembling of the heart But this of Elihu was supernatural at least some-what more then natural as arising either from the consideration of what God h●d done or of what himself was about to speak and not only did his heart tremble but Cordis palpitatio totius animae concursus ad cor in pavoribus o●idens est Galen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Effluxit Sept. Evulsum est August Emotum est Hieron Salit seu subsilit Tharg Hi● verbis excessum quem Graeci 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vocant puto denotari quae 〈◊〉 effectus causam admirationem cum pavore subsequi solet Bold Et hum●nas motura tonitrua montes Ovid. 1. Met. Was moved out of its place Which is added to set forth the exceeding greatness of that fear which seized upon him The Text speaks as if his heart were indeed removed or taken out of his body It is usual in Scripture to affirm that as done which is like to be done The ship was said to be broken John 1.4 and the net Luke 5.6 because both were in eminent danger of breaking We say of a man in great fear his heart is ready to leap out of or out at his mouth One of the Ancients renders here my heart is pluckt out the septuagint It floweth out the Chaldee paraphrase takes up the fo●mer expression my heart leaps or jumps which as it doth sometimes for joy so often for ear or at the unexpected appearance of danger Some conceive by this moving of his heart out of his place that Elihu was in a kind of extasie that he was as it were car●ied out of himself upon the hearing of that dreadful voice of God the thunder taking it so Note Thunder is a terrible thing It hath made and may make the stoutest heart to tremble One of Christs Apostles was called Lebbeus Mat. 10.3 as much as to say the hearty man or all-heart Now he that is Lebbeus a man of the greatest courage the most hearty man may be put to a tremble at this when he heares it thunder Heathens have spoken much of this and by a peculiar word have called those who are much amazed men thunder struck Hos Laetinus Attonitos vocat Attonitus est cui casus vicini fulminis sonitus tonitruum dant stuporem Serv in tertium Aenid Tonitrus dici videtur a terrendo quod conterreat hominem Aliqui a tono ruendo quia magno cum sonitu fiat irruat Suetonius de Augusto Caligu●a men being so much amazed at the sound of
shall see God no more they shall not see him as long as they live they are afraid they shall never have comfort more nor peace more while they are in this world while they are on this side heaven yet whether ever they shall come to see him in heaven is their greatest their saddest their most heart-disquieting and heart-breaking doubt and feare And indeed as we cannot see God untill he gives us eyes so we cannot believe we shall see him untill he gives us hearts Many times his dealings both as to outward terrible providences and inward terrors are so dark that we can see nothing but darkness nor say any thing but as Job is here charged to say that we shall not see him Yea God doth often hide himself from his people on purpose to try whether they will trust him and wait upon him under such withdrawings for salvation whether temporal or eternal Isal 45.15 Thou art a God that hidest thy self O God of Israel the Saviour Let us therefore take heed of saying he will be for ever hidden or that we shall never see nor behold him as a Saviour say not it is so dark with us that as now we see no light so our night shall never have a morning Fourthly From these words Although thou sayest thou shalt not see him Note A good man is apt to give his heart and tongue too much liberty We should watch our hearts to keep out or cast out vaine thoughts we should strangle distrustful and unbelieving thoughts in the very birth that so our tongues may never bring them forth nor publish them to the offence of others Thou hast said thou shalt not see him But when our unbridled tongues have run at randome and spoken what is not right yet God will do what is right as the next words assure us Yet Judgment is before him These words plainly intimate that Jobs scope when he said he should not see God was that he should not see him as a Judge clearing up his cause or appearing to vindicate the wrong done him and to do him right As if Elihu had said Whatever thy opinion is concerning God that he will never appear in thy cause to do thee right yet know this O Job Judgement is before him and therefore I advise thee be thou better perswaded both of his presence with thee and of his providence over thee The word rendred Judgement is that from which one of the Patriarks had his name and it is a great elegancy Gen. 49.16 Dan shall Judge his people The proper name Dan is the same with the Verb which follows shall Judge When Judgement is said to be before the Lord it may be taken three wayes so we find it in the Sc ipture First we read there of Judgement as it is opposed to mercy These terrible and dreadful Judgements of God are every where spoken of Secondly Judgement is opposed to imprudence and want of understanding or discretion Judgement is a wise and clear sight or apprehension of things as we say such a one is a Judicious man or a man of a great Judgement Thirdly Judgement is opposed to injustice or to un●ighteousness thus we do judgement and justice Many have a great stock of judgement or understanding who yet will do little judgment that is little justice they have a right understanding of things yet will do little or nothing right Here when it is said Judgment is before him we are to understand it in the two latter senses for though it be a great truth that judgment as opposed to mercy is before the Lord And he shall have judgement without mercy that hath shewed no mercy though as the Apostle adds in the same place James 2.13 Mercy rejoyceth or glorieth against Judgement The Lord hath judgements all manner of judgements about him yet that notion of judgement doth not belong to this place but the two latter Judgement is before him that is he is a God of infinite understanding and wisdome he seeth every thing to the utmost he goes to the bottome of every mans case yea to the very bottome of every mans heart he sees every action quite through and every person And as he knows the truth of every mans cause and case so he will do every man right according to the merit of his cause and case Justice and Judgement are the habitation of his throne while clouds and darkness are round about him Psal 97.2 that is though present dispensations are obscure as in Jobs case yet both the procedure and dealings of God as also the issue or determination which he gives in every matter is just and righteous to all men as well as gracious and comfortable to good and upright-hearted men Thus Judgement or this judgement is alwayes before him that is he hath a clear sight of it and he is ready to do it Hence Note First God hath a right and clear apprehension of all persons and actions His understanding is infinite The Lord is as Hannah spake in her Thanksgiving-Song 1 Sam. 2.3 a God of knowledge and by him actions are weighed That is he knoweth them exactly to a grain as we do the weight of those things which we have laid in an even Balance It is required of Judges in that advice which Jethro gave to Moses Exod. 18.21 That they should be able men that is not so much men of able purses as of able parts men of able judgement and of more than common understanding even such as were able to look through every mans Cause that came before them Such is the ability of the Lords understanding to the full he is Omniscient He is light and in him is no darknesse at all And as in him there is no darknesse so nothing is dark to him the most intricate and knotty Case the most ravel'd and vext Cause that ever was is plain and evident before his eyes with whom we have to do and who hath to do with us Judgement is before him neither is there any Judgement before any other in comparison of him God hath so much light that Men and Angels are to him but darknesse God seeth so much that all others may be said not to see or to be stark blind even those Judges may be called blind who are not blinded we may say they have no eyes whose eyes are not put out with gifts compared with God How blind then are those Judges who are blinded and whose eyes are put out either by prejudice or passion by hopes or fears it cannot be but Judgement must be before God because as he cleerly sees and fully understands whatsoever comes before him so nothing can divert or biass him f●om doing every man right according to his sight and understanding Judgement is before him Hence Note Secondly God will do right to every man as sure as he knows the right of every man There are many who know what is right who know whose Cause is right yet will not
do right But as sure as God knows every mans righ● so certainly he will do him right Abraham pleaded thus with God Shall not the Judge of all the Earth do right Gen. 18.25 Certainly he will do right he cannot but do right Judgement is before him The Scripture is express He will reward every man and award to every man according to his works Every man shall have as he is for as the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 4.6 He shall bring to light the hidden things of darknesse and make manifest the counsels of the heart and then shall every man have praise of God that is every man shall have it who is fit for it every man shall have praise who is as we say praise-worthy how much soever he hath been dispraised slurr'd in his credit unworthily dealt with and accused in this world God will not hold or detain the truth of men in unrighteousnesse though men hold both the truth of God and the truth of men the truth of their Causes in unrighteousnesse Judgement is before the Lord. Fu●ther That Particle which we render yet gives us this Note God is never a whit the lesse Righteous because it doth not appear to us that he is so Although thou sayest thou shalt not see him yet Judgement is before him The wayes of God are often secret but none of them are unjust Judgement is before him even then when we think i● is farthest off from him Therefore if we will give God the glory of govern●ng the world and of ordering all our personal conditions we must not measure him by the things we see or which appear for we cannot see the measure of his Judgement by what appears that which appears to us is not his Judgement something else is his judgement and he in the close will make his judgement clear to all men he will make it appear that judgment is his though what his judgement is doth not appear The mis-apprehensions or mis-constructions of men do not at all retard or stop the righteousnesse of God as the Apostle speaks in another case Rom. 3.3 Shall the unbelief of man make the Faith of God that is the Faithfulnesse of God of none effect God forbid God will be Faithful and True though all the world be Unbelievers and Lyars Now as the unbelief of man cannot make the Faithfulnesse of God of none effect so our not believing that Judgement proceeds or our saying it is delayed does not at all take off God from righteousnesse in doing Judgement he is doing Judgement righteously whatever apprehensions men have of his doings Judgement is before him Therefore trust thou in him Elihu according to the first reading of the former words exhorts Job to Repentance Judge thy self and here he exhorts him to Faith Trust thou in him Judgement is before him therefore trust thou in him or wait and hope in him for seeing God is a Just and Righteous Judge he will not neglect or slight the Cause of any of his People therefore they have all the reason in the world to trust in him and wait upon him It is unbelief which makes haste Faith is content to wait and tarry The Original word hath several significations First 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Notat 1. Dolere 2. Parturire 3. Manere Perseverare 4. Sperare Forte per metaphoram quia animus sperans futur●m gaudium cum dolore parturit Coc. More general to grieve or be in pain and trouble Secondly In special to bring forth or the pain of a woman in travel to bring forth there is much pain in that travel Thus some translate here Wait for him as a woman in travel waits for deliverance Thirdly As it signifies to have pain and to have that pain in bringing forth children so to attend to wait to stay quietly and expect Rest in the Lord saith David Psal 37.7 and wait patiently for him We may give the reason of this signification from that allusion The woman though she be in pain yet she patiently bears it because she hath hope a man shall be born into the world John 16.21 A woman in that pain hath not only patience but comfort under it because she hopes a child shall shortly be born who will recompence all her sorrows in bearing and bringing him forth into the world That 's the force of this word Trust in him Thou art in pain in trouble in travel for the present yet thou shalt have a blessed deliverance thou shalt certainly find that it is not in vain to trust upon God Thus Elihu a●viseth Job to such a patience as a woman in travel with child hath who bears her pains comfortably being refreshed and supported with an assurance and fore-sense of that joy which she shall have being once delivered Trust thou in him I have in some other places of this Book met with this Point of trusting in God Job said in the 13th Chapter of this Book vers 15. Though he slay me yet will I trust in him And therefore I shall not stay to open that general duty or the exercise of that Grace which here Elihu exhorts Job to Trusting in or waiting upon God Only from the Connexion Note First It is our duty to wait and trust upon God And 't is such a duty as will keep us close to all other duties a mind staid on God is a mind fit to move about any good work whatsoever which God calleth us unto Secondly Put all together Thou sayest thou shalt not see him thou art doubtful whether ever things will mend yet Judgement is before him therefore trust Hence Note When things are not clear to us when we have no light about what God is doing or what he will do yet it is our duty to trust and wait upon God We must wait upon God and trust in him though we do not see him yea though we cannot see him for Judgement is before him That of the Prophet Isa 50.10 is a clear proof of this duty and some expound this Scripture specially respecting outward dark providences as others of inward darkness or darkness of spirit Who is among you that feareth the Lord and obeyeth the voyce of his servants that walketh in darkness and hath no light as Job saith here I shall not see him What shall a poor benighted soul do in that case The answer or advice followeth Let him trust in the name of the Lord and stay upon his God How dark soever our condition is yet it is our duty to trust upon God and if once we are enabled to give God the glory due to his name in confessing that Judgement is before him we shall readily trust upon him to order all things for us though all things seem out of order even to amazement though we see heaven and earth as it were confounded yet we shall readily trust upon him because we believe that even then Judgement is before him How soon can he turn our
Lord doth often exercise that is as often as there is cause and we give him cause too often to exercise a smart and severe anger towards his own people but his consuming and destroying anger is the lot and portion of the wicked If his anger be kindled but a little namely against his enemies blessed are they that trust in him blessed are they that believe when that anger of the Lord breaks forth against unbelievers Or we may state it thus First God is angry with sinful persons thus he is angry with the world or with wicked men Secondly God is angry with persons for sinning there is a great difference between these two anger with sinful persons and anger with persons for their sin or for sinning and thus he is angry with his own people even with the godly when they sin though not for every sin Further We may distinguish of anger thus There is anger mixed with a desire of taking revenge upon those that we are ang●y with a revengeful anger thus the Lord is angry only with the wicked Of this anger Moses speaks having described a presumptuous sinner who believes not only without a word but against the word who when he heareth the word of the curse blesseth himself in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of mine heart to add drunkenness unto thirst then the anger of the Lord and his jealousie shall smoak against that man c. Deut. 29.19 20. Read more of this revengeful anger of the Lord Deut. 32.22 41 42. Secondly there is anger with a desire to reforme and reclaime those that we are angry with Thus a loving and indulgent father is angry with his child when he hath committed a fault he is angry not with an anger of desire to revenge but with an anger of desire to reforme And thus the Lord is angry with his own people with his choicest servants and dearest children when they forget their duty and play the wantons Lastly We may distinguish of anger thus There is First a temporary anger As there is a temporary faith in hypocrites so we may say there is a temporary anger in God against the faithful when offending that is he is angry with them for a while for a season Sing unto the Lord O ye Saints of his and give thanks at the remembrance of his Holiness saith David Psal 30.4 But why doth he call them to singing we have the reason of it given at the 5th verse For his anger endureth but a moment he speaks there of the Lords anger against his Saints and peculiar people while they indeed have cause to mourn for provoking the Lord to anger they may also sing both because his anger endureth but for a moment that is because if that be all it endureth not at all a moment is of no endurance as also because in his favour is life weeping may endure for a night but joy cometh in the morning Once more hear the Prophets report of the Lords anger Micah 7.18 Who is a God like unto thee that pardoneth iniquity and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage he retaineth not his anger for ever because he delighteth in mercy God do●h not retain his anger for ever that is not long yea that not for ever is but a little while a moment and that but a small moment as the Prophet Isaiah spake Chap. 54.7 As if he had said The Lords anger is not retained so long as if it should be alwayes retained his anger towards you is soon blown over and gone upon the matter like a moment as soon as come Such is the anger which God discovers towards his own people Secondly There is an anger for ever an abiding wrath a fire of anger which never goeth out nor can be put out which is kindled in the breast of God against ungodly men and against them only as living and dying without repentance in their ungodliness Job a godly man was visited in the former not in this latter anger Yet for the fuller answer to this query as it concerns Jobs case I conceive Elihu speaks with the highest and hardest towards him For though it be a truth th●t the Lord discovers as was shewed before a fatherly anger towards his children when he chasteneth them for their sin yet he chasteneth them more or rather in love than in anger As whom he loves he rebukes and chastens Rev. 3.19 so he chastens and rebukes them in love And as for Job whom God dearly loved it is cleare from the first and second Chapters of this Book that God afflicted him not for any special sin or way of sinning but for his tryal and to set him up as a great pattern of patience to all succeeding generations Or we may say that God afflicted Job not because of any provocation which he had given him but at Satans instance and provocation Chap. 2.3 All that can be said for Elihu's help in saying that God visited him in anger is only this That though Job had not provoked the Lord to visit him in anger when he began to visit him yet some impatient and over-bold speeches of his or that liberty of speech which he took in expostulating and almost contesting with God about his afflictions might cause him to visit him in such anger as hath been set forth in answer to the query And now because it is not so because the Lord misseth those acts of grace trust and patience which thy case calleth thee to the exercise of He hath visited in his anger and what followeth Yet he knoweth it not in great extremity Et non advertit ad auctum valde i. e Nihil discrevit sc deus qued non visitaret etiamsi ea re visitatus magis dolerer Nam necesse erat visitatum ita tangi ut sentiret quod fieri non poterat si non pleraque charissima quóque bona adimerentur Coc Elihu seems to have spoken this turning himself to the company and complaining to them of Jobs insensibleness Yet he knoweth not c. Some refer this clause of the verse to God also He hath visited in his anger and taketh no notice of the great increase or of that which is greatly increased that is God hath spared nothing from his visitation although the party visited were never so much grieved or damnified in the loss and spoyle of his all There was a necessity saith this Author that he who was visited should be so toucht as to be sensible of the stroake which could not be unless the greatest of his encrease and those things which were most dear to him were taken away from him or he were stript naked and bereaved of them Our translation refers these words to the person visited as if he though reduced to the greatest extremities yet was not sensible of it or took no notice of what he suffered or was done to him Yet he knoweth it not in
looks to him that is poor in spirit or of a contrite spirit let such be in Rags and lye upon the Dunghil the Lord will look to them and he hath a threefold look for them First A look of honour as respecting their Persons Secondly A look of care to supply their wants Thirdly A look of justice to deliver them from wrong And if they that are poor in spirit be rich also in the world they shall not fail to receive right from the hand of the Lord. The Lord giveth right to all sorts of men against their wicked oppressors but his poor the Godly poor believing poor those that are poor not only in purse but in spirit are more peculiarly under this priviledge of being righted by the Lord. And usually in Scripture the word poor is taken in a good sence Nomen pauperis in bonum sumitur pauperes sunt populus Dei for good men as the word rich in an ill sence for evil men Jam. 5.1 Go to now ye rich men weep and howl for the miseries that shall come upon you The Apostle speaks as if that were the case of all rich or as if he called all rich men to weeping and howling c. Yet some poor men are wicked and some rich men are righteous and therefore I conceive the word poor may be taken here for any wronged or oppressed poor yet especially for the Godly poor For though God giveth right to all men even the worst of men yet here the scope of Elihu is to shew that God takes most care of those whom the wicked do most not only neglect but injure and oppresse He giveth right to the poor Hence Note The poor especially the Godly poor are often wronged and go by the worst in the world Or thus The poor as poor usually suffer from and by the world As the world is apt to oppresse any poor so mostly the Godly poor Psal 12.5 For the oppression of the poor I will arise 'T is possible a rich man may be oppressed a mighty man may be oppressed by one mightier than he but usually the poor are oppressed and they trampled on who are already underfoot And therefore the Lord saith For the oppression of the poor for the sighing of the needy now will I arise and set him at safety from him that puffeth at him This is not exclusive the Lord will arise for the help of the rich and great when any such are wronged but he is said to arise for the help of the poor as intimating that the poor seldome come by their right or find help in the world unlesse God arise to help them or help them to it and because he hath said he will help them to their right we may be sure he will Davids Faith was strong upon this promise Psal 18.27 Thou wilt save the afflicted people Psal 72.4 He shall judge the poor of the People P●al 140.12 I know that the Lord will maintain the cause of the afflicted And his Experience was as clear as his Faith was strong Psal 37.25 I have been young and now am old yet have I not seen the righteous forsaken that is I have often yea alwayes seen him helped one way or other and sometimes set on high from affliction Psal 107.41 The Lord careth so for the poor as if he cared for none else and the best of the poor are little cared for by any but the Lord. Zeph. 3.12 I will also leave in the midst of thee an afflicted and poor people and they shall trust in the Name of the Lord. The rich of this world trust to creature helps but as the Lords poor know they ought not to trust in creature help so they have it not to trust to and therefore they trust in the Name of the Lord not only out of choice which is their grace and duty but out of necessity And what will the Lord do for them that trust in him not only out of necessity but choice he will surely take care of them and do them right Secondly Note God rights the poor freely He giveth them right he doth not sell it What freer than gift They need not bribe for it As he freely giveth them the Righteousnesse of his Son to justifie them so they have common right of free gift to relieve them Note Thirdly The Lord relieves or rights the poor speedily He giveth implyeth a present act and that doubles the mercy Note Fourthly God will always right the wronged poor He giveth imports even a continued act as he did it in former times in the dayes of old so he doth it at this day and will do it always As the Lord giveth right speedily so constantly with him is no variablenesse or shadow of turning Most men do right only by fits but the Lord is ever giving right Lastly He giveth right to the poor not to this or that poor man but to the poor Hence Note The Lord distributes right to all that are wronged As his Mercy so his Justice is not confined to a few but floweth out to all But it may be objected Why then are so many poor without their right If the Lord giveth right and giveth it continually and impartially why do the poor cry and sigh and groan and mourn why see we so many tears of the poor If they have right why do they complain I answer First The Lord giveth right to the poor sometimes when the poor perceive it not Psal 97.2 Clouds and darknesse are round about him Righteousnesse and Judgement are the habitation of his Throne When a man cannot see the Lord doing right yet the Lord doth right The Sun shineth when eclipsed or covered with a Cloud The Lord never ceaseth to right the poor though neither poor nor rich perceive how or which way he doth it Secondly I answer He giveth right to the poor even when they want right or when they are under the sorest oppressions by supporting their hearts in this perswasion that he will give them right The poor have right when their minds are satisfied that they shall have right There is no true Godly poor man in the world how much soever afflicted but his heart is or may be satisfied that he shall have right That 's a sure word Psal 9.18 The needy shall not always be forgotten the expectation of the poor shall not perish for ever And therefore we may pray with confidence Forget not O Lord the Congregation of thy poor for ever Psal 74.19 The poor may rest in this assurance while their troubles rest upon them that God will bring forth their Righteousnesse as the Light and their Judgement as the Noon day Psal 37.6 He hath right who believes he shall have it as he that believeth hath everlasting life in hope long before he attains the possession of it John 3.36 Thirdly Though we say The Lord giveth right to the poor both speedily and constantly yet he reserveth to himself a liberty as to
as I have heard from thee I will answer them all how many soever they be I will undertake thee and all thy Party Thee and thy Companions with thee Hence Note He who hath truth on his sid● needs not fear the opposition of many no nor the opposition of all men To oppose two is a very great disadvantage but if a man have the truth on his side he may oppose all though he be alone He may be an Antipas Revel 2.13 a man against all men as that name of Christs faithful Martyr there mentioned doth import If there be a thousand of them he may undertake them all for in answering one he answers all Elijah said of himself 1 Kings 18.22 I even I only remain a Prophet of the Lord yet he stood up against all the Idolatrous Prophets of Baal who were no fewer than four hundred and fifty men That we have many with us is li●tle advantage and lesse honour many a time A long train of Followers will do us no good if our Cause be bad Truth is strong and will prevail 't is vain to fight against it though our partakers are many The ancient Fathers observed how some were wont to cry up those that had the multitude on their side and to boast that most were of their Opinion It was the saying of a Worthy in those times By my being alone Non mea solitudine minuitur verbum veritatis Dictum Liberti ad Constantium Arrianum Theod. lib. 2. Histor Eccl. c. 16. the word of truth and the truth of the word is not at all diminished One man and the truth are strong enough to oppose a multitude in error and a multitude of errors The more any men and the more men appear in opposing truth the more is God engaged in faithfulness to appear for it When one boasted to St Hierome that he had a multitude of Followers in his Opinion he answered That the number of his Companions did not prove him a Catholick Multitudo s●cio●um te nequaquam Catholicum sed Haereticum monstrabit Hieron l. 3. advers Pelag. but a Heretick But how did Elihu answer Job and his Companions The next verse tells us how Vers 5. Look unto the Heavens and see behold the Clouds which are higher than thou 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aspexit aliq tando ab o●ulis ad intellectum transfertur As if he had said Look to the Heavens and they 'l answer thee behold the Clouds and they will confute thee Thy very senses may convince thee that thou hast spoken these things against Reason And the Heave●s will tell thee that thy mistake in this matter is Heave●ly wide If thou turn thy eyes upward and considerest that distance which is between God Toto coelo erras who hath Heaven for the Habitation of his Hol●nesse and of his Glory and thee who dwellest in thy house of Clay here on Earth thou mayest see that thy sins cannot hurt him nor thy goodnesse extend to him The distance between Heaven and man is very great but the distance between God and man is far greater the one is immensurable but the other is unimaginable unconceiveable Therefore if the Heavens be so high that thou canst not annoy them with thine Arrows much lesse art thou able to annoy God who is higher and infinitely more out of Bow-shot and Gun-shot than the Heavens That 's the scope of his A●gumentation here to prove that Job could not or that no man can hurt God by his sin Look to the Heavens and see Both words are applyed to the sense or sight of the eye yet they have a reference also to an intellectual sight to the eye of the mind Look and see that is Take special notice of and contemplate the Heavens We may look and not see that is look and not consider look and not observe To look and see is to give earnest attention to the thing looked upon look curiously c●itically how high the Heavens are Look and see 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Significat curiose inspicere intueri visa contemplare mente Aquin. We may apply the first word Look as some do to the truth of the thing look how high the Heavens are it may be seen by the eye that they are very high though we cannot see how high they are The latter word See may referre to the admirable contrivance and contexture of the thing seen as the forme● to the truth and reallity of it Look and see how wonderful how full of wonders the Heavens are see with admiration what a vastness what an ex●ctnesse there is in the Heavens above thee Thus the word is used by the Prophet Isa 42.18 Look ye blind that ye may see It is a Prophesie of Gospel times that is Consider the Messages and Mysteries of the Gospel exactly view them well that ye who are blind may behold the glorious light that shines forth in them There were many blind ones in Ch●ists time that looked upon the things of the Gospel and did not see the Pharisees lookt upon them and they were among the blind ones they indeed had better thoughts of themselves and therefore put that question to Christ in scorn John 9.40 Are we blind also They did not look so as to see they were blind when they looked and blind after they looked The holy Prophet exhorts poor blind souls to whom the Gospel should come to look better to look again and again till they saw Look ye blind that ye may see That is be diligent and humble that ye may see the light shining in the Gospel The proud Pharisees who would not see the light which Christ offered to them were the worst of blind ones This is the Look which the word in the Text calls for Look unto the Heavens and see it cannot be understood of the outward sight only for he that looks upon the Heavens cannot but see them but a man may look a great while upon the Heavens and not see them considerately nor understand what he seeth The words import attention and consideration 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Intentis oculis intuitin est And so they are used and placed 2 Kings 3.14 Were it not that I regard the presence of Jehoshaphat the King of Judah I would not look unto thee nor see thee said Elisha to Jehoram King of Israel that is I would give thee no respect nor take notice of thee Nomen hoc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non potest significare Nubes quae sunt substantiae densae nempe Aer condensatus At Shehhakim dicti sunt a substantiae tenuitate qualis est substantia coeli ergo ver●o tenues coelos Pisc In this sense the Prophet represents the Church bespeaking the incompassionate Spectators of her calamity Lam. 1.12 Is it nothing to you all ye that passe by Behold and see that is weigh it well and consider if there be any sorrow like unto my sorrow Look unto the Heavens
every pressing danger let us go to God in faith and hope and he will either give us enlargements or do us good by and in our worst and greatest straits Thirdly Note As it is good when at any time we are in trouble to look to God so we should then look to God specially under this relation as he is our Maker It is good then to say God is my maker and I am the work of his hands therefore he will take care of me and deliver me out of the hand of my oppressors There are five duties which arise from this Consideration that God is our Maker First We should highly esteem and be thankfull for this benefit our making Secondly We should be confident that he who hath made us will preserve us Thirdly We should patiently submit to him when he afflicteth us himself or suffers others to afflict us Fourthly We should give him glory by believing that he will take care of us in or deliver us out of all our sufferings and afflictions Fifthly We should not think nor speak hardly of God because he hath made us subject to tryals and the exercise of patience neither should we take it ill that he hath made others so high or great that they have power to oppress us In all these respects we should look to God our maker and neither murmure at nor be afraid in a day of ●ffliction The Lord himself poynts us to that Isa 51.12 13. Who art thou that thou shouldest be afraid of a man that shall dye and of the son of man which shall be made as grasse and forgettest the Lord thy maker It is good in time of affliction to remember God in all our relations and in this as our maker in a three-fold making of us First As our maker in a natural capacity that is as he hath made these bodies of ours we may plead with and urge the Lord to take care of and preserve our bodyes because he ha h made them preservation is an act of providence and p●ovidence followeth creation Secondly As our maker in a civil capacity that is as he hath made us rich or poor high or low in the world or in any worldly enjoyments Pharaoh that great Dragon lying in the midst of the rivers said Ezek. 29.3 My river is mine own and I have made it for my self But grace teacheth us to say otherwise if we are rich or strong God hath made us so if our river be broad and deep full and over-flowing God hath made it so and if we are poor and weak if our river be na●row and shallow empty and dry God hath made it so and who shall say to him Why hast thou made it so That God is the maker of our crosse should make us quiet under it Thirdly A godly man should look to God in affliction as his maker in a spiritual capacity I do not mean as he hath made our spirits but as he hath made us spiritual or as we are his workmanship that 's the Apostles word created in Christ Jesus unto good works Eph. 2.10 That we are thus wrought works much upon the heart of God in the day of our affliction That God hath made us men that we are his creatures is a good argument a faire plea and moves much but that he hath made us new men or new creatures his Sons by grace and Temples of his Spirit that he hath made us holy believing righteous is a far stronger argument a suller plea and moves much more A soul that can go to God thus and tell him he is his maker a soul that can say as 't is said of the Church Isa 54.5 My maker is my husband He that made me hath married me to himself a soul that can say this may indeed triumph in and over all his tribulations How sweet is it to have an interest in Christ and by him a relation to God as our maker in this respect When the Lord rejects a people to the utmost he saith he will not be stayd no not by this relation as their maker from doing it Isa 27.11 This is a people of no understanding therefore he that made them will not have mercy on them and he that formed them will shew them no favour As if the Prophet had said If any argument could move the Lord to shew mercy this would do it to tell him he hath made such a people or he is their maker But there are none whom the Lord hath made in the third sense as to a new creation but he will have mercy on them and shew them favour his making of them such is a g●eater mercy and an higher favour th●n any they can ask of him nor are there any of that making who are of no understanding So then he that is made of God spiritually needs not care for all the unmaking or undoing he can receive from men nor fear that he shall ever be unmade or unmercy'd by God All he can lose in this world doth not cannot make him miserable who is made fit for the world to come He knoweth he hath an estate setled upon him by his Maker which cannot be taken away A man thus made may say to his spoylers Ye have taken nothing from me but the scraps and sweepings the parings and chippings of my estate The Archers indeed have sorely grieved me and shot at me but my bow abides in strength and the armes of my hands are made strong by the hands of the mighty God of Jacob. He that is spiritually made or made a new creature is made for ever and in every strait he may look to God his Maker as a helper and restorer He that made us when we were nothing can help us when we are reduced to a very nothing It is an encouragement to go to God for healing because he hath wounded us Come and let us return unto the Lord saith the Church for he hath torne and he will heale us he hath smitten and he will bind us up Hos 6.1 Much more is it an encouragement to go unto God to be our healer because he hath been our Maker He that hath made us can mend us He that built us can repaire us if we say as we ought and have been taught Where is God our maker Who giveth songs in the night Those words contain a second Consideration why the oppressed should seek to God he giveth songs that is matter of songs or cause of singing joy and comfort even in the night There are several opinions about the meaning of these words Some as I shewed before interpret this verse of the oppressors None of them say Where is God my maker who giveth songs in the night So the words are a description as of the great worldly security so of the great worldly felicity of those oppressors Poor men labour all day hard and being wearied out with their labours when night cometh they go to bed But prophane great and rich men
idle away the day and sport and play and sing away the night As good men have holy songs in the night Isa 30.29 Ye shall have a song as in the night when a holy Solemnity is kept c. So the wicked have their wanton vaine revelling songs in the night when their sensual Solemnities are kept Belshazer was drinking in the night and doubtless he had his musick songs that night And as he had his songs mirth and musick in the night so he said not Where is God my maker who giveth me songs in the night he instead of minding God his maker in his mirth minded only the gods which himself had made as the text speaks Dan. 5.4 They drank wine and praised the gods of gold and of silver c. And thus 't is in proportion with all the wicked to whom God gives songs in the night they say not Where is God my maker This interpretation which carrieth the songs to the oppressors before spoken of contains a truth yet I shall not stay upon it but take the words as referring to the oppressed Here it may be queried how doth God give them songs in the night I shall not insist upon those conjectures which some have made about this giving songs in the night As First implying God so gracious that he giveth us not only in the day but in the night occasion of joy in sorrow namely the view and contemplation of the Heavens and Starrs which are very pleasant and refreshing Psal 19.1 Others Secondly conjecture that God may be said to give the sorrowful and oppressed ones songs in the night by the singing of birds in the night of that bird especially which hath its name from singing in the night the Nightingal Some insist much upon these interpretations It is I grant a great mercy of God that when the Sun is down we have Moon-light and Star-light and that in the night we have the innocent harmless birds to sing and make us pleasant melody But leaving these we may take the words in a double notion First Properly Secondly Metaphorically Properly and so to give songs in the night as the night is taken for night time imports the goodness of God to man not only in the day time but in the night Hence Note God in the night season as well as in the day gives his people matter of joy Night-mercies deserve and call for day-praises especially two sorts of night-mercies First Night preservations Psal 3.6 I laid me down and slept for thou Lord makest me to dwell in safety The night is subj●ct to many dangers Qui distribuit nocturnas custodias Sept The Septuagint render fully to this sense Who giveth watch or preservation in the night that 's matter of praise and thanksgiving to God Secondly he gives us cause of praise and singing not only for preserving our lives while we sleep in the night but for refreshing us with sleep in the night Psal 127.2 So he giveth his beloved sleep The Lord gives us not only safety but sleep Sweet sleep is a great mercy Eccl. 5.12 The sleep of a labouring man is sweet whether he eat little or muc● and they who sleep sweetly get refreshing and renewings of strength after all their fo●mer labours for new labours So tha● if we take night properly for the night time there is much occasion of rejoycing given by God to mankind in general and more peculiarly to his faithfull servants in reference to those common mercies of bodily safety and the return of natural strength and spirits Secondly Take night properly and then this assertion He giveth songs in the night may have this meaning The Lord gives his people a praising frame of heart in the night season Et●am cum nulla ad eum laudandum documenta circumfulgent intus Spiritu excitat ad laudes Jun When they are wrapped up and compassed about with outward darkness when they are solitary and alone when no worldly object holds out any occasion of comfort to them yet then the Lord lets in a light or shines into their s●uls by his good Spirit The Lord may well be said to give songs even in the night when by the immediate work of his Spirit he filleth our spirits with joyes unspeakable and glorious These a●e the most ravishing songs of the night Hence Note God by his good Spirit doth often suggest sweet meditations and comfortable thoughts to his people in the night In the night the Lord minds his servants either of such mercies as they have already received or of such as according to his promise he is ready to or will surely bestow that so they may be busied in that heavenly work of praising him and rejoycing in him when they awake or cannot sleep This was Davids experience Psal 17.3 Thou hast visited me in the night Men use to visit us in the day when we are up or awake But saith David God gives me visits in the night when I am in bed he gives me many a song or makes me to rejoyce When we are in our retirements or freest from the hurry of worldly businesses and enjoyments then we are in the fittest posture for the entertainment and enjoyment of God The Lord visits his servants in the night not only as David there to try them or as elsewhere to instruct them but to com●o●t them as David was assured Psal 42.8 The Lord will command his loving kindness in the day time and in the night his song shall be with me That is a song concerning him I will sing and rejoyce even in the night time because of the goodness and kindn●ss of God to me in the day The experience of Asaph or of David communicated in that Psalm to Asaph gives further proof of this Psal 77.6 where having said v. 1. I cryed unto God with my voyce and he gave eare unto me he adds v. 6. I call to remembrance my song in the night that is those occasions of joy and singing which God hath heretofore given me These songs were sweeter to me than sleep As it sheweth an excellent frame of spirit to remember the Commandments of God in the night which David also professed as his practise Psal 119.55 I have remembred thy Name O Lord in the night and have kept thy Law The name of God is any manifestation of God either in his word or works And again Psal 119.62 At midnight I will rise to give thanks to thee because of thy righteous judgements Some watch in the night to give thanks Psal 134.1 others give thanks when they wake at any time in the night both are acts of purest love to God and proceed from purest consolation in God Cant. 3.1 By night on my bed I sought him The Spouse doth not say only by night I sought him but by night on my bed I spend not the night in sleeping but in seeking him whom my soul loveth Psal 16.7 My reines instruct me in the night
the learned Authors of it make fairly out from the Original to whom I refer the Reader and shall only offer two notes from it for instruction First The sorest afflictions that fall upon sinners in this life are little or nothing to what God might lay upon them There is no condition here actually so bad but possibly it might be worse though the darkness of night be upon us yet it may be darker with us God can make a night so dark that the former darkness may be called light God can add so much bitterness to that which is ve●y bitter so much weight to that burden of affliction which is already very heavy that the former bitter may be called sweet and that former weight of affliction light Are any poo● sick or pained God can make them poorer sicker and so encrease their paine that former poverty sickness paine may go for riches health and ease And as present sufferings of one kind or other are but little to what they may be so they are but little to what we have deserved they should be The least mercy is more than we deserve and the greatest affliction is less than we deserve Et nunc quia nihil est quod visitavit ira ejus Drus He hath visited thee little or nothing so the word is saith Elihu according to this reading of the Text. The Lord hath not only not visited thee too much O Job but he may be said not to have visited thee at all or the All of thy visita●ion is nothing to that which the Lord could have brought upon thee David gives a general assertion near this concerning the dealings of the Lord in his angry dispensations Psal 103.10 He hath not dealt with us after our sins nor rewarded us according to our iniquities that is our sins and our iniquities might have born out the Justice of God in laying heavier evils and troubles upon us than yet he hath done Sinners never have their full punishment till they come to hell As the sweetest joyes and strongest consolations which the godly find and feel on earth are only tasts and first-fruits of that they shall have in heaven so all the sorrows and sufferings of the wicked in this world are but tasts light touches and beginnings of sorrow compared with the pains and sorrows of the next world where sinners shall be payd their wages in full Vtrumque visitandi recensendi vel cognoscendi verbum in hoc loco judicis vel magistratis in peccatores animedversionem inquisitionem punitioni conjunctum importat Bold Secondly From the latter part of the verse thus translated Neither hath he made any great inquisition that is he hath not taken strict knowledge of thy sins though a multitude though even past number though there be abundance of them and they abounding in sinfulness yet he hath not made any great inquisition after them Hence Note The Lord doth not severely mark the sins of his people no not the multitude nor magnitude of their sins to punish them Psal 130.3 If thou Lord shouldest mark iniquity implying that the Lord doth not mark in the sense here intended if thou shouldest mark iniquity O Lord who shall stand The word in that Psalm rendred to mark notes first to watch or to observe with exactest diligence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and is therefore in the Noun rendred a watch Tower upon which a man is placed to take observation of all things that are done and of all persons that passe by or approach and come neer A Watch-man placed upon a high-Tower is bound industriously and critically to observe all Passengers and passages all that his eye can reach So saith the Text If thou shouldest mark as a Watch-man and eye with rigour every thing that passeth from us Who could stand That is make good his Cause in the day of his judgement and tryal before thee Secondly The word signifieth to keep in mind to lay up to have as it were a store and stock a memorial or record of such and such things by us In that notion it is said Gen. 37.11 Josephs Brethren envied him but his Father observed the saying he marked what Joseph spake about his Dreams he laid it up and did not let it passe away as a D●eam or as a vision of the night Thus in the Psalm If the Lord should mark iniquity if he should treasure up our sins in his memory and keep them by him who were able to stand when accounted with The Lord in a way of grace seeth as if he saw not and winks at us oftentimes when we do amiss as he is said to have done at those times the times of ignorance when not only many things but even every thing was done amiss and out of order in the dark Gentile world before the approach of Gospel light Acts 17.30 And the times of this ignorance God winked at but new commandeth all men every where to repent That is the Lord took little notice of those untaught times in comparison of that strict notice which he will take of these times concerning which he gave command to his Apostles Go and teach all Nations and yet the strictest notice which he takes of our sins in these times is but little to what he might So much from that Translation of the Text our own runs thus Vers 15. But now because it is not so he hath visited in his anger yet he knoweth it not in great extremity We must expound this Verse in Connexion with the latter part of the former But now because it is not so What is not so what is missing what is wanting What had Job done amiss or what had he mist to do Elihu seems to answer he hath mist the doing of that duty to which he was moved in the close of the fore-going Verse expressed in those words Trust thou in him or wait upon him But now because it is not so that is Because thou dost not put forth such acts of holy confidence and patient waiting upon God as thou oughtest and as I admonished thee to do therefore God is engaged and even compelled to treat thee thus roughly and severely He hath visited in his anger As if he had said Though thou hast professed a trust in God yet thou dost not trust in him fully as becomes thee yea thou seemest sometimes as a man forlorn to cast up thy hopes therefore because thou dost not trust in him because it is not so as I have exhorted and directed thee the Lord hath visited in anger Mr. Braughton renders But now for missing his anger doth visit For missing that is for missing of duty or for not acting up to duty for not trusting fully in the Lord the Lord hath visited thee in his anger This sense is obvious and commodious according to our reading But now because it is not so Homo tentatur et in examen vocatur ut probetur ejus spes et patientia
which he expected from Job Doubtlesse more of all these should have appeared in him and they should have appeared more in that time of affliction There are two things which God looketh for and aims at in the time of our affliction first the mortifying of corruptions that they wo●k no more at least no more so strongly as they have done secondly The stirring up and acting of our Graces that they may be more wo●king and work more strongly than ever they have done Where the Lord sees not these effects of affliction that our sins grow lesse and our graces more that we complain lesse and trust or believe more we are like to be afflicted more and he will discover his anger more Because it is not so he hath visited in his anger And thence Note Thirdly Distrust or impatience under the affl●cting hand of God or our not trusting God in our worst condition patiently is a very provoking sin We provoke the Lord to visit us in his anger when we do not trust in his mercy Our not trusting God must needs provoke him to anger for when we do not trust him we question him distrust or unbelief questions all that God is and all that God hath promised it questions his Truth and his Faithfulnesse his Power his Mercy and his Goodnesse all these which are the glory of God and in all which the sons of men ought to glorifie him these are all questioned and darkned when we put not forth acts of trust and reliance upon God in times of greatest affliction and extremity Is it not then a provoking sin I say not to with-draw trust from God and give it to an arm of flesh but not to put out fresh and full acts of trust upon God let our affliction or extremity be what it will The Children of Israel were in great extremity at the Red Sea a mighty Army pursuing them at the heels to destroy them and mighty waters being before them ready to swallow them up in these straits whilest they should have done their utmost to get and assure God to be their Friend the Psalmist tells us They provoked him Psal 106 7. But wherein lay their provocation that Scripture saith They remembred not the multitude of his mercies The former mercies of the Lord did not strengthen their trust in present troubles that was one provocation And as former mercies did not strengthen their trust so the present trouble drew out their distrust as another Scripture assures reporting their behaviour in it Exod. 14.11 And they said to Moses Because there were no Graves in Egypt hast thou taken us away to dye in the Wildernesse Wherefore hast thou dealt thus with us to carry us forth out of Egypt What were these fearful fore-casts these amazing bodements of an unavoidable as they apprehended ruine but the overflowings of unbelief or distrust in God and this was another provocation Former mercies are forgotten yea eaten up by unbelief as the seaven lean Kine in Pharaohs dream eat up the fat ones and present difficulties are aggravated by unbelief as if all the power of God could not remove and overcome them And will not the Lord think you visit in anger for such a sin as this Again As Elihu doth not say barely he hath visited but he hath visited in his anger or his anger hath visited so consider who was it that was thus visited in anger It was Job a Godly man a man perfect and upright Hence note Fourthly God visits or afflicts even his own people his elect and choicest servants with fatherly anger when they displease and provoke him We find the Scripture speaking expresly of the anger of God towards the best of his servants even towards a Moses as himself made confession Deuter. 1.37 when they displease him Also the Lord was angry with me for your sakes saying thou also shalt not go in thither Moses was a most meek man the meekest man upon the face of the earth nor was he an inferior in any other grace yet the Lord was angry wi h him and angry with him upon that special occasion his unbeliefe Numb 20.12 And the Lord spake unto Moses and Aaron because ye believe me not to sanctifie me in the eyes of the children of Israel therefore c. We read of the Lords anger breaking out against Aaron for another sin Numb 12.9 The anger of the Lord was kindled against them that is against Aaron and Miriam because they had spoken against Moses vers 1.8 Aaron was the High Priest and as he was high in office so eminent in grace and doubtless Miriam was a very gracious woman yet the Lord was not only angry with them but exceeding angry his anger waxed hot against them and kindled when they forgot their duty to Moses and remembred not their distance with reverence Solomon in his prayer at the Dedication of the Temple speaks of the people of God collectively If they sin against thee and thou be angry with them The Lord is not only angry with the world but angry with his Church not only angry with Babylon but with Jerusalem And as Solomon spake that of the whole Nation of the Jewes supposing they might fall under the Lords anger all together as a body so he did experience it sadly in his own person 1 Kings 9.11 And the Lord was angry with Solomon because his heart was turned from the Lord God of Israel which had appeared unto him tw●ce Wise Solomon departed from God through an evil heart of unbelief and vanity after the Lord had come and appeared to him more than once in grace and savour and the bitter effects or fruits of that departure appeared to him shortly after the Lord saith that Scripture was angry with Solomon and the sequel of his History tells us there went out very hot displeasure against him As these Scriptures are a proof of the Lords anger kindling against his people when they sin so we find the Church represented praising the Lord for quenching the fire of his ange● Isa 12.1 And in that day thou shalt say O Lord I will praise thee though thou wast angry with me thine anger is turned away and thou comfortest me When we turn from God his anger is turned against us and when we turn to God his anger is turned away from us When the Lord is angry what can comfort us but the turning away of his anger And by the very act of turning away his anger he comforts us though all the world be angry with us But some may say How doth the Lord who is said to love his people with an everlasting love visit them in anger To clear that we may distinguish of anger First There is correcting anger Secondly there is consuming or destroying anger Destroying anger is inconsistent with eve●lasting love but not correcting anger correcting anger may be very grievous therefore the Prophet deprecates it Jer. 10.24 Correct me O Lord in Judgement not in thy anger The
The Prophet saith concerning Ephraim Hos 7.9 Strangers have devoured his strength and he knoweth it not That is Enemies have swallowed up or taken away that wealth those riches they have subdued those Armies those Forces which he looked upon and boasted of as his streng●h they have broken him quite with Warrs Invasions yet Ephraim knew it not and not only so but as it followeth Yea Gray hairs are here and there upon him that is he hath many Symptomes or Signs or ruine and destruction yet he knoweth it not Grief of heart for great changes in our Estate change the hair many grow gray with sorrow So that when 't is said gray hairs are upon him 't is an allusion taken from the Body Natural to the Body Politick for as when the natural Body of a man hath gray hairs appearing or as Solomon allegorizeth Eccl. 12.5 when the Almond Tree flourisheth it is an argument that old Age and infirmities are coming upon him Gray hairs tell us that Death and the Grave are not farr off they signifie some decay of nature Now as the natural Body hath its gray hairs so a Politick Body the body of a State hath its gray hairs too that is somthing may come upon a State which sheweth that it is declining and waxing old that it is ready to break and go to the Grave I shall not stay to enquire what are the gray hairs of a Nation I only bring that Scripture to prove that many are insensible of the hand of God he visiteth in his anger yet man possibly a good man knoweth it not as Ephraim knew not of his gray hairs But did not Ephraim know his affliction or did not Job know his what is it to know or who may be said to know an affliction I answer they only know their afflictions or that God is visiting in his anger First who labour to find out the cause of Gods visitation If we feel the afflicting hand of God upon us and enquire not whence is this why is it so what hath moved or provoked the Lord to this manner of proceeding with us If I say we make not such enquiries we are visited in anger and know it not And therefore in that case the Prophet Jeremy exhorts the afflicted captivated Church of the Jewes in Babylon to search and try their wayes Lam. 3.41 that is to consider why it was so with them what was the cause of their captivity Till we sit down and make diligent search why we are visited why any affliction or calamity is upon our Persons and Families or upon the Kingdomes and Nations respectively where we live we know neither the day of our visitation nor what our visitation is Then only we know Gods visitation when we are studying the causes of it Scire est per causas scire To know a thing is to know it in the causes of it Secondly They may be said to know the visitation of the Lord that are studying as the cause which they have given so the ends and purposes which God hath in visiting them for how much soever we find and see the causes of an affliction yet till our hearts are drawn out to answer the ends of it we do not truly know it But you will say what are the usual ends which the Lord hath in afflicting his people I answer First to turn them from sin Secondly to unglew and wean them from the world Thirdly that they may live nearer to or more with him Fourthly that they may live more unto him or which takes in both the latter ends that they may enjoy him more while they live honour him more with their lives Now I say till we are upon this kind of study both of the causes of our visitation and the ends of it beg that we may both remove those causes comply with or answer those ends we may be said not to know the visitation of the Lord though it be and we are in great extremity And if this be to know the visitation of God surely many are perishing and sinking under the hand of his visitation w●● yet know it not How many are there who neither endeavour to search out the causes nor to fulfil the ends for which the Lord visiteth them in his anger I conceive this assertion or supposition at least of Elihu's concerning Job both as to his not trusting God in his affliction and not knowing his visitation was though in part true and occasion'd on Jobs part yet over-harsh and severe nor was the inference which he made from it in the next verse less severe and harsh Vers 16. Therefore doth Job open his mouth in vain he multiplyeth words without knowledge Here 's the conclusion of Elihu's third Discourse with Job Therefore doth Job open his mouth in vain Some connect this verse with the former according to the first reading of it before mentioned that giving a reason of this But now his anger or he in anger hath visited thee but a little or nothing c. Therefore thou O Job openest thy mouth in vain As if he had said Because the anger of God hath not punished Job sharply enough nor in proportion to the multitude and greatness of his sins therefore he speaks thus boldly and rashly Therefore doth Job open his mouth in vain To open the mouth is a Pariphrasis of speaking As if he had said therefore Job speaks in vain To speak in vain or to use vain words is to speak to little or no purpose as I have had occasion to shew upon other places of this Book Chap. 15.2 Chap. 16.3 and therefore shall not stay upon it here Job was no vain speaker he used to speak words of weight words of soberness and truth yet was overborn by passion though not to speak vain words in the matter yet to speak or open his mouth in vain Therefore doth Job open his mouth in vain Consider the Inference therefore that is First Because he doth not humble himself in a patient dependance upon God Secondly because he doth not as he ought duly take notice of the purpose of God in visiting him Thirdly because he seems more solicitous and zealous in defending his own right and credit than the honour and righte●usness of God for all these Reasons he openeth his mouth in vain that is he loseth his labour in all this discourse and might as we speak proverbially have saved his breath to cool his broth Therefore doth Job open his mouth in vain Taking the Charge which Elihu brought against Job in the former verse to be well grounded and true we may Note All our complaints to and debates with God as also all our Apologies for our selves in affliction are fruitless and succesless till we give Glory to God and answer his purposes in laying his hand upon us Gratio vana sensus atque sapientiae inops tantum sonitu verborum querimoniarum clamosa Unless our hearts bow to
forgets God as his Maker will never remember much less answer and accomplish the ends for which he was made Thirdly I will ascribe righteousness to My Maker Note A godly man takes God as his own and appropriates him by Faith in all his Relations Faith takes not only a share in God but all of God My God my Father my Maker my Redeemer are strains of Faith A Believer doth as it were ingross God to himself yet desires and endeavours that all as well as himself may have their part and portion in God yea God for their Portion Job said Chap. 19.25 I know that my Redeemer liveth He spake as if he had got a Redeemer not only to but by himself Thus also holy Paul of Christ Gal. 2.22 Who loved me gave himself for me as if he had been given for him alone and loved none but him This is the highest work of Faith and 't is the signification of our hottest love to God it shews endearedness of affection to him as well as neerness and clearness of interest in him when we thus take him as our own Saviour Father Maker I will ascribe righteousness to my Maker Observe Fourthly He who is the Maker of all men can be unrighteous to n● man nor is lyable to the censure of any man whatever he doth 'T is impossible that he who made us should wrong or injure us and that upon a twofold Principle First Of the respect he hath for Justice towards all those whom he hath made God is so tender that he doth not willingly or with his heart affl●ct nor grieve the children of men to crush under his feet all the Prisoners of the earth Lam. 3.33 34. much less will he as it followeth vers 35 ●6 turn away the right of a man before the face of the most High that is before his own face who is the Most High As if it had been said The Lord will not pervert Judgment in any mans Case that comes before him Or if we take those words before the face of the Most High as denoting the highest Judicatory on Earth as our Margin intimates putting there for Most High A Superiour then the meaning is The Lord doth not approve that any earthly Judge though Supream or most Superiour should turn aside the right of a man how inferiour soever for as the 36th verse hath it To subvert a man in his Cause the Lord approveth not or as the Hebrew is rendred seeth not that is he seeth it not with approbation but indeed with detestation and will severely punish such subverters of Justice Secondly It is impossible that he who hath made us should wrong or injure us upon the principle of his Soveraignty over all those whom he hath made He that gives all men their being he that gives all to all men that are in being can be unrighteous to no man whatsoever he taketh from him or doth with him We have Job in the beginning of this Book Chap. 1.21 ascribing righteousness to God his Maker upon this reason or principle The Lord hath given and the Lord hath taken away blessed be the Name of the Lord. It is he that made me a man 't is he who once made me a rich man a great man the greatest man of all the men of the East Chap. 1.3 What if now he hath lessened me and left me little or nothing what if he hath now made me a mean man a poor man in account a no man what if God hath now stript me naked and taken all from me He hath taken nothing but what he gave why then should I take it ill at his hands or have so much as an ill thought of him the Lord gives and the Lord takes there 's no unrighteousness in all this If God should utterly undoe us he doth us no wrong if he should as it were unmake us let us consider he is our Maker then we must say there is no unrighteousness in him yea we shall be ready with Elihu in the Text to ascribe righteousness unto him And therefore as a Corollary from the whole Note Fifthly Whatsoever God doth with us or others we ought to maintain the honour of God and retain good thoughts of him both as righteous and good Though Heaven and Earth be moved though the World be full of confusion and un●ighteousness yet we must ascribe righteou●nesse to God Whatsoever or whosoever falls to the dust the Honour and Justice of God must not Thus far of Elihu's third Argument for attention the Fourth is at hand in the next verse Vers 4. For truly my words shall not be false he that is perfect in knowledge is with thee As if he had said I am purposed to speak the truth and nothing but the truth therefore hear me Truly my words shall not be false He gives assurance for or warrants the truth of his words while he saith they shall not be false Negatives in Scripture often carry a strong affirmation The Father of a Fool hath no joy Non est ●●num pro passimum est sic non remitt●tur ei i. e. famietur Drus saith Solomon Prov. 17.21 that is he shall have a great deal of sorrow When the Scripture denyeth forgiveness to any sort of impenitent sinners or saith their sin shall not be forgiven the sense is they shall be punished When we say proverbially Goods ill gotten shall not prosper the meaning is they shall perish and do him mischief that hath gotten them not only shall he not thrive with them but they shall ruine and undoe him his goods ill gotten shall do him no good when the evill day is come much less shall they be able or he by them to prevent the coming of an evil day Once more When we say Such a thing is not ill done our intendment is 't is very well done excellently done So here when Elihu saith Truly my words shall not be false his meaning is I will speak truth and truth to the highest I will speak nothing but what shall endure the Touchstone and the Test I will not offer thee a Syllable of falshood what I alledge and urge either for God or against thee shall not be fetcht o● hammer'd out of my own brain and so subject to errour and mistake but such as God who cannot erre by whose Spirit and in whose stead I speak unto thee hath inspired me with or taught me for thy conviction and instruction Fourthly When he saith Truly my words shall not be false we may take it two wayes First As to the matter spoken Secondly As to the mind of the Speaker when truth is thus spoken t is truly spoken thus much Elihu engag'd for As if he had said The matter that I speak shall be true and I will speak it in truth or with a true mind and heart I will not speak any thing to flatter thee nor for my own ends to trouble thee my words shall be candid and sincere
not I spare this City wherein are more than six score thousand persons that know not their right hand from their left and also much Cattle The Lord did not despise but pity them Go through all the sorts of men the Lord despiseth none the Lord despiseth not great men because great which will come to a further consideration upon another Translation of the Text nor mean men because mean he despiseth not men in prosperity because they are rich and prosperous nor doth he despise men in adversity because poor and unprosperous He despiseth not any upon any of these accounts the Lord despiseth none but the wicked and the ungodly the unbeliever and the impenitent and all them he despiseth and them he ever will despise how great how high how mighty how rich soever they are the Lord despiseth them and he will alwayes despise them He doth not despise any man because a great man if he be not a wicked great man and let men be never so poor or low the Lord looks not disdainfully upon them because they are so God doth not despise any man because he is in a bad case he only despiseth men because their case or Cause is bad and then he will despise them let them be who or what they will Such is the goodness of God and this goodness is his Glory That although the highest and greatest of men are but as worms to him or not so much to him as the dust of the Ballance or the drop of the Bucket yet he despiseth not any no not the lowest and least of men S●condly When the Text saith he desp●seth not there is more in it than is exprest We may take it affirmatively God gives all sorts of men due regard and favour he takes care of them and bestows suitable mercies upon them even upon the meanest and poorest of them if they be his if they be faithful and godly how doth the Lord own them how doth the Lord honour them how doth the Lord embrace and lay them in his bosome though they lye upon the Dunghil as Job did As when we are warned not to despise the chastnings of the Lord Heb. 12.5 we are taught to take them in good part and as when the Apostle admonisheth us 1 Thess 5.20 not to despise Prophesie his meaning is not only this that he would not have us slight it and throw it at ou● heels but he would have us give it due esteem and honour it as one of our choycest mercies he would have us set a g●e●t price upon it and bless God heartily for it So here when Elihu saith The Lord despiseth not any his purp●●e is to shew that he respects and favours men according to their condition but most his own faithful and obedient Servants This Interpreta●ion may give us another Instruction God hath a due regard and respect to all sorts and conditions of men Having made all men he doth not throw them up to the wide world much less trample upon them himself but owns them preserveth them wa●cheth over them all And as for his special people he tends them as a Nurse her infant or as a Father tenders his children he counsels them he guides them he directs and leads them he supports and comforts them he carries them through this world as it were in his own armes as the Eagle carries her young ones upon her wings 〈…〉 simila devorat ●● consumat sed sibi si●ulia complactitur Brent The Lord is a consuming fire to burn up the wicked those that are unlike him and like him not but he is a warm Sun to cherish and a safe-guarding Shield to protect those that fear him and trust in his Name He indeed will be as a refining Fire to fetch out and consume the dross that he sees in his people and as a trying Fire by affliction to their Graces as Jobs case was But when he is so and doth so he is so far from despising them that he honours them and makes them more honourable And therefore having made Promise of being with his people when they should be called to walk through the fire Isa 43.2 he presently subjoyns vers 4. Since thou wast precious in my sight thou hast been honourable As if he had said Since thou hast given a proof that thou art good Metal and that thou hast lost and left nothing in the fire of affliction but thy dross I both honour thee my self and will cause others to honour thee also Again He desp●seth not any Elihu in this sets out the honour of God he puts this as a Crown of Glory upon the head of his Power God is mighty yet he despiseth not any Hence Note To be mighty in Power and meek in Spirit shews an excellent God-like Spirit As God is great so good bo●h are equally essential to him goodness gentleness and meekness meet together and are matcht with greatness and mightiness in God Nahum 1.8 The Lord is great in Power and sl●● to anger he is not presently in a flame with sinners but waiteth to be gracious Fury is not in me saith the Lord Isa 27.4 5. I do not presently execute my power because great in power Who would set the Bryars and Thorns against me in battel I would go thorow them and burn them t●gether or let him take hold of my strength and make peace with me and he shall make peace with me As if he had said If sinners of one sort or other who are to me or to my people like Bryars and Thorns vexing and troubling both me and them should take the boldness to contend with me I could quickly rid my hands of them even as soon as fire can consume Bryars and Thorns fully dry yet I rather advise them to humble themselves and humbly make suit for peace and they shall not find me inexorable though I am invincible they may have Peace for the asking though I fear not at all the issue of the War O that the mighty men of the World would strive to imitate this overture of the mighty God But oh how unlike are the most of the mighty men of this World to God! First Some mighty men of this World rather pride themselves that they can do hurt than please themselves that they may do good with their might Psal 52.1 Why boastest thou O mighty man that thou canst do mischief that thou canst tread and trample upon others this thy boast should be thy shame Mighty men are apt to despise all men upon the matter that are below them that are their underlings but why dost thou boast O thou mighty man seeing as it followeth in the Psalm the goodnesse of God who is mightier than thou endureth continually Secondly How unlike are they to God who having might and power in their hand despise the mean and the oppressed who come to them for Justice Such are not like God the Judge● all men but like that Judge whose Character was Luke
can stop and bridle our boisterous and angry passions towards those that have offended us The Lord saith unto or concerning Pharoah Exod. 9.16 And in very deed for this cause have I raised thee up for to shew in thee my power c. What power The Lord shewed forth a twofold power in the raising up of Pharoah First the power of his Arm that he was able to cast down such a mighty Prince Secondly The power of his Patience that he spared him from ruin till he had sent ten messages to him and poured ten Plagues upon him The Lord was so provoked by Pharoah that he might have crushed him upon the first denyal but he forbare him long the Lord might well say I have set thee up that I might shew forth my power my power in forbearing thee long as well as in destroying thee at last The Apostle speaks of this power Rom. 9.22 What if God willing to shew his wrath and make his power known the Lord will not only shew his wrath hereafter in breaking those vessels of destruction but he shews his power now in suffering them long and therefore he to make his power known endured with much long-suffering the Vessels of wrath fitted to destruction Here 's the strength of the Lords heart he bears long with wicked men Secondly There is a mighty power or strength of heart in God as in long-suffering towards impenitent sinners so in pardoning sinners who repent Who Magni animi est ignoscere but the Lord hath such a strength of Spirit to pardon and passe by offences After the People of Israel had mutined and murmured Sola sublimis et excelsa virtus est nec quicquam magnum nisi quod simul placidum Sen. and so provoked the Lord to the height Moses begs and bespeaks the power of the Lords pardoning-mercy Numb 14.17 And now I beseech thee let the power of my Lord be great according as thou hast spoken saying The Lord is long-suffering and of great mercy forgiving iniquity c. As if Moses had said Lord thou must put forth as much power in pardoning the sins of this People as ever thou didst in delivering them from their bondage-sufferings in Egypt Or thus O Lord thou mightest magnifie the power of thine anger in punishing this rebellious People but rather magnifie the power of thy patience and long-sufferance in sparing and pardoning them O what strength of heart is in God who passeth by the great transgressions of his People Thirdly The Lord hath a mightinesse of heart in executing his wrath upon his incorrigible enemies Psal 90.11 Who knoweth the power of thine anger The anger of God is such a thing as no man can go to the bottome of it in his thoughts The Lords wrath is powerful beyond all imagination and apprehension his anger as well as his love passeth knowledge In all these respects the Lord hath strength of heart or he is mighty in strength of heart as well as in hand or arm The greatest discoveries of Gods power are in the wayes of his mercy His Judgements are called his strange work but his mercy is his strength as the Prophet calls it Isa 27.5 where warning the Bryars and Thorns to take heed of warring with God he gives a sinner this counsel Let him take hold of my strength that he may make peace with me and he shall make peace with me But what is meant by the strength of God Some render Apprehendet arcem meam i. e. Christum Coc. Let him take hold of my Tower A Tower is a place of strength but here put for that which God glories in most as his chiefest strength even his goodnesse me●cy patience and long-sufferance yea Christ himself as if he had said Let not the sinner struggle with my strength let him not think by str●ng hand to overcome my strength but let him take hold of my Christ through whom all those glorious perfections of mine my Goodnesse Mercy Patience c. are given out to the children of men and he shall make peace with me This is the true strength of God nor doth any thing more set forth the strength of man than this that he is ready to pardon to forgive and passe by only impotent spirits are much for revenge 'T is our weaknesse not to passe by wrongs and injuries done to us To bear wrongs is to be like the high and mighty God to bear them in mind is to be like the lowest and weakest spirited men He is strong indeed who is strong in patience against Offenders and as strong in mercy to pardon humble ones as in power to punish stubborn and rebellious ones Secondly By way of Illation Note 'T is the greatness of Gods Spirit or the strength of his heart and mind which moderates him towards sinful man That which keeps men in a moderate frame towards men is true greatnesse of spirit They that are of such a spirit will neither despise those that are below them nor envy those that are above them not willingly oppose those that are equal to them The envy and opposition of others greatnesse ariseth from the meannesse and weaknesse of our own spirits The reason why one man is affraid that another should be high is because himself hath not a real highnesse of spirit or the reason why most oppose the greatnesse of others is the littlenesse of their own spirits Whence spring contentions and strifes envyings at and underminings of one another come they not from the narrownesse of our hearts that we cannot rejoyce in the good of others or from the impotent jealousies of our hearts that we fear others will do us hurt If such a one get up he will pull me down if such a one be high 't is dangerous to me therefore I must pull him down if I can whence comes this but from lownesse and poornesse of spirit from that pitiful thing in man called Pusillanimity The Lord hath so great a Spirit that as he envieth no mans greatnesse so he feareth no mans greatness and therefore doth that which is just and equal to all sorts of men bad and good as is further shewed in the next verse Vers 6. He preserveth not the life of the wicked but giveth right to the poor As if Elihu had said Though the Lord doth not despise any that are great yet he doth not respect any that aro bad he preserveth not the life of the wicked And as the Lord will not do any wrong to the rich so to be sure he will give right to the poor What Elihu had affi●med of God he now proveth by instances or particulars and that both in respect of the wicked and the godly That the Lord is most just and righteous he proveth thus He preserveth not the life of the wicked That 's the first instance and he expresseth it negatively 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Non vi●ificat He preserveth not the life of the wicked he
which the neglect of giving God the glory of his corrections and chastenings may bring upon the righteous Hence note Disobedience or neglect of duty is dangerous wheresoever it is found The Church of Corinth felt this many of them died in the sence given without knowledge or not having a due spiritual knowledge of Christ in the holy supper which the Apostle calls their not discerning the Lords body 1 Cor. 11.29 and presently tells them ver 30. for this cause many are weak and sickly among you and many sleep that is are taken away by death Any kind or degree of sin is dangerous not to obey a hint of providence not to obey an intimation of the mind of God in an affliction may be very dangerous afflictions may end in destructions and fetters in death if the purpose of God in them be not attended and answered by us Secondly note Not to obey when God calls and commands is folly and ignorance Such do as if they had no knowledge at all what or how to do Lastly in that he saith they shall dye without knowledge we may learn this from it The ignorance and heedlesness of men undo them and bring destruction upon them Many die because they have no knowledge others not heeding or minding what they know Holy David confessed that in on● point he was ignorant and foolish even as a beast Psal 73.22 and when good men act like beasts without a due improvement of reason and understanding they may perish as to this temporal life like beasts Isa 5.13 Therefore my people are gone into captivity because they have no knowledge The Prophet I conceive is to be understood as this text not that they had no knowledge at all or were utterly ignorant but they had no knowledge as to that special dispensation of God how to make use of it or improve it at least they took no heed no care to use or improve it and saith he they therefore are gone into captivity they are brought under bondage to their enemies they are scattered ruin'd and as to this world quite lost and undone Wicked men are undone by acting against their knowledge good men may be undone by acting below their knowledge or by not acting according to what they know or should have known and so through their ignorance or heedlesness they dye without knowledge JOB Chap. 36. Vers 13 14. 13. But the hypocrites in heart heap up wrath they cry not when he bindeth them 14. They die in youth and their life is among the unclean ELihu having put the case of the righteous in these two conditional propositions last opened as somewhat doubtful what at least some of them may do as to a right-improvement of outward afflictions he proceeds in these two verses to shew the case of the wicked wholly desperate in their affliction There is an if put upon the righteous but he is conclusive upon the hypocrite to be sure he will neither hear nor obey neither submit nor conform to the voyce of the rod. So that in these words he sets forth the common yea constant issue of the hand of God upon hypocrites in heart Possibly good men righteous men may not alwayes answer the expectation of God when affliction is upon them but as for hypocrites they alwayes heap up wrath And in this we may conceive Elihu hath a respect to Job For though he did not conclude him to be an hypocrite in heart yet he put it home upon him to consider the matter whether he himself had not at least acted and carried it like an hypocrite in heart under the afflicting hand of God forasmuch as he was no more humbled and subdued under it And indeed Elihu turns every stone and tryeth every way to bring down the spirit of Job And therefore as he had shewed what the usuall effects of the hand of God upon the righteous are so he tells him how it is with the wicked in that case thereby to put him upon the triall whether he had not reason to suspect himself to be an hypocrite because his carriage was so like theirs 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vers 13. But the hypocrites in heart c. That adversative particle shews that he is dealing upon another subject hypocrites in heart are far from righteousness I have discoursed somewhat largely concerning the hypocrite in chap. 34 v. 30. upon these words That the hypocrite reign not lest the people 〈…〉 snared Therefore I intend not here to revive that subject but shall only a little open the additional tearm or amplification which is here put upon the hypocrite Elihu doth not say barely hypocrites heap up wrath but The hypocrites in heart heap up wrath as implying some special character and brand of hypocrisie upon the persons here aimed at An hypocrite in heart is no more but this nor is it any thing less than an hearty hypocrite he is one that is not to the halves but wholly hypocritical he that is but half with God such is the hypocrite is wholly profane wholly wicked The same word which signifyeth an hypocrite signifyeth a profane person and so we put it in the margine of this text The hypocrite or the profane in heart This expression is very paralel with that of the Apostle Paul Col. 1.21 Ye that were sometimes alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked workes yet now hath he reconciled He doth not only call natural men enemies to God as indeed they all are the wisdome of the flesh is enmity against God But he calls them enemies in their minds that is such as have a mind to be enemies or such as have a good will to do evil So here an hypocrite in heart is a man heartily hypocritical whosoever is an hypocrite is an hypocrite in heart Hypocrisie is that which lyeth at the bottome it is an heart-sin though hypocirsie act and vent it self at the tongue and by the hand yet all hypocrisie lyeth at the heart nevertheless every hypocrite is not strictly taken an hypocrite in heart The hypocrite in heart is opposed to the upright in heart Psal 92.11 The hypocrite in heart hath a heart as full of hypocrisie as the upright in heart would have hearts full of uprightness Yet further to characterize the hypocrite in heart Take these three considerations to clear it Data opera inpius est First an hypocrite in heart is one who doth evil not out of mistake but our of designe not because he cannot do otherwise but because he will not and is resolved on it such a sinful piece or such a piece of sinfulness is the hypocrite in heart he sins as he should love and serve and obey God with all his heart Secondly as this hypocrite doth evil upon design so also he doth good with a wicked mind It is possible for a man to do good unsincerely or not to be sincere in the doing of it and yet not to do it with a wicked mind and
c. Secondly he applies it by way of conviction that as yet surely he was unhumbled because still under the afflicting hand of God vers 17. But thou hast fulfilled the judgement of the wicked judgement and justice take hold on thee So much concerning the state of these three verses in general I shall now go on to open them in order Verse 15. He delivereth the poor in his affliction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Traxit exiraoeit detr●xit in piet extraxit ex aerumu● miseria ericulo or he pulls the poor out of affliction That is the sense of the word and the work of God We find the word used to signifie the pulling or drawing off of the shoo Deut. 25.19 As the shoo is tied or buckled to the foot and must be loosed before it can with any ease be drawn off Chalatz and lachatz two contraries save and undoe are sweetly used ●y Elihu in this verse Brough so affl●ctions are tyed to us till the Lord unlooseth and draweth them off from us or us from them To draw out of trouble or to draw us out of trouble is deliverance David expresseth himself by that word Psal 6.4 Return O Lord deliver or draw my soul that is me out of the enemies hand or out of the trouble which compasseth me about and is ready like deep waters to swallow me up He delivereth The poor in his affliction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Est vox conjugata pauperum a paupertate miserum a miseria Pined Who are meant by the poor hath been shewed before I shall not stay upon it here only consider there are poor as to their outward state and poor as to their inward state that is first poor in spirit which is a blessed poverty and secondly poor in spirituals which is a miserable poverty The two former sorts of poor especially when joyned in one are here intended He delivereth the poor in his affliction or in his poverty There is a great elegancy in the Hebrew text 't is a word of the same root which signifieth the poor who are delivered and the affliction in which or out of which he or they are delivered We may translate the text thus he delivereth the poor in his poverty that is when he is in his poverty or affliction the Lord delivere●h him out of his poverty or affliction if poverty be his affliction o● whatsoever affliction comes under the name of poverty Hic ב redditur per 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 de ex the Lord delivereth him out of it I have upon other passages of this book spoken of this deliverance yet shall touch it here again because we ought always to remember it we are often in affliction often in trouble and therefore we have need of●en to be put in mind and continually to bear in mind that God is a deliverer the deliverer of his people from or out of afflictions He delivereth the poor in his affliction Hence Note Deliverance is the work of God As ●he poor cannot deliver themselves in affliction so neither can the rich deliver the poor by his riches nor the strong by his power nor the wise man by his wisdom craft or pollicy The Lord often useth the help of man creature help in delivering the poor out of affl●ctions yet the whole effect is here and every where in Scripture attributed to God He delivereth the poor Deliverance of any so●t is of God yet more especially some sort of deliverances are as Nebuchadnezzar confessed Dan. 3.29 who wh●n those three Worthies were delivered out of the fiery furnace ma●e a decree that every People Nation and Language which spake any thing amiss against the God of Shadrach Meshach a●d Abednego should be cut in pieces c. and he did it upon this ground because saith he there is no other God that can deliver after this sort He had an opinion that his god could deliver but he appropriated the glory of that deliverance to their God there is no god can deliver after this sort no god but the God of Shadrach Meshach and Abednego can check and stop the rage of fire and b ing out those unburnt who are cast into the burning That 's the first thing Deliverance is of the Lord. Secondly He delivereth the poor Note The lowest and meanest are the objects of deliverance When it 's worst with us then usually God cometh in He will be seen in the Mount and provide at a pinch he loves to do for us when we can do nothing for our selve Take the poor in any notion but especially for such as being destitute of all help and means of deliverance are also poor in spi it not trusting to any help or humane arm these these are the persons whom the Lord delights to deliver and herefore God is so often spoken of in Scriptu e as espousing the cause and quarrel of the Widow and the Fatherless Thirdly From the manner of expression He delivereth the poor in affliction Note They who are not delivered from affliction may yet be delivered in affliction God doth not alwayes deliver his People from affliction either not suffering affliction to fall upon them or presently bringing them out of affliction but he is engaged by promise to deliver them in affliction and this he doth sometimes by checking the affliction that it shall not hurt them sometimes by enabling them to bear yea to conquer the affliction how much soever it hurts them He delivered those in the third of Daniel in the fiery fu●nace by checking the fire that it should not hurt them and Daniel in the Lions den by checking the hungry Lyons that they did not devour him He delivered Job and David and Jeremie and the Apostles and all the Martyrs who loved not their lives to the death for the testimony of Jesus by causing them to glory in and triumph over all their tribulations He delivereth the poor in his affliction and openeth their ears in oppression What 's meant by opening the ear was shewed at the 10th verse of this Chapter and at the 16th verse of the thirty third Yet consider somewhat in the words anew And openeth their ear The Hebrew copulative particle which we render and is often in that language used to denote a season or special time and then it is rendred by when thus here he delivereth the poor in affliction when he hath opened their ears by or in oppression Thus also Psal 139.16 Thine eyes did see my substance yet being imperfect and in thy book all my members were written which in continuance were fashioned when as yet there was none of them The Hebrew is and not one in them as if he had said God had a full Idea or platform of Davids b dy before it was framed so here he delivereth the poor in affliction and openeth or when he hath opened their ears in oppression that is taught them effectually to make a good use of their afflictions We may
falling before his Enemies hereupon David said I am in a great streight somewhat he must chuse and what-ever he chose it was evil that is penal evil but seeing it was so and could not be otherwise e malis minimum he would chuse the least he chose to fall into the hand of God rather than into the hands of men Into such kind of streights are the people of God sometimes cast they have somewhat before them to chuse but what-ever they chuse it is very hard and troublesome troublesome to stay and troublesome to go troublesome to abide by it and troublesome to flie from it every way it is a trouble and how many of the precious people of God have been brought into these troubles Only this is their comfort as well as their duty that though they may be in such streights as necessitate them to chuse a less good or a penal evil yet as God will not so man cannot bring them into any such streights as necessitate them to chuse a moral or sinful evil Troubles are streights He would have removed thee out of a streight into a broad place Hence Note Thirdly What-ever streights we are in God is able to inlarge us The hand of the Lord is not shortned that it cannot save Isa 59.1 There is no streight so strict but the Lord can open it and remove us out of it or it from us When the Children of Israel were in that great streight having the Sea before them and Pharaoh with his Host behind them the Lo●d removed them out of that streight and brought them into a large place There are a thousand instances and experiences of this David saith Psal 130.1 Out of the depths have I cryed unto thee O Lord The depth there and streight here are the same under several Allusions David cryed out of the depth of misery when he was at the bottome of the pi● he cryed unto God and was delivered We can be in no depth but the power and mercy of God can reach a hand to us and draw us out we can be in no streight but the power of God can and his love will make roome for us that we may escape Dum deus velit misereriquia bonus e●t possit quia o●nipotens est ●pse contra s● di●inae pietat●s januam claudit qui deum sibi aut non velle aut non posse misereri credit August S●r 88. de Temp Seeing then as one of the Ancients speaks fully to this poynt God will help because he is so merciful and can because he is s● powerful that man shuts the doore of hope against himself who thinks or through unbelief fears that either God will not or cannot help him And therefore when at any time we are in a streight let the greatness of our streights be the exercise of our faith not a discouragement to it Some make their streights a stop to their faith they cannot believe they shall be delivered out of great streights but the greatness of our streights should quicken not deaden our faith it should encrease our faith not weaken it and so it will if we consider who it is that undertakes to remove his people out of their streights it is the great God and the more their streights are the greater their difficulties are the greater is his glory in removing any of them into a large place 'T is said in the Psalm The Lord makes a way for his anger he doth do so sometimes he makes a broad way for his anger yet remember he makes a way for his love and mercy too that his great power may be seen in opening our greatest streights Fourthly Whereas 't is not only said He would remove thee into a large place but into a large place where there is no streightness Observe God can bring his afflicted people perfectly out of streights and set them out of the reach of danger O●r comforts in this world are usually mixed with sorrows our enlargements with streights yet ●he Lord is able to give us sorrowless comforts and such enla●gements as shall not have the least shadow of a st eight in them As Jesus Ch●ist saveth us to the uttermost of soul streights o● we are saved through Christ to the uttermost of our sins that is of our guilt and danger of condemnation by sin so he can save us also to the uttermost of outward troubles he can give a perfect temporal salvation such a salvation as shall have nothing of feare or danger in this life Elihu speaks of such a salvation The Lord can save us to the uttermost of present perils and set us beyond the reach of peril even in such a place where there shall be no feare no suspicion of annoyance 'T is said Pro. 10.22 The blessing of the Lord maketh rich and he giveth no sorrow with it The Lord makes some men rich or gives them a great estate yet they find sorrow enough with it but the Lord through his blessing can give riches and add no sorrow with it put no gravell in our bread nor gall in our cup but all shall be sweet to us that 's bringing us into a large place where there is no present streightness no nor appearing cause to feare any Thus the Nations are brought in rejoycing at the fall of Babylon Isa 14.7 8. The whole earth is at rest and is quiet they break forth into singing yea the fir-trees rejoyce at thee and the Cedars of Lebanon saying since thou art laid down no feller is come up against us Positio vel requies Heb a radice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod est requiescere Metonymia adjuncti Pisc Est abstract●m pro concreto ●ositio requies pro i●s quae s per mensam deponuntur a serculariis Quemadmodum jumenta vocantur servitus hominum quia hominibus serviunt Bold Vicinae sunt radices 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quievit ●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 posuit quod enim ponitur in aliquo loco ponitur ut requiescat Merc The Lord will work full deliverance for his people by Babylons fall when that falls Sion shall not feare the coming of any more fellers Christ will then give his faithfull people such enlargement as shall know no streights This is the first allusion He would have removed thee out of the streight into o broad place where there is no streightness it followeth And that which should be set on thy Table should be full of fatness Here 's the second mercy As if he had said The Lord would not have given thee a bare deliverance out of evil but thou should'st bave received abundance of good thou shouldst not only have roome enough but comfort enough That which should be set on thy Table should be full of fatness Some render That which resteth or abideth on thy Table that is thy meat and thy drink thy wine and thy oyle that which thou feedest upon should be of the best and most nourishing not bare
of the aire spreading themselves all the Heavens over v. 29. Thirdly He tells us of the sudden changes and successions of rain and faire weather of a cloudy and serene sky v. 30. Fourthly He sets forth the different purposes of God in dispensing the rain which are sometimes for judgement some●imes for mercy v. 31 32. Fifthly He intimates the Prognosticks of it or what are the signes and fore●unners or foretellers of it v. 33. The two verses under-hand hold out the first poynt the formation and generation of the rain Vers 27. He maketh small the drops of water That is God as it were coynes and mints out the water into drops of rain As a mighty masse of gold or silver is minted out into small pieces so a huge body of water is minted out into small drops that 's the sum of these words according to our rendring The Hebrew word rendred He maketh small hath a two-fold signification and that hath caused a three-fold translation of these words First It signifieth to take away o● to withdraw according to this signification of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ademit substraxit a two-fold power of God is held forth about the drops of water First Substraxit de●u stillas aqu●rum sc● ex mari flumini●us ●● loc is humidis quae fundunt pluviam ad nubeni ejus Haustus vapor ex aqua cogitur in nubem quae dainde sundit pluviam Merl Qui ausert stillas pluviae Vulg. The power of God in drawing the water up from the Earth to make rain for that in Nature as we shall see afterwards is the cause of ●ain God draws up the water from the Earth which he sends down upon the Earth he draws up the vapours and the vapours become a Cloud and the Cloud is dissolved into rain Secondly The word may very well expresse according to other texts of Sc ipture the putting forth of the power of God in stopping staying keeping back and with-holding rain from the ea●●h when ●od hath drawn water from the earth he can hold it fr●m the ea●●h as long as he pleaseth The Chaldee Pa aphrase saith He forbids the drops to water the earth or he sends forth a proh bition to the clouds that they give no water The vulgar Latine speaks to the same sence who takes away drops of rain that is from the earth Mr. Broughton renders he withdraws dropping of water In this sence I find the word rendred expresly Numb 9.7 where certain persons are brought in by Moses thus complaining Wherefore are we kept back that we may not offer an offering to the Lord with the children of Israel It is a case there were some it seems suspended from bringing their offerings to the Lord and they demand a reason of it to give which Moses saith stand still and I will hear what the Lord will command concerning you But I quote that scripture only for the force of the word wherefore are we kept back or with held which was for some uncleanness Thus you have the first signification of the word and a double translation upon it both very pertinent to the nature of the rain and the Lords dealing with man in it which is the subject Elihu is insisting upon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 M●nuit diminuis Secondly The original word signifies to diminish or lessen or make a thing small so 't is rendred Exod. 5.8 when the children of Israel complained that they were oppressed in making brick This commandement came from Pharaoh The tale of bricks which they did make heretofore you shall lay upon them you shall not diminish ought of it It is this word Again Deut. 4.2 Ye shall not add to the word which I command you neither shall you diminish ought from it Man must not make the word of God smaller or greater than it is 'T is high presumption to use either subtraction from or addition to the word of God Thus also the word is used in the case of second or double marriages Exod. 21.10 If he take him another wife her food that is the food of the first wife her raiment and her duty of marriage shall he not diminish Our translators take up this sense of the word as noting the diminishing of a thing in the quantity of it He maketh small the drops of water or he makes the water fall in small drops whereas if the water were left to it self it would poure down like a sea or like a flood to sweep all away This is the work of God and though it be a common yet it is a wonderful work He maketh small the drops of rain A drop is a small thing and therefore the Prophet when he would shew what a small thing or indeed what a nothing man is yea all the nations of the earth are to God saith Isa 40.15 The nations are as a drop of a bucket and are counted as the small dust of the ballance Behold he taketh up the Isles as a very little thing The Spirit of God pi●cheth upon this comparison when he would set forth that great distance between God and man Man is but a drop to God But are not all drops small why then doth he say He maketh small the drops The reason is because though all drops are sm●ll yet some drops are smaller than others and we read of great drops in the Gospel History of Christs agony in the Garden which was an immediate suffering in his soul from the hand of his Father pressing him with that weight of wrath which was due for our sins Luke 22.44 He sweat as it were great drops of blood As God made Christ sweat great drops of blood for our sins so he makes the Clouds to sweat small drops of water for our comfort He maketh small The drops of rain 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Guttavit guttatim fluxit The Verb of this Substantive is used Joel 3.18 In those dayes it shall come to pass that the mountaines shall drop down new wine by which we are to understand the plentiful effusion of the Spi●it promised in the latter dayes David describing the Lords glorious march thorow the wilderness saith Psal 68.8 9. The earth sh●ok the heavens also dropped at the presence of the Lord thou O God didst send a plentiful rain whereby thou didst confirm thine inheritance when it was weary Which Scripture principally intends the spiri●ual rain which drops down upon believers and refresheth their wearied souls And therefore by a Metaphor this phrase to drop signifies to prophesie or preach the word of God because that like rain falls silently S●binde Praeceptuci auri●ulis hoc instillare memento Horat. Lib. 1. lip 8. and as it were in drops upon the hearers it falls in at the ear and soaks down to the heart it soaks quite thorow as Moses spake Deut. 32.2 My d●ctrine shall drop as the rain and my speech shall destil as the dew And as the word is used
in Prophesies of mercy and instruction so of judgment and desolation Thus the Lord charged his Prophet Ezek. 20.46 Son of man set thy face towards the south and drop thy words towards the south and prophe●●e against the forest of the south field Again Ezek. 21.2 Son of man set thy face towards Jerusalem and d●op thy words towards the hol● place and prophesie aga●nst the land of Israel Once more Amos 7.16 Drop no● thy word against the house of Isaac So tha● I say this dropping is us●d frequently as in a natural so in a spiritual sence He maketh small the drops Of water 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Forma duali significantur aquae duplices The word is of the Dual Number in the Hebrew and so it signifies both sorts of water the waters of heaven and the waters of the earth the upper and the nether waters the ●pper waters in the Clouds and the nether waters in the Springs We find them spoken of together in the first of Genesis at the 7th verse God divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the firmament We find the upper waters spoken of singly Psal 104.3 Who layest the beams of the chambers in the waters Chambers are above And in the first of Genesis at the 9th verse we find the lower waters alone Let the waters be gathered together under the heavens Rabbi Selo exponit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 per 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 multiplicat quia dum ita guttatim aquae decidunt multiplicantur Merc. Under-heaven waters are the lower waters One of the Rabbies renders the words thus He multiplieth the drops of rain and the reason of it is which falls in with our translation because the less any one thing is made the more is the general mass out of which it is made multiplied From the words thus far opened we may note somewhat for our instruction Taking the former signification of the words He draweth up the drops of water Observe The ordinary rain which watereth the earth is first fetched from the earth Plavia est vapor calidus humidus ex aquis locis humidis virtute Solis Stellarum usque ad m●diam aeris regionem elevatus ibi propte● loci frigiditatem in nubem condensatus c. Garc. de Meteorol part 2. cap. 25. God raiseth vapours from the earth and then watereth the earth with them All the rain which falls upon the earth was raised from the earth If I were to answer that question in nature What is Rain I might resolve it thus Rain is the moisture of the earth drawn up by the heat of the Sun into the middle Region of the Air which being there condensed into clouds is afterwards at the will of God dissolved and dropt down again in showers The Clouds at the command of God hold fast and at his command they break and let out their waters upon the earth This is as was toucht before a very ordinary yet a very admirable work of God As in spirituals all those acts of grace in faith and love and joy c. by which our hearts and souls are carried up to heaven come first from heaven so that rain which comes down upon us from heaven was first fetched from among us by the mighty power of God Rain according to natural Philosophy is thus generated The water and moisture of the earth being attenuated by the heat of the Sun-beams become vapours which being so rarified and resolved into an airy substance are by the same heat of the Sun drawn up to the middle region of the air where being again condensed or thickened into water they melt down into rain at the appointment of God We may consider rain briefly in all the causes of it Thus First The efficient cause of rain is God Secondly The instrumental cause is the heat of the Sun Thirdly The material cause is the moisture of the Sea and watery Land Fourthly The final cause of it is 1. Supream the glory of God 2. Subordinate and that threefold First the benefit Secondly the punishment Thirdly the instruction of man Secondly From that other signification of the word as it notes withdrawing or keeping back upon which some insist much Observe God when he pleaseth can with-hold the water or the rain He can give a stop to the rain and then the clouds yeeld us no more water than a stone He with-holds the drops of water The Lord threateneth the Vineyard with this stop Isa 5.6 I will command the clouds that they rain no rain upon it which is true of a natural and proper Vineyard and of proper natural rain though it be meant there of the people of God whom he metaphorically or improperly calleth his Vineyard and the rain there intended is the rain of instruction usually falling upon them Now as God doth often forbid the showers of the word that they fall no more upon a people as he sends forth a prohibition to stop the spiritual rain so he also stops and prohibits the natural rain Amos 4.7 8. I have with-holden the rain from you when there was yet three moneths to the harvest and I caused it to rain upon one city and caused it not to rain upon another city one piece was rained upon and the piece whereupon it rained not withered so two or three cities wandered unto one city to drink water but were not satisfied Thus in case of disobedience to his divine Law the Lord threatened to stop the common Law of nature and to make the heavens brass and the earth iron Deut. 28.23 And when the heavens are brass that is when they yeeld no more moisture than brass then the earth is as iron that is it yeelds no more food for the sustentation of man or beast than a bar of iron doth Such stops the Lord hath often put upon the courses of nature and can do again when he pleaseth though I believe he never did nor ever will do so but when highly displeased and provoked by the sin of man Take two or three inferences from it First If the rain or drops of water come not in their season let us acknowledge the hand of God It is God that hath lockt up the clouds when-ever they are lockt up God hath forbidden the clouds to let down their rain when-ever they with-hold it Men and Devils can no more stop the rain than make it Secondly When we want rain let us go to God for it 'T is the prerogative of God alone to help us in that streight and therefore the holy prophet sends a chalenge to all other powers or declares them disabled for this help Jer. 14.22 Are there any among the vanities of the Gentiles that can cause rain or can the heavens give showers neither the one nor the other can The heavens cannot dispose of a drop though they possesse a sea of water God must hear the heaven before the heavens can
the waters of the Sea by the heat of the Sun become Clouds and these Clouds cover both Earth and Sea far and near Thus 't is matter of wonder to see such great and sudden changes in the air that the same Sun with its beames should exhale those vapours which are condensed into Clouds and that soon after those Sun-beams should scatter and dissolve those Clouds or tha● now the heavens should be so masked with Clouds as to make all dark and in a little space all return to its former brightness and b●●uty He spreade●h hi● Light Wha is there in the world that is not Gods ●●re he calle●h Light his Hence note God loves to entitle himself to Light in an especial manner Mat. 5.44 He causeth his Sun to shine c. The Moon is his as well as the Sun and the Stars are his as much as either but because the Sun is the greater Vessel and conveigher o● Ligh● therefore saith Christ He causeth his Sun to shine on the evil and the good c. God himself is Light and the Father of Lights Jam. 1.17 which is true not only of spiritual Light by which the things of God are discovered to us but also of natural Light the light of the Sun that 's Gods Light too he is the Father of it Secondly note The changes which we see in the air from fair to fowl weather from calms to tempests are from God It is not in the creature to make one day or hour fair or foul As Christ gives the reason why no man should swear by his head because he cannot make an hair white or black he cannot change the colour of an hair nor make a hair of any colour So it is not in the power of any man to make one day fair or foul that 's Gods peculiar He spreadeth his Light upon the Clouds and covereth the bottom of the Sea Vers 31. For by them he judgeth the People he giveth meat in abundance This 31th Verse gives us the effect of all that which Elihu had spoken before of the rain of storms and tempests and we may add of lightening and of thunder By them he judgeth the people and giveth meat in abundance Here are two effects First an effect grievous Secondly an effect gracious The former proceeds from the justice the latter from the mercy and goodness of God By them that is by the rain by the winds c. he judgeth the people To judge is taken three wayes in Scripture First To judge is to rule or govern When it is said such a man judged Israel the meaning is he ruled and governed Israel That 's the language of the book of Judges every where when their Governours are spoken of Secondly To Judge is to determine or give sentence in a special case Deut. 25.1 Thirdly To judge is to punish or afflict and thus often in Scripture when God punisheth any person or people he is said to judge them Psal 51.4 That thou mayest be cleared when thou judgest that is when thou afflictest or layest thine hand upon me saith David as God had threatened by Nathan that the sword should not depart from his house this moved David to make confession Against thee thee only have I sinned that thou mightest be justified when thou speakest and cleared when thou judgest As if he had said my confession O Lord will be thy justification all may see I have given thee abundant cause to lay thy chastening hand upon me Heb. 13.4 Whoremongers and adulterers God will judge though men let them pass yet God will not he will punish them Again in that notable place 1 Cor. 11.31 32. If we would judge our selves we should not be judged of the Lord. What it is to be judged the Apostle sheweth in the next words But when we are judged we are chastened of the Lord. The Apostle warns the Church to take heed how they came to the solemn assemblies lest coming rashly and unpreparedly the hand of God should fall heavy upon them by weakness sickness and death When Elihu saith By them he judgeth the People We are to take judging in this third sence He judgeth that is he afflicteth and punisheth men by these things Thus the Allusion is elegantly followed The Lord from his tabernacle or throne in the Clouds sends forth Edicts and signes his Warrants for the punishment both of nations and persons windy stormes rain and thunder going forth as executioners of his orders and appointments By them he judgeth the people Hence observe First God can make a scourge of any of the creatures By them that is by the rain and by the wind he judgeth the people He can use what instrument he pleaseth to afflict and chasten us with Read the holy Scriptures read the Histories of the Church and you will find all sorts of creatures summoned one time or other and sent forth as Gods messengers to punish the pride and stubbornness the impenitency and perversness of mens hearts and wayes How many creatures did God make use of to punish Pharaoh with and many of them ve●y contemptible ones among the rest the hail rain and thunder spoken of in this place were his instruments of vengeance in plaguing that hardned King Whensoever God afflicts a people by the creatures he judgeth them by the creatures Let us take heed that we provoke not God to turn those things which were given for our good to our hurt that he make not what was made our servant our punishment God made all creatures serviceable and useful to man but through sin they become grievous and destructive to man By them he judgeth the people He giveth meat in abundance Escam ad copium Heb. i. e. copiosum Here is the second effect wrought or produced by these creatures He giveth that is God giveth meat that is all kind of food and provision for the life both of man and beast and he giveth it in abundance He doth not give it scantly or nigardly in small portions and pi●tances but in full measure pressed down heaped up and running over By them that is Dat escam multis mortalibus Hieron by the rain and by the wind c. God gives us our meat in abundance One translation saith He giveth meat to many that is to all Hence note First Our daily food is the gift of God He giveth meat No man gets his own bread unless God giveth it God must give it before we can get it Secondly note God is a free bountiful and liberal house-keeper He giveth meat in abundance he giveth to very many yea to all and he giveth very much he giveth meat to all the fowles of the Air and to all the fishes of the Sea to all men and beasts living on the earth they all receive food from God he giveth food to all flesh Psal 136.25 He filleth every living thing Psal 147.9 He giveth to the beast his food and feedeth the young ravens when they cry
Christ makes this an argument of faith in God for food and cloathing Mat. 6.26 Behold the fowls of the air for they sow not neither do they reap nor gather into barns yet your heavenly Father feedeth them are not ye much better than they How little faith have you who knowing that God feeds the fowls of the air yet cannot trust him for your food He giveth food in abundance Thirdly note Plenty and scarcity are at the dispose of God He can give meat in scarcity as well as meat in abundance he can give cleanness of teeth as well as fulness of bread And as he can strengthen the staff of bread so break it and cause us to eat bread by weight and with care and to drink water by measure and with astonishment Ezek. 4.16 To eat by weight and drink by measure is to eat and drink in the want of bread and water as is expressed vers 17. And as these changes of our natural so of our spiritual food are from the Lord Amos 8.11 I will send a famine What famine not of bread but of hearing the word of the Lord. 'T is the Lord who sends plenty and scarcity of bread whether for the soul or for the body Fourthly In that he saith by them he giveth meat in abundance Note God useth natural meanes as the cause either of plenty or scarcity The Lord could give us abundance if he pleased without rain but he rarely gives abundance but by rain he sends rain out of the Clouds to water the earth and make it fruitful The Lord could make our souls fruitful in every good work without the preaching of the word but he seldom doth it I believe never when the word may be had without the preaching of the word And therefore the Lord by his Prophet makes a comparison between or a paralel of these two Isa 55.10 11. As the rain cometh down and the snow from heaven and returneth not thither but watereth the earth and maketh it bring forth and bud that it may give seed to the sower and bread to the eater so shall my word be that goeth out of my mouth c. The Lord useth rain and snow yea wind and thunder to fit the earth as he useth his Word and holy Ordinances to fit the soul to bring forth fruit to himself He could do both alone but he improveth that order of nature and grace which himself at first set up and instituted to b●ing about these excellent ends 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Praebebit esc●m per multam Sept. By them he giveth meat in abundance The Greek translation renders all manner of muchness From the whole learn what cause we have to acknowledge the goodness of God in every shower of rain and fleet of snow for by them he giveth us our meat We should hence also be minded to fear the Lord and to take heed of his displeasure It is said Asts 12.20 when Herod was highly displeased with them of Tire and Sidon they came with one accord to him and having made Blastus the Kings Chamberlain their friend desired peace because their Country was nourished by the Kings Country O how much more should we labour to avoid the displeasure of God and hasten to make our peace with him seeing our Country is nourished by his Country The heavens nourish the earth else the earth could not afford any thing for our nourishment We are fed rather from the heavens than from the earth The clouds drop down and make the earth fat to give grass for cattel and co n for man Elihu speaks nothing of the Earth but of the Clouds f●om them we are fed Lately consider Elihu joynes both effects expresly By them he judgeth the people he giveth meat c. Hence note The Lord can make the same creature either beneficial or hurtful to us That which is an instrument in his hand for good to his servants is often a plague and a scourge to his enemies The rain which at one time moistens the earth at another time drowns it the rain which at one time cherisheth the creatures at another time choaks them The winds which at one time fan the air and cool it at another time enrage and vex it the winds which at one time sweeten and cleanse the air at another time corrupt and infect it The Lord can with the same creatures furnish himself for any dispensation By them he judgeth the people and by them he giveth meat in abundance JOB Chap. 36. Vers 32 33. 32. With clouds he covereth the light and commandeth it not to shine by the cloud that cometh between 33. The noise whereof sheweth concerning it the cattel also concerning the vapour THese two verses have a Character of difficulty and obscurity put upon them by several interpreters Hujus et sequentis versus difficultas et obscuritas tanta semper ab omnibus enarratoribus habita est ut vix alius in toto hoc libro ne dicum in toto sacro codice locus isto impenetrabilior esse videatur Bold and some have concluded them the most difficult and darkest portion of the whole Book of Job yea of the whole Book of God And should I reckon up all the various Grammatical constructions of these words together with the distinct interpretations given upon them I should weary my self and rather perplex than advantage the Reader And therefore I shall speak to these two verses First as they are laid down plainly in our translation according to which with submission to the judgement of those learned Authors I see neither any great difficulty nor obscurity in them and shall afterwards give a brief account at least of some of those different readings and translations which I find upon them The words as I conceive according to the mind of our translators and as the Text clearly beareth hold out two things concerning the raine of which Elihu had spoken before First What is naturally preparatory to raine or foule weather that we have in the 32d verse With clouds he covereth the light and commandeth it not to shine by the Cloud that cometh between Secondly We have that which is declaratory of raine or as some call them the Prognosticks and signs of raine these are laid down in the 33d verse The noise thereof sheweth concerning it the Cattel also concerning the vapour Vers 32. With clouds he covereth the light He that is God covereth the light with Clouds We heard of the Clouds at the 29th verse but the word there used is not that which is used in this 32d verse Vox 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 am●igua est ad manus nubes proprie volas denotat ad nubes refero quia de iis hactenus actum et quia propriè curvaturas significat quales in unaquaque mibo duae sunt convexa concava De Dieu in loc The word here made use of by El●hu signifies generally any thing that is hollow or concave as
heart trembled and it moved out of its place 2. Hear attentively the noise of his voice and the sound that goeth out of his mouth THis Chapter concludes the Conference of Elihu with Job and it consists of three parts First In it we have an enumeration together with a description of divers Meteors or wonderful works of God in the Air Thunder and Lightning Snow and Rain yet before Elihu speaks of them he doth two things by way of Preface to lead us with more reverence towards God into that discourse of Nature in which much of God appeareth First Elihu tells us how himself was affected either with the present sense o● with the fore-ap●●ehension of those things concerning which he was about to speak At this also my heart trembled and it moved out of its place Secondly He stirs up the whole Auditory then present and all others to a diligent attention and serious consideration of them Vers 2. Hear attentively the noise of his voice and the sound that goeth out of his mouth Having spoken thus in way of Preface Elihu proceeds first to a description of Thunder with its immediate fore-runner as to our sence the eye being quicker to receive its object than the ear th●ugh in truth and according to reason its companion the Lightning in the three Verses following 3 4 5 concerning both which he shewes First that they go not at random but have a guide he directeth it that is the Thunder and Lightning Secondly He shews the extent of their motion and Gods direction they are not confined to this or that part He directeth it under the whole heaven and his lightnings unto the ends of 〈◊〉 earth in the same Verse Thirdly He speakes of the irrevocableness of Gods decrees and orders about them at the 4th Verse After it a voice roareth c. and he will not stay them when his voice is heard Fourthly He concludes about these and many other works of God with an Elogie of all his works First In their greatness Secondly In their incomprehensibleness or he concludes them not only great but wonderful and incomprehensible Vers 5. God thundereth marvelously with his voice he doth great things which we cannot comprehend Having thus spoken of Thunder and Lightning he proceeds Secondly To shew the power of God which he describes in Snow and Rain First from their efficient cause at the 6th Verse Secondly By their effects First Towards men in the 7th Verse Secondly Upon or towards irrational Creatures the Beasts of the earth at the 8th Verse Thirdly He sets forth the Power of God in the Winds concerning which we have First Their original whence they come Vers 9. Secondly Their effects or what they produce cold and frost in the latter part of the 9th and 10th Verses Fourthly He treats of the Clouds and about them he declares four things First The melting or dissolving of them into Rain at the 11th Verse Secondly The scattering and dispersing of them by the wind in the latter part of that Verse Thirdly The disposing and ordering of them by the counsel and command of God at the 12th Verse Fourthly Their uses ends and operations at the thirteenth Verse Thus we have the first general part of the Chapter opened containing a description of the Meteors or manifold works of God in the Air all which hold forth and advance his mighty power and righteous administrations in this world towards the children of men which was the poynt that Elihu had laboured in all along and undertaken to demonstrate In the second part of this Chapter Elihu upon the whole matter gives Job serious counsel and admonition wherein First He stirs him up to consider these wonderful works of God at the 14th verse Secondly He asserts and urgeth the weakness and inability of Job or indeed of any man to understand them fully this he doth First In general at the beginning of the 15th verse Dost thou know when God disposed them c. Secondly More particularly in their several kinds First Of the Rainbow at the latter end of that 15th verse and caused the light of his Cloud to shine Secondly Of the Clouds and their various motions at the 16th verse Thirdly Of the heat according to the wind vers 17. Fourthly Of the Heaven or Skie vers 18. All which were such as he could not give a clear account of and therefore at the 19th verse Elihu bids Job do it if he could as for himself he durst not venture upon it verse 20. nor can any saith he vers 21.22 see far into these natural things or into the nature of these things These are the special poynts of his admonition to Job and from these he passeth to the Third Part or Conclusion of the Chapter and of his whole discourse with Job wherein First He makes a recapitulation of or sums up all that he had said of the unsearchableness of God in his works this he doth in the former part of the 23d verse Secondly He sets down positively what God is in a three-fold Excellency First Of Power Secondly Of Judgment Thirdly Of plentiful Justice at the middle of the 23d verse Thirdly He tells us what God will not do at the end of the 23d verse He will not afflict and from all makes two inferences at the the 24th verse Fi●st That therefore men ought to honour and to fear him Secondly That therefore God is not in the reverence nor fear of any man in the close of that 24th verse He respecteth not any that are wise of heart Thus I have given a prospect of the whole Chapter Now to particulars beginning with those two verses by which Elihu leads in his discourse of those wonderful workes of God First By shewing how himself was affected with them Secondly By calling upon others to be affected as himself was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Propter hoc Vers 1. At this also my heart trembled At this that is by reason of this or for this cause or because of this so the word is rendred Gen. 2.23 She said Adam of his wife or Second-self shall be called woman because she was taken out of man So here at this or for this cause my heart trembleth It may here be questioned what it was at which the heart of Elihu trembled I shall give a double answer to that querie First Some conceive that while Elihu was speaking about or about to speak further of that marvelous work of God the Thunder God to confirm what he had said or should say at that very instant caused it to thunder that so Job might be in a more humble reverential frame and so the better prepared to receive what Elihu had further to say unto him That there was a storm at or about that time may appear from the first verse of the 38th Chapter then the Lord answered Job out of the whirlwind and said and we find that God hath often given great discoveries of himself in or by Thunder
shewed how himself was affected with a gracious fear and trembling labours to affect others also with the same fear in the next verse Vers 2. Hear attentively the noise of his voice and the sound that goeth out of his mouth We have here a doubling of the word in an unusual way That Hebraisme is ordinarily read Plus est inquit Rab. David quam audiendo audite nam infinitum postp●●titur ego nihil aut p●rum ref●rre puto hoc an illo m●do eff●r●s Drus hearing hear but in this place 't is hear in hearing which one of the Jewish Doctors saith hath a greater emphasis than the ordinary Hebraisme hearing hear Others find nothing of such a difference in those differing Heb aismes however both call for greatest heed in hearing what is spoken when 't is either said hear in hearing or hearing hear we should as our translation gives the sense fully Hear attentively There is a two-fold hearing First A hearing with the ear of the body there needs little stirring up of that ear to attend the voice of thunder here spoken of that speaks so loud that men cannot if they would not but hear that commands audience and attention that boreth the ear and makes its own way The deafest adders can hardly stop their eares so as not to hear the voyce of that not muttering charmer but but rouz●ng speaker Thunder Secondly There is a hearing with the ear of the mind a spiritual hearing such as the Prophet spake of Hab. 3.2 O Lord Non solum auditum excitat sed intelligentiam postulat I have heard thy speech c. that is I have heard it fully clearly understandingly affectionately obedientially Elihu is here stirring up not so much the outward sence as the affections with all the powers of the inner man to attend and take notice of that which was then to be heard what was that Hear attentively The noise of his voice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Commotio perturbatio animi prae metu vel prae ira Audite audiendo cum tremore vo●em ejus Merc. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Omnem sonitum articulatum aut inarticulatum significat in genere 〈◊〉 umque strepitum The word here rendred noise signifies both an angry noise and an awful fear Ps 4.4 such a noise as causes fear or such a fear as is caused by a dreadful noise Hence some read the words Hear his voyce with trembling we say hear the noise of his voice According to the former interpretation the noise of his voice is the noise of thunder that if any thing makes a noise a dreadful noise as was toucht before a noise like the roa●ing of a Lion Hear the noise Of his voice The word voice is taken in general for any sound articulate or inarticulate Ezek. 1.24 and it may very well signifie thunder because thunder in several scriptures is called absolutely A voice the voice of God and whole volyes of Thunder are called voices of God Exod. 9.28 Pharaoh entreated Moses that he would entreat the Lord that there might be no more mighty thundrings we put in the margin voyces of God It is said Exod. 20.18 the people saw the Thundrings the Hebrew is voices the meaning is they heard the Thund●ings as if they had been so many voices or they heard as it were voyces when it thundered Thus 't is said Rev. 4.5 Out of the Throne proceeded lightnings and thundrings and voices Again Chap. 10.3 seven thunders uttered their voyces Hear attentively the noise of his voice that is the noise of of his Thunder speaking aloud and aloft in the air And the sound that goeth out of his mouth The word imports secret silent meditation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sermo meditaetus proprie meditatio Sermonem etiam significat ore prolatum as also an audible sound of voice or words spoken and it may be applyed particul●rly to that more gentle quiet or whispering sound of thunder of which I shall have occasion to speak further at the 4th verse Some Thunders speak very loud others give a kind of gentle sound Philosophy tells us that this difference in thunder ariseth from the different constitution of the clouds in which it is bred and through which it breaks The greater may more properly be expressed by the words in the first part of this verse The noise of his voice and the lesser by these in the latter part Tonitruorum unum genus est cujus fit grave mu●mur aliud genus est acre quod crepitum magis dixerim quam sonum aliud frangor est subitus vehemens quo edito concidunt homines c. Sen. l. 6. Nat. q. c. 27. The sound that goeth out of his mouth Now Whether it be the noise of his voice or a whispering soft sound both or either must be attended Hear attentively the sound That goeth out of his mouth Thunder is said to go out of the mouth of God as words go out of the mouth of man and as men especially the minds of honest men are known by the words which go out of their mouths so God maketh himself known to the world or makes the world both know him and fear him in his power and greatness by the noise and sound of thunder Elihu chargeth Job to attend diligently this noise this sound and he calleth it the noise of Gods voice the sound that goeth out of his mouth Hence observe First God speaks to man in Thunder or Thunder is the voice of God to man And so 't is often called in Sc●ipture the 29th Psalme almost throughout is a proof of it Thunder being there seven times called The Voice of the Lord. The very Heathens had that apprehension of Thunder Poetae Jo●em tonant●m tonitr●●●m ●oc●m Jovis vocare solent calling it the Voice of the Gods Jupiter was si●named Thundring Jove H●re we have Jehovah the true God the living God sending out his Voice in Thunder That Voice spoken of by David Psal 68.33 is usually interpreted of T●under Lo he doth send ou● his Voice and that a mighty Voice Thunder may be called th● Voice of God in a double respect First Because it is a great and mighty voice and then those words of God have only the force of an Epithete Quod magnum e●t divi●●m esse dicitur 〈…〉 As the Cedars of God the Rivers of God are great Cedars and Rivers so a gr●at Voice is called the Voice of God God is great and therefore great things are ascribed to him Secondly Thunder is called the Voice of God because God formes and puts it forth by his power as a man doth his voice God may be said to utter his Voice when he sends out the Thunder And as Thunder is put forth by or speaks from God so it puts forth or speaks much of God it speaks and puts forth much of the Power and M●jesty of God When it thunders we should think we hear God
to have it so but I rather take it for the frost-making winds which are sent by God By the breath of the Lord that is when the Lord appoynts and orders cold winds to come out of his treasure when the Lord gives out the word of command A verbo dei dat G●lu Chald pro a voluntate dei dat gelu sc Arcturus cold winds issue forth and then frost appears David affi●mes in general Psal 33.6 By the word of the Lord were the Heavens made and all the Host of them by the breath of his mouth The Heavens and their Host● all the powers and vertues of them all the influences and ●fficacies of them are given out by the breath of the Lord. And among other things that are given by the breath of the Lord Frost is given Frost is cold in excess frost is great cold every cold is not freezing cold The word which we rende● frost i● o●●en rendred ice and it cometh from a root which signifieth to m●ke bald because frost and ice cover the grasse which is to the ground as haire to the head of man and so make the su face of the Ea●th smooth like a bald head Frost also makes the surface of the Earth not only smooth but bright and shining like a bald head By the breath of the Lord frost is given Hence Note Frost is the gift or dispe●sation of God Changes in the air as well as changes in the estates lives or hearts of men are from the Lord Psal 147.17 He giveth snow like wooll he scattereth the hoar frost like ashes He casteth forth his ice like morsels who can stand before his cold It is Gods ice and his cold as well as his rain or his Sun-shine When the Psalmist saith He scattereth the frost he casteth forth his ice he saith the same thing in substance which Elihu doth here By the breath of the Lord frost is given There is a continuall dependance of all creatures in their motions and operations as well as in their beings upon the will of God 't is by his word that frost is given Some deny the working of the first cause with the second cause● any otherwise than as God once gave them a working power and conserveth that power once given them Whereas indeed God hath not only given a general power to the creature not only hath he said There shall be frost somtimes and heat somtimes and fair weather somtimes but when-ever the heat or cold or frost come they come by a particular order from him As all things men especially have their being in him so their working and moving from him and that not only because he makes us in general working moving creatures but as to every special work and motion This the Prophet asserts while he puts those reproving questions Isa 10.15 Shall the axe boast it self against him that heweth therewith or shall the saw magnifie it self against him that shaketh it as if the rod should shake it self against them that lift it up or as if the staffe should lift up it self as if it were no wood Living and natural creatures move no more without God th●n artificial and liveless instruments such as the axe and saw the rod and staff can move themselves without the hand or help of man By the breath of the Lord frost is given And the breath of the water is straitned This is an eff●ct of the former Frost drinks up the waters Glacies est copia aquae in angusto and so straitens them some-define ice which is made by the frost to be store of water in a little room or narrow compasse Every years experience tells us that the waters are pinched with the frost Waters which were out before a frost are fetcht in or contracted by the frost hence 't is said Chap. 38.30 The waters are hid as with a stone which is of the same sence with this express●on The breadth of the water is straitned God brings the wate●s into their old bounds or into narrower bounds than before by frost From this effect of frost that the breadth of the water is straitned by it Note Cold is a straitner 'T is so in natural things 't is so also to mind the reader of that occasion'd this note in spirituals and morals Take coldness as it is an ill disposition or an indi●position upon the heart it straitens us as to the doing of any good fo● as Christ hath foretold us Mat. 24.12 that because iniquity shall abound in the latter dayes the love of many shall wax cold So when-ever love or zeal or any grace in us waxeth cold piety in all the acts or whole compasse of it will certainly decline and be straitned He that before had a large heart becomes narrow-hearted and is pinched in his spirit by this sinful coldnesse Warmth enlargeth Cold straiteneth God sends the cold of afflictions upon many bad men to straiten their Lusts else they would keep no bounds they would overflow all and it is the g●eat design of Satan to send a cold upon or to frieze the spirits of all good men that they may be straitened and made unfit for the service of God Take heed of a coldness in your disposition for that will be a straitner of your graces but welcome the frost of affliction that may be a st●aitner of your corruptions There is nothing we should fea● more except the loss of them and the favour of God with them than to feel our graces straitened nor is there any thing except the favour of God which we should more desire than to feel our lusts and corruptions weakned and abated Et rursum latissime funduntur aquae Vulg Ego consenserim illis qui participium 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non arctum ve● angustum sed ● fusum aut solutum potius reddunt Sic aquiloni facultatem efficiendi gelu Austro liquandi fundendi attribuit Bold Some render this latter part of the ve●se not as we The breadth of the waters is straitned but The waters are dissolved into their breadth As if Elihu had said the ice or frost being dissolved the waters return to their wonted latitude The word rendred straitened may be derived from a root which signifieth to dissolve to melt and pour out Thus as according to our translation we take the latter part of the verse as an effect of the first frost being that whereby the breadth of the waters is straitned so according to this translation it stands in opposition to the former By the breath of the Lord frost is given and he again by his breath diss lveth the water Thawing as well as freezing is from God Thawing is the melting of the ice as mettal is melted in the fire so ice is melted by the heat of the Sun Thus the North makes ice and the South unmakes or melts it The power of God is to be seen in dissolving those huge rocks and mountains of ice into
to cherish and comfort the fruits of the Earth But besides these common and ordinary ends of sending rain somewhat extraordinary seems to be intended when the Text saith He causeth it to come for mercy or favour What 's the favour or special me●cy that comes by rain Surely it is the sending of such a rain and such a blessing with it as causeth the earth to bring forth abundantly The Lord can more than supply wants he can give plenty he can give as much in one year as may serve for two or three Sive ad Benignitatem sc●ut benigne fiat terrae citra necessitatem ut cum pluv●● descendit summo aestu ad aerem refriger●ndum Drus Thus he p●omised Levit. 25.21 Then I will Command my blessing upon you in the sixth year and it shall bring forth fruit for three years the sixth year was the year before the Sabbath-year for then they were not to till the g●ound Now if you carefully observe my Sabbath-year saith God you shall have no want though you do not sow This is a mercy when God sends in a double or treble Crop when he not only sends enough to serve the tu●n or to keep us alive but abundance and plenty so that the floars shall be full of wheat and the fats shall overflow with wine and oyle as the promise is expressed Joel 2.24 Hence note God is not only a just but a bountifull Master He doth not only give us enough for necessity but for delight and contentment if we use his boun y well and turn not his blessings to his dishonour plenty will be our mercy The Clouds come somtimes for Correction God sweepes away even our necessaries by raines which are therefore in Scriptu●e called sweeping raines at other times the Clouds come for mercy and empty themselves to fill us with the blessings of the earth that we both by corrections and favours may be led to repentance and receive further mercy not only mercy f●om the Clouds but mercy above the Clouds Thus the words stand in a fair opposi●ion and one part of the verse illustrates the other Yet I conceive there is somwhat further in these wo●ds for mercy or in mercy and free benignity which may intimate thus much to us That even the Rain from the Clouds and fruits of the earth are not given us of desert but of free favour and mercy They come for mercy or as a mercy God doth not seed the World because he owes them any thing but because he is mercifull we do not oblige him to give us a drop of rain or a morsell of bread sweet showres from Heaven and plentifull harvests on Earth are acts of grace mercy favour and good-will unto man God payeth men wages in nothing but in punishment wh●n God punisheth he payes wages that which is deserv'd if God send the Clouds for Correction we have what our sins have procured and brought upon us but if he send plenty we have mercy a gracious bounty or largess from the hand of God our daily bread is not pay nor wages but reward and mercy much lesse is that which is more or beyond our daily bread We by sin deserve that the Heavens should be as the Lord th●eaten'd his ancient people in case of disobedience as b●ass and the Ea●th as iron but we have not deserv'd that the Heavens should drop fatness and the Earth yeild her increase this is mercy Not only are we to look upon the Pardon of sin as a me●cy and Redemption by the blood of Christ as a mercy and Justification through his Righteousness as mercy and eternall life as a mercy or coming from mercy and free grace but we are to receive every bit of bread as coming to us through mercy freely and not upon any account of our own workings or deservings And if we cannot deserve a showre no nor a drop of rain from the Clouds if we cannot deserve a Crop of Corn from the Earth then surely we cannot deserve grace or peace from God or eternal life and happiness with God Therefore how should we magnifie and admi●e the mercy and free grace of God for spiritual thing● when we see such cause of magnifying him even for temporal good things if the Clouds are favourable to us it is of mercy Further That notion may be well improv'd which some give of this word reading the Abstract by the Concrete we say For mercy they say for the mercifull that is for the liberall benigne and mercifull man the man of a large heart to d● good God causeth the Cloud to come somtimes for Correction usually for his land to conveigh common comforts and he hath his times wherein he causeth it to come for the merciful that is in special favour to those that are mercifull and good and g●acious both as they have received grace from God and as they have done good things for and among men He that watereth shall be watered also himself Pro. 11.24 Thus you see the three-fold Message that God sends the Clouds upon either to Correct men for their sin or for his Land that the Creature in general may have subsistence or for special favour and mercy to his peculia● people and for those above the rest of good men who are mercifull and ready to do good JOB Chap. 37. Vers 14 15 16. 14. Hearken unto this O Job stand still and consider the wondrous works of God 15. Dost thou know when God disposed them and caused the light of his cloud to shine 16. Dost thou know the ballancings of the clouds the wonderous works of him which is perfect in knowledge THis context begins the second part of the Chapter wherein Elihu First exciteth Job to a serious contemplation of the wonderful works of God this is expressed in the 4th verse Secondly He urgeth the weakness and inability of Job and indeed of any man to understand the full compass of those works And this he doth First In general as to them all in the beginning of the 15th verse Dost thou know when God disposed them Secondly he sheweth his inability as to particulars or the several kinds of the works of God First As to his causing of the Light to shine in the close of the 15th verse Secondly As to his weighing or ballancing of the Clouds verse 16th The summe of these three verses together with the two next which follow make up an earnest exhortation that Job considering and comparing that great power and wisdom of God which appear shine in those forementioned works with his own weakness and insufficiency would therefore humble himself and not venture any further to contest or plead with God And because many of the Lords providential works are unsearchable as wel as these which are natural therefore Elihu would not have J●b busie himself in any curious prying into those which concerned his present condition For if there be infinite and unerring wi●dom tempered with mercy and justice with
in the dark about these matters and Cannot order our speech by reason of darkness The word here rendred to order may have a double allusion First To a Military Secondly To a Judiciary ordering It is an allusion to the Military ordering of an Army or Camp because words in speech ought to be put into good order to be duely ranked and drawn out as souldiers to battel They al●o that have to do in Causes and Courts o● Justice ought to order their words aright they must not speak at random or what comes next but they must weigh the plea they make and put eve●y thing in its due place Thus saith Elihu here We cannot order o●● speech we canno● tell how to ●●aw up our reasons we are over-matcht in this business we know not how to plead before God in thy case nor what defence to ma●● for thee thou pretendest to be able to contend with him but we are not we cannot order our speech Why not By reason of darkness It is darkness that usually hinders the putting of things in order Darkness in the Air doth so much more darkness of the Understanding There must be light of one kind or other for the ordering of every matter Where darkness is there must needs be confusion and therefore Elihu gives a very good account why they could not order their speech when he saith We cannot do it by reason of darkness What da●kness there is a twofold da kness First There is darkness proper or natural Once there was darkness because light wa● no● come or created of that Moses speaks Gen. 1.3 4. Darkness was upon the face of the deep Now there is darkness eve y night caused by the departure of light or the going down of the Sun as also sometimes by the Eclipse of the Sun Matth. 27.45 There was darkness over all the land when Christ was crucified It was not this kind of darkness that hindred Elihu from ordering his speech for a man may order his speech though he have nei●her Sun-light nor Candle-light a man needs no other light but that of Reason and Understanding to order his speech by Secondly Darkness in Scripture is taken improperly and metaphorically and so we are to understand it here We cannot order our speech by reason of darkness And this darkness which I call improper or metapho●ical is of several kinds First Trouble and sorrow in Sc●iptu●e language are called darkness Psal 18.28 Thou O Lord w●lt lighten my darkness that is thou wilt bring me ou● of a sorrow●ul into a joyful state Joel 2.2 It is a day of darknes what is that a day of trouble and affliction Hence the state of the damned in Hell is called darkness yea utter darkness Math. 22.13 because it is a state of sorrow even of everlasting sorrows This da●kness of sorrow and trouble will hinder a man very much f●om o●dering his speech He that is compassed about wi●h especially if discomposed by sorrow is unfit to speak before men of understanding yet I conceive this was not the da●kness here mean● Secondly Darkness in Scripture notes the state of a natural man as unregenerate and without faith Ye were sometimes darkness saith the Apostle Eph. 5.8 that is ye were sometimes unconverted or in a state of nature which is called darkness not only there but often elsewhere 1 Thess 5.4 Brethren ye are not in darkness that is ye are not in a sinful condition grace hath shined unto you yea it hath shined into you or as the Apostle speaks 2 Cor. 4.6 it hath shined in your hearts to give you the light of the knowledg of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ he it was who came on purpose into the wo●ld as to give life to them that were dead so to give light to them that sit in darkness Luk. 79. 'T is a truth also that this kind of darkness doth exceedingly hinder a man in speaking especially when some things are to b● spoken He that is in the darkness of a natural condition will be to seek as we say or knoweth not how to order his speech befo●e God in any spiritual matter Yet neithe● is this ●ere meant for Elihu was not a man in this kind of darkness he w●s doubtless a godly man a man that had much acq●aintance with and in the things of God Therefore it wa● not because of this darkness that he could not order his speech before God Thirdly Darkness is put for the deserted estate of a godly man Isaiah 50.10 Who is among you that feareth the Lord and obeyeth the voice of his servant he that doth so is su●ely a godly man or in the state of grace who is there of this sort among you that walketh in darkness and hath no light God having with-drawn the light of his countenance from him Now 't is a very great truth and sadly experienced by some that this kind of darkness doth exceedingly hinder a man from ordering his speech before God A poor soul th●t is walking in the da●kness of a spiritual troubled deserted state that is bewildred with fear and doubt about the savour of God to him and his acceptance with him knoweth not what to do or say before God he knoweth not how to order his speech in prayer or discourse This darkness hindereth us mightily in ordering our speech befo●e God Yet I conclude that neither is this the da●kness here understood which is a darkness following upon the present going down or setting of the Sun of Righteousness upon the soul who was himself once thus grievously benighted when nayled to the Cross he cryed out my God my God why hast th●u forsaken me Fourthly Darkness taken for that remaining ignorance or impe●fection of knowledge which abides even in the best in the holyest of men after their conversion while on this side Heaven Thi ignorance is da●kness 1 Cor. 13.9 and this is that darkne●s w●ich Elihu here intends when he saith we cannot order our speech by reas●n of darkness As if he had said Though I and they with me a●e not altogether rude nor ignorant of God and his wayes though we have received through grace a competency of divine light to guide us through this world yet we are sensible of so much dimness and darkness that we cannot order our speech before God nor direct our selves what to say for thee as thou hast handled the matter Further The darkness that as Elihu saith hinde●eth man in o●dering his speech before God may be taken not only for the darkness of the man or of the person speaking as hath been shewed already but also for the darkness of the matter or of the things about which he is called or occasioned to speak As there is a darkness of the Subject so a darkness of the object which David thus expresseth Psal 49 4. I will utter dark sayings upon the harp And again Psal 78.2 I will open my mouth in a parable I will utter dark
ligh● enough to look through all the darkness and obscurity that is in the Works and Word of God I do not affirm this to cast that repro●ch of obscurity upon the Wo●d of God which the Papists do The Word of Go● hath in it abundance of light yea 't is a light there is enough in it so plain that any who have any ●rue light may see much of it and be able to order their speech com●o●●ably and competently that is acceptably before God ab●ut it Yet there is a mysterious da●kness in many parts of the Word and Works of God which our light is not clear enough to master and get through God hath purposely done and spoken some things which stand as secrets which our eye cannot pierce into that he might keep us low and little in our own eyes As there is enough in the Word which the si●plest may understand and spe●k of to ●alvation so there are some things there to po●e the wisest and hold them in a silent admi●ation The Apostle Peter 2 Epist 3.16 speaking about the Epistles of Paul saith In them there are some things hard to be understood He doth not say all things in the Epistles of Paul are hard to be understood but some things a●e and they are so for our exercise and tryal As those things are altogether secrets to us which God hath not revealed so some things are in a great deg●ee sec●ets to us though God hath revealed them and if so Then First Let us believe when we cannot understand Faith hath a knowledge about all general Principles yet he that hath no more Faith in some special Scripture-P●inciples and Mysteries than he hath knowledge will have but little Faith in them Though we must have a knowledge about every thing we believe yet we may be much more in believing many things than we are in knowing them we may have much Faith in that of which we have but little knowledge As Faith is the evidence of those things which cannot be seen at all by the eye of sence so it is the evidence of some things to us which are very little seen by the eye of the understanding The blessed Virgin said How shall this be When she was told she should have a Son she could not understand the thing there was a darkness in it yet she believed it Secondly When we find darkness in the Works or Truths of God which are the Object of our Faith Let us adore what we cannot see and admire where we cannot apprehend Thirdly When we find darkness in any of the works of God Let us be sure to forbear to censure or question those works How vain a thing is it to judg when we do not understand or to say that is not done well which we know not how it is done Doubtless We cannot order our speech about such things before God by reason of darkness and therefore we should tremble to speak rashly or hardly of them Elihu heightens the poynt yet further in the next words Vers 20. Shall it be told him that I speak if a man speak surely he shall be swallowed up I find another rendring of these words in such a tenour as this Is there any need that he should be told what I speak As if Elihu's meaning were that God being omniscient and every where present needeth not any to bring him a report what men say or do he knows our doings and hears all our sayings though none tell him I hearkned and heard saith the Lord Jer. 8.6 He that planted the ear shall he not hear he that formed the eye shall he not see If any man behave himself amiss or speak amiss God seeth it God heareth it The Omnipotent needs no helper the Omniscient needs no informer no intelligence● to bring him an account o● what is done o● sp●ken Is there any need saith Elihu acco●ding to this reading that he should be told what I speak We render Shall it be told him that I speak Verbo forensi vide●ur t● us esse mit●o versu● An nar●abitur vel in act●●eferretur Merl. Here some instead of the word told translate record shall it be recorded registred or written in a book that I speak that is that I have undertaken thy cause as thou hast stated i● Shall this be recorded and the record sent to God that I intend to be thy Advocate surely no neither I nor any man of wisdome or discretion will undertake to sp●ak in this matter after thy manner Shall it be told him that I speak An aliquis audebit ei narrare quum locutus fue●o si● na●p● ut t● locutus es de gube●natione Dei Pisc I dare not I would not have it told him that I will for a World Hence Note First No man who understands hims●lf will venture upon the doing or speaking of any thing that may provoke God or be displeasing to him Will any wise man be an Advocate to plead a Cause which he knows will upon just g●ounds offend and distast an ear●hly Judg The Prea●her saith Solomon meaning himself Eccl. 12.10 sought to find out acceptable words the Hebrew is words of delight or words of the will He meaneth not flatte●ing words or men-pleasing words but such words as may profit men or please men for their profit that is a● the Apostle speaks Rom. 15.2 for their good to edification Now if we should not provoke men but seek to find out in the sence given words acceptable to them should we not much more take heed of speaking any thing to the provocation of God should we not seek to find out words of delight and acceptation with him words of his Will that is words every way agreeable to his holy will Secondly As Elihu feared such a report should be made to God Note It is high presumption to do or speak amiss not fearing God should know of it We are afraid to do that evil which may be reported to great persons who have power to punish us It such a man be told say some what we have done what will become of us Many are not afraid to do evil who yet are afraid it should be told their betters what evil they have done Servants will somtimes thus check children in a Family when they have done amiss We will tell your Father we will do your errand to your Mother that 's a dreadful word to a child that hath any ●everence of Father or Mother to say I will tell your Father and Mother of you The Lord knoweth all that we do amiss as was ●aid before though no man tell him but shall it be told to God what such and such men speak or do and will they speak or do it still shall it be told God what they speak and against whom they speak shall it be told God whom they reproach whom they revile and will they venture it 'T is dangerous when such Tales are truly told in the ears of God
Hence note What-ever stands in the way of our comforts God can quickly remove it When Clouds cover the light from us God hath ●is wind ready to chase them away and clear up the weather Never did any such thick and dark Cloud of sorrow and trouble hang over the heads or fill the hearts of the people of God but he had means at hand to dispell and scatter it or he could scatter it himself without means When dreadfull Clouds of danger looked black upon and threatned the Church of God during the Reign of Julian the Apostate Athanasius said It is but a little Cloud N●becula est citò transibit a wind will shortly cleanse it away His meaning was now we are compassed about with fear and trouble but peace and prosperity will not stay long before they return This is true also if we carry it yet in a more spiritual way as to those Clouds of sorrow which often darken and afflict our minds in the midst of outward prosperity or in the clearest Sun-shine-day of peace that ever was in this world when these inward Clouds dwell as it were upon the soul the Lord hath a wind which passeth and cleanseth them away too What is that wind it is his holy Spirit The word in the text Bolduc is used often to signifie not only the natural wind in the air but that divine wind the Holy Ghost who is compared unto the wind in many places of Scripture and his opperations are like those of the wind For as the wind bloweth where it listeth we hear the sound thereof but know not whence it cometh nor whither it goeth so saith Christ is every one that is born of the Spirit John 3.8 And as our Regeneration is wrought by that secret yet strong and powerfull wind so likewise is our consolation The Spirit of God doth those ●ffices in our hearts which the winds do in the air As the wind dispells and sweeps away the Clouds which are gathered there so the Spirit of God cleanseth our souls from those Clouds and foggs of ignorance and unbelief of sin and lust which are gathered in and would else abide for ever upon our hearts From all these Clouds the holy Spirit of God cleanseth us in the work of Regeneration And from all those Clouds which trouble our Consciences the holy Spirit cleanseth us in the work of Consolation Some Interpreters expound the words only in this mystical sense quite rejecting the proper But though by allusion we may improve the words to this spiritual sense yet doubtless Elihu speaks here of the winds properly taken or of the natural winds and their sensible effects and so according to our reading this Text as it hath been opened teacheth us what sudden changes God makes in the Air. Now the light is shut up or shut in and anon it is let out again and all by the powerful hand of God who doth administer these things to us interchangeably as himself pleaseth Secondly The text according to another reading which others insist much upon and conceive pertinent to the scope of Elihu runs thus ●im enim non respi●iunt homines lucem quum nitida est in superioribus nubibus quas ventus transiens purgavit Translatio Jun For now men cannot see the bright light in the Clouds when the wind passeth and cleanseth them Mr Broughton translates clearly so his words are these And now men cannot look upon the light when it is bright in the Air then a wind passeth and cleanseth it And then the sence of the whole verse is plainly a setting forth of the excellency or superexcellency rather of the light of the Sun which is so clear and splendid that if the Air be but cleansed from Clouds if it be but a pure Air no man is able to face it nor his eye directly to behold it We behold all things by the light of the Sun but no man can stedfastly behold the light in the Sun no man can look right up to the Sun when it casts forth its fiery rayes and shines bright upon us And this some conceive so genuine and clear an exposition of the Text that the light of it may seem to obscure and darken all others Now according to this second reading the whole verse with that which followeth contains an argument to confirm the former proposition laid down at the 20th verse If a man speak he shall be swallowed up that is if a man come too nigh unto God and be over-bold with him he shal even be swallowed up of his brightness that it is so I prove thus saith El●hu The very light of the Sun Nemo potest adversis oculis ●itidum solem contueri quis ergo ferat praesenti●m Majesta●● dei Jun which shines in the Air is so bright and so powerful that no man is able to hold up his eyes against it And if so then from the lesser to the greater his argument riseth thus If when the Sun shineth brightly no man is able to look upon it then much less are we able to behold the bright Majesty of God or to comprehend his greatness This rendring hath a very profitable sense in it leading Job to reason thus with himself I plainly see by all that hath been discoursed that for as much as I am not able to bear the brightness which breaks through the Clouds nor the noise of Thunder of which Elihu spake before for as much as I am not able to bear the fiercenes● of a great Rain nor the coldness of the Frost nor the impetuousness of the Wind nor the violence of a Tempest for as much as I am not able to bear the clear light of the Sun shining in my face therefore surely I am much less able to bear the Majesty and glory of God if he should unvaile or open himself unto me Thus I say Elihu leads Job to an humbling conviction that he could not stand before the glorious Majesty of God because he was not able to endure the brightness of the Sun shining upon him If the light of the Sun the Created light be too excellent for mortal eyes then what is God the Creating light what is God who dwelleth in light who is light and in whom there is no darkness at all 'T is a Maxime in Nature Excellens visibile visum destruit A ●isible object exceeding bright dazles the eye and even destroys the sight And why was all this spoken to Job Surely to bring him upon his knees as afterwards it did to humble him to take him off from his frequent appeals or desires of approach to God for the debate and determination of his cause The sum of all in a word is as if Elihu had said O Job thou canst not see the bright light of the Air if the wind do but fan it and cleanse the Clouds how then shalt thou be able to dispute thy cause before God to whom the most glorious
had Fathers of our flesh who for a few dayes chastened us after the●r own pleasure they to ease themselve● have put us to pain but the Lord doth it for our profit that we might be partakers of his holiness There is just cause we should be afflicted when we provoke God by sin or when he would purge us from our sin or make us more holy And as it may be said God will not afflict because he doth not afflict us but when there is cause for it so Thirdly Because he doth not afflict us but when there is need 1 Pet. 1.6 nor more than there is need we shall not be afflicted an hour longer nor have a grain more of weight in the burden of our cross nor a drop more of gall and wormwood in the cup of our sorrows than we have need of Isa 27.7 8 9. Hath he smitten him as he smote those that smote him in measure when it shooteth forth thou wilt debate with him As if it had been said he shall have no greater a measure than is both useful and needful First to humble him for his sin secondly to subdue and mortifie his sin thirdly he shall have no more than is needful to exercise his graces his faith and patience no more fourthly than is needful to make him thankful for deliverance and sensible of mercy when it comes Thus as God who hath plenty of Justice will not afflict us but when there is need so not more than is need Fourthly It may be said He will not afflict because he doth not afflict us more than we can bear he tenderly considers our strength what we are able to stand under how long we are able to stand under it he will not break our backs nor our hearts unless by godly sorrow for or from sin by affliction God saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 10.13 is faithful who will not suffer you to be tempted above that you are able but will with the temptation also make a way to escape that ye may be able to bear it Hence wh●n it is said Lam. 3.33 He doth not afflict willingly c. it foll●weth vers 34. to crush under his feet all the prisoners of the earth The Lord makes many his prisoners yet then his bowels are opened towards them he will not crush nor tread them down as mire in the streets I saith the Lord Isa 57.16 will not contend for ever c. For if I should the Spirit should fail before me and the souls which I have made I know what your spirits can bear and I will contend no longer than I know you are able to bear it Hence that Promise Psal 125.3 The rod of the wicked shall not rest upon the lot of the righteous least he put forth his hands to evil The Lord knows the rod may prevail over us so as to put us upon the doing of evil and therefore he will take order that it shall not Thus we may safely understand this assertion He will not afflict that is he afflicts not willingly he afflicts not till there is need nor will he afflict more than needs nor more than we are able or himself will enable us to bear he will either support us under or give us deliverance out of all our afflictions in due time I might hence or from the whole infer a double duty First Be Patient under affliction Secondly Be Comforted in affliction For God doth so afflict that he may be truly said not to afflict But having met with occasions for the ministring of such like counsels to the afflicted from other passages in this book it may suffice only to mind the Reader of them here This spake Elihu in the close or peroration of his discourse to stir up Job to consider all the dealings of God with him he would have him sit down with these four Doctrinal Conclusions upon his heart that God is Excellent in Power and in Judgement and in plenty of Justice he will not afflict Surely he will not afflict more in measure nor longer in time than is need as Job seemed in his passion to intimate and charge God for which he had several reproofs before Thus far I have opened these words as they stand in our translation There are two or three different readings especially of the latter part of the verse which would not be altogether omitted and therefore I shall touch at them and then proceed to the next and last verse of this Chapter which is also Elihu's parting word or the conclusion of his large and close discourse with Job The first different reading is much insisted upon by some Interpreters Take it thus Omnipotens quem non assequimur amplus est virtute sed judicio m●gnitudine justitiae non affliget Merc. The Almighty whom we cannot find out is great in power but he will not afflict in judgment and plenty of justice This translation transposeth those words which we place in the end of the verse he will not afflict to the middle of it and it renders the copulative particle And by the adversative But This makes the sence of the whole verse more plain and easie than the former as also to rise up more fully to the purpose of Elihu As if he had thus summed up all that he spoke before or had contracted it into this sum Which things seeing they are so as I have declared we may certainly conclude Quamvis sit potentissimus tamen homines ante creatos tanti facit ut non utator omnipotentia sua ad eos summo jure pro meritis eorum affligendos Jun. that the Almighty is so full of majesty and power that we are no way able to reach compass and find him out Yet notwithstanding he is so full of goodnesse and mercy that he is very sparing towards men and will not afflict them according to their demerits nor up to the extremity of justice This exposition holds out clearly that temperament of the power and justice with the goodness and mercy of God which Elihu undertook to demonstrate at the fifth verse of the thirty sixth Chapter and so forwards He is great in power but he will not afflict in judgement Take this note from it How great soever the power of God is yet he doth not afflict sinful man according to the greatness of his power nor the utmost line of his justice The Lord is full of mercy full of sparing mercy he spareth his people as a man spareth his own son that serveth him Mal. 3.17 And indeed if God should afflict in plenty that is in extremity of justice what would become of the best of the holiest of men Who can withstand the power of the great God who can stand in judgment before him if he should mark iniquities Psal 130.3 Woe to the most innocent man alive if God should mark iniquities and not forgive iniquities And therefore it follows in the next or 4th verse of that Psalm
not chastise them without cause nor correct them but for their good so when he doth them good or raiseth them up when he sheweth them any favour or giveth them any mercy he doth it not for their wisdom-sake or holiness-sake but for his Sons-sake or for his own Name-sake Acts of favour from God are purely from his free grace not from any desert in man so that every way his mercy is from himself and undeserved by us He respecteth not any that are wise in heart First As the wise in heart stand in opposition to those that fear God spoken of before being so stout that they do not humble themselves in his fear Note True wisdom is alwayes joyned with the fear of God Yea as Job concluded Chap. 28.28 The fear of the Lord that is wisdom and to depart from evil which none do but they who fear the Lord is understanding Secondly Note God regardeth no man for his wisdom who doth not fear him Let men be never so learned and wise never so prudent and politick if they have not the true fear of God before their eyes he values them not he will not cast an eye of favour upon them they shall have no countenance with him no honour from him The most wise the only wise God cares not for the wisest of men who stand so much upon their own understanding as to stout it out with him He is not at all moved unless to displeasure by their wisdom who are puffed up with a conceit of their wisdom Thirdly When 't is said He respecteth not any that are wise in heart Note Wisdom without the fear of God will do no man good at last nor can it keep him off from evil Let no man think by his wisdom policy or subtilty to keep himself out of the reach of God If men will not fear and honour him he knoweth well enough how to deal with them and to recover his honour upon them Note Fourthly Let men be as wise and crafty as they will God is not afraid of them as if they could do him any hurt or spoil his designes as if they could out-wit him and over-throw his counsels Some take upon them as if they by their wisedom could hinder Gods purposes and counter-work him as if they could over-reach or undermine him We are much afraid of wise men If such a wise man if such a head-piece be against us we think surely he will works us a great deal of mischeife When David found his son Absalom rebelling against him and Achitophel joyning with him he prayed that God would turn his counsell into foolishness 2 Sam. 15.31 David feared that Achitophels going over to Absalom might have carryed the whole business against him But God doth not regard a whole conclave of Achitophels he cares not a straw for their plottings and contrivings The Lord is so far from fearing the counsels of the wise in heart that he can destroy them by their own wisdome and not only undoe their counsels but undoe them by their counsels The pit which they have digged they shall fall into it themselves and be entangled in the lime-twiggs which they have set up for others All this the holy Prophet intended when he said of God Isa 44.25 He frustrateth the tokens of the lyers and maketh the diviners mad He turneth wise men backward and maketh their knowledge foolish Diviners grow mad when they see things issuing quite contrary to their predictions and expectations He that can destroy the wise with their own wisdom needs not fear the wisdom of the wisest 'T is the noblest way of vanquishing an enemy when we wound him with his own weapons and turn his own Artillery upon him Thus God dealeth with the wise in heart they are nothing in his hands they cannot put the least stop to what he hath a purpose to do but he can put a stop to all their purposes The foolishness of God saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 1.25 is wiser than men He saith also in the third Chapter of the same Epistle vers 19. The wisdome of this world is foolishness with God for it is w i●●en and that writing is taken out of this Book of Job Ch●p 5.13 He taketh the wise in their own craftiness And again The L●rd knoweth the thoughts of the wise that they are vaine and vain he knoweth them to be in a twofold respect First because sinf●ll or evill in themselves Secondly because he knows how to make them barren or abortive successless and ineffectual unto the wise So that they all become like most Adventurers at a Lottery going out with their hearts full of hopes but returning with their hands full of blanks Disappoyntment Disappoyntment being written upon all their counsels and undertakings Again Taking the wise in heart for those who are truly wise godly wise Learn Fifthly God will not forbear when he seeth cause to afflict those who are indeed the wisest and holiest of men Let no man think that because he is wise or holy he must not therefore be touched or medled with Some conceive the chief design of writing this Book was to let us see this truth That let men be never so holy never so upright or godly yet they must not claime priviledge from the cross nor complain when they are under it that God deals not well with them In this Job over-acted supposing there was no cause why such a man as he should have such severe chastenings and rebukes but let men be never so wise never so good God may see cause to lay his chastening rods upon them and had the Lord nothing else to say for it his soveraignty will bear him out in it against the best of men The clay must neither say to the Potter why hast thou made me so nor why hast thou marr'd me so Be silent O all flesh good as well as bad before the Lord. Lastly Observe What-ever favour what-ever mercy God bestoweth upon the holiest and wisest of men he doth it not with respect to any wisdome holiness or goodness in them but for his own Name sake or because he will He respecteth not the wise in heart No man can merit the least favour from God his is free grace All good cometh to us through the Son of his love and it was meerly of his love that ever his Son came to us and dyed for us Therefore let us not say such a one was a good man such a one was an holy man therefore it was so and so with him As what we are or can do cannot oblige him when he sees cause from giving us correction so he is un-obliged as to what we are or can do in giving us salvation whether temporal or eternal He respecteth not the wise in heart There are yet two other readings of the words which I shall set before the Reader and then conclude all The word which we translate respecteth Is certe non invenit sapientes quoscunque
them it had been better for us not to have received them 364 Merciful men have special favours from God 521 Merit no merit in the best of men 649 Mighty men apt to despise others 173 Mightiness of man four fold 57. Mightiness of God in two things or of two sorts 160. The mig●tine●s of God set forth in seven assertions 161 162. Five Infere●ces fr●m the mightiness of G●d 164 165. Mi●acles God doth ●ot Mi acles to preserve or deliver the wicked 191 192. Mi acl●s as easie to God as his ordinary works 535. Mode●ation of Spi●it procee●s from true greatness of Spirit ●86 Modesty a great vertue and the grace ●f all our graces 158 Motions of the creature most violent and in appearance contingent under the dominion of God 450 N Name of God what 73 Nature work● of God in nature ought to be searched 145 Necessity no man necessitated to choose a sinful evil 283 Negatives in Scripture often carry a strong affirmation 153 187 188. Nero his seeming clemency 631 Night God gives his people occasions of rejoycing in the night as well as in the day 71. God gives his people a rejoycing frame of spirit in the night 72. Night taken two wayes 312 North-wind makes fair weather 603. why promotion is said not to come out of the North. 605 O Obeying and hearing expressed by the same word 237 Obedience due to the call of God either by his word or works 237. Obedience to God profitable to man 247. No obedience where no service 250. Good men fail in obedience 251 Oppression of three sorts 56. Oppression a common sin 58. Oppression is a crying sin 59. Power is commonly abused to oppression 59. Yet when poor oppress that worst 59 60. It is best to have recourse to God when oppressed by men 67. Oppression cannot bring down the pride of man 88 Oppressors mind not God 62 Opp●essed persons will be crying and complaining 86. Some under Oppression do nothing but cry and complain 87 P Pardon of great sins what may encourage us to ask it 372. The greatness of pardoning mercy in G●d 634 635 Passion not to be quieted but by Reason 382 Perfection two-fold 157 Perswasion what it is 280 Pleasure distinguished of in what pleasures to spend our dayes is a mercy 243. How that Promise of spending their dayes in pleasure is made good to the godly 245 246 Plenty and Scarcity are at the dispose of God 414. God useth natural means as the cause either of Plenty or Scarcity 414 Poor in Spirit how pleasing to God 195 196. Poor taken two wayes in Scripture 195. Poor shall have right done them by God 197. Objections answered 198 199 Poverty it self an affliction and the poor afflicted by others 194 196. Power of grea● use to do good and a great temptation to do bad things 60 Power of three sorts 335. They who have Power are apt to do wrong 347 Power of God in c●mmanding and working how excellent 619 Prayers of the proud and impenitent are not heard 89 92. The Prayers of vain persons are vain things 93. What prayers are vain shewed in seven particulars 93 94. How much God values holy prayers shewed three wayes 66 Holy p●ayer not alwayes presently answered but never disregarded 96. A dreadful judgment not to have prayer regarded 97. Not to pray in time of affliction very sinful shewed in three things 267. Prayers of the wicked not esteemed by God 307 Praise God fearfull in praises 611 Presumptuous sin what 35 Presumptions of evil men described 106 Presumption to do or speak amiss not fearing God should know it 589 P●ide oppression cannot bring down the proud heart of man 88. Pride a bad Mother of three bad children 169. Pride and high-mindedness the same 458 Promises some make them not minding to perform them 629. Four things ascribed to God in Scr pture which assure us he will perform his promises 630 P●omotion comes usually in a secret way 605 Pronounes mine thine have a great emphasis 149 Prophaning the Name of God what 34 Prosperity what 242. Promises of outward prosperity most in the Old Testament 246. Outward prosperity given many Godly 288 Protection of God towards man two-fold 191 Providences when they seem to cross Promises and Prophesies yet trust 113 Providential care of God towards his people is perpetual 206. Some works of Providence very plain 357. The P●ovidence of God reacheth to all places 453. The Government of the world is as much of God as the creati●n of it 536. Heathens dark about P●ovidence ascribed all to Fortune and second Causes 536 537. Comfort to the godly that all things are under the P●ovidence of God 537 Q Question one question put more than twenty times to J●b and why 535 Q●ietness of the Air much more of mens Hearts is of God 562. Christ can make the heart quiet in the midst of all outward u●quietness 563 R Rain fi●e things spoken of it 384 385. Rain comes fi●st from the earth 388. The causes of Rain 389. God can with-hold the Rain when he pleaseth 389. Four Inferences from it 90 39● That the water falls from Heaven in drops of R●in is of God 393. God hath store of Rain in his treasury 397. R●in a comparison between that ●nd the Word of God 397 398. R●i● s●all and great 471. Great Rain of Gods strength what 471. In what quantity soever the Rain falls it is by the special appointment of God 475. For what purposes Rain is sent 519. Rain undeserved 't is of free mercy that we have Rain 520 Rain-bow the signification of it 542 543. The forme and cause of it 543. Why expressed in the Greek by a word that signifieth to speak or shew forth 544. Whether the Rain-bow were before the fl●●d 544 545. The fitness of the Rain bow to assure mercy shewed in seven particulars 545 546 Ransom what it is several sorts of it Nothing but the blood of Christ can ransom sinners nor will that deliver some sinners 304 Remember taken two wayes 349 Reward and punishment without them Religion would vanish 14 Riches God regardeth not men for their riches or any outward greatness 306 309 Right how God gives it the poor 195 Righteous man righteous three wayes 39. A two-fold notion of the righteous 21. The Righteous alwayes under Gods eye 202 203. Righteous highly esteemed and exalted by God 213 Righteousness essential to God 11 Righteousness of two sorts 8 9. The righteousness or righteous actings of men contribute nothing to God 41. Three grounds of it 42 43. How and whom righteousness doth profit 51 52. Cautions about it 53. Righteousness when and how ascribed to God 147 Rods of two sorts 514. S Scholars great not alwayes the wisest men 177 Scourge God can make any creature a scourge to man 412 Sealing in Scripture hath a threefold signification 476. Sealing up of the hand what it signifieth 478 September how expressed in the Hebrew and why 448 Servant what it
light of the Sun is but a Cloud yea but as a clod of earth The next words carry on this conviction yet further Vers 22. Fair weather cometh out of the North with God is terrible Majesty The former part of this verse hath a respect to the latter part of the former The wind passeth and cleanseth them fair or bright weather cometh out of the North. It hath been shewed before in opening the 9th verse of this Chapter that the South wind ingenders the Rain and causeth foule weather here saith Elihu fair weather cometh out of the North. The North wind saith Solomon Pro. 25.22 driveth away Rain so doth an angry countenance a backbiting tongue The North wind blows coldly yet it blowes clearly it clears the Air from Clouds We render Fair weather cometh out of the North. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aurum The word translated fair weather signifieth gold gold cometh out of the North. Fair weather in its season is worth much gold and may well be called golden weather the Sun in such seasons gilds both the Air and Earth with his precious beams And I find an ancient Interpreter sticking much upon the strict signification of the Hebrew word maintaining that gold is to be taken here properly Out of the North cometh gold because saith he in the Northern Countryes through the greatness of Cold the heat in those parts is so pent in the bowels of the Earth that it more fully concocts and refines the gold than in other places Out of the North comes gold that is the purest gold But I conceive that was not at all the business of Elihu here and I find the Scripture in another place expressing that which is shining beautifull and precious by gold Zach. 4.12 The oyle which the two Olive-branches emptied out of themselves through the two golden pipes is called gold or golden oyle that is Lux quovis auro splendidior ●ez bright oyle pure oyle and so because the light of the Sun shining in fair weather is purer and more defecate than the purest gold therefore this Scripture expresseth it by gold through the North a golden cometh saith Mr Broughton Again Some taking the word gold here metaphorically for any pretious thing take the word North metaphorically also for any evil thing that is for any affliction trouble or sorrow which we meet with in this world these are indeed as a cold chilling North-wind and so they will needs give the sence of this Scripture mystically thus Out of the North cometh precious things that is afflictions which are as a cold chilling North-wind make us more precious or through cold chilling afflictions we are made more and more precious Job saith and this text may have such an allusion and I give it no further to that Chap. 23.10 When he hath tried me I shall come forth gold that is I shall come forth precious Whether God doth try us by the North or by the South whether by the heat of prosperity or by the cold of adversity if we are under his tryal and are faithfull we come out gold we come out more precious from our tryals than we came in The Apostle hath a like allusion 1 Pet. 1.6 7. Ye are now for a season in heaviness if need be through manifold temptations that is troubles tribulations and afflictions That the triall of your faith being much more precious than of gold that perisheth though it be tried with fire might be found to praise c. Thus Out of the North comes Gold or this precious thing a tryed faith That 's a truth from the allegorical sense of this place but I shall not stay upon it The proper meaning is Elihu would have Job and all men know God hath his several Climates or places out of which he sends and dispenceth fair and foul weather foul weather cometh out of the South and fair out of the North. Out of the North cometh fair weather The Hebrew word rendred North signifieth hiding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abscondit occuliavit hinc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 septentrio aquilo quasi abscondita quia sol ibi multo per annum temp re ibi non conspiciatur because the remote parts of the North are much hidden from the Sun a great part of the year being quite dark and therefore the Northern Climate may well be called the hidden part of the world Some put a Question upon those words of David Psal 75.6 Promotion comes neither out of the East nor out of the West nor from the South Here are three of the foure Winds specified and it is said Promotion comes from neither of them But why is it not also said that Promotion comes not from the North that 's the question I answer It were answer enough to say that we ought not to put questions curiously about such things it should satisfie us that the Spirit of God is pleased to say it is so and no more Yet some tell us the reason why it is not said Promotion cometh not from the North is because indeed it cometh out of the North which say they is intimated in the Hebrew word for the N●rth which signifies ●idden or secret Promotion comes not from the East nor West nor South but from the North saith this Author it comes from the North in a figure or mysterie that is it comes from some hidden providence or secret hand which many take no more notice of than we do of the furthest part of the North. God promotes many in this world to power and sends them great prosperity we see not how or which way The causes and contrivances of it are hidden close and in the breast of God This also is a truth in that sence we may say Fair weather cometh from the North. Promotion is visible but the manner of it is a secret we see not the causes for which nor the wayes in which it cometh It is enough to touch these niceties and to touch them can do no hurt while the matter arising from them hath the clear consent of and is harmonious with other plain places of Scripture Fair weather cometh out of the North and as it followeth With God is terrible Majesty This is the Epiphonema the exulting conclusion of both these verses yea of Elihu's large discourse concerning the works of God in Naturalls As if Elihu had said All these things God doth and tell me then is not terrible Majesty with God in God or with God is terrible Majesty The word which we render Majesty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 celsitudo majestas a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quidem dedu●unt quod est confiteri celebrare laudare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theod 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Symmach Ad deum formidolo a laudatio Vulg comes say Grammarians from a root which signifies to confess to acknowledge to celebrate because Majesty Greatness or Excellency is and ought to be much acknowledged confest and celebrated The word notes