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A63066 A commentary or exposition upon the books of Ezra, Nehemiah, Esther, Job and Psalms wherein the text is explained, some controversies are discussed ... : in all which divers other texts of scripture, which occasionally occurre, are fully opened ... / by John Trapp ... Trapp, John, 1601-1669. 1657 (1657) Wing T2041; ESTC R34663 1,465,650 939

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at once his wicked dayes and desires The Pope to honour and encourage the Leaguers in France sent them consecrated pictures and medals promising them thereby good successe against the Huguenots but God confuted and defeated them all as he did likewise Tyrone in Ireland to whom Cárlt Rem among other trinkets the Pope had sent a Plume of Phoenix feathers a meer collusion When the Kings commandment and decree drew near c. Both that for the Jewes and the other against them This latter was not reversed though the former were published The King it seemeth greatly cared not for the lives of his subjects sith he would not so much as privately hint to them to be quiet and to let the Jewes alone Such an intimation as this might have saved the lives of seventy five thousand of them But God had an holy hand in it for the just punishment of those blood-thirsty Persians confident in the good successe of their sorceries having made hell their refuge but it failed them In thi day that the enemies of the Jewes hoped c. But their hope ran astope as they say their lucky day deceived them Wicked mens hope when they most need it will be as the giving up of the ghost and that 's but cold comfort Job 11. ult and as the spiders web Job 18.13 14. who gets to the top of the window as high as she can and then when she falls she falls to the bottom for nothing stayes her From such high hopes fell our English Papists first Act. Mon. fol. 1871 when Queen Mary died You hope and hope said Dale the Promoter to Julian Lining whom he had apprehended but your hope shall end in a rope for though the Queen faile she that you hope for shall never come at it for there is my Lord Cardinals grace and many more between her and it Secondly at Queen Elizabeths death that long-look'd-for day as they called it triumphing before the victory and selling the hide before they had taken the beast This they had done before in eighty eight when in assurance of victory they had stiled their forces the Invincible Armado and also afterwards at the Powder-plot when they had presumptuously disposed of the chief offices holds and revenues of the land like as before the Pharsalian field was fought the Pompeians were in such miserable security that some of them contended for the Priesthood which was Caesars office Heyl. Geo● 407. others disposed of the Consulships and Offices in Rome So at the batte● of Agin●court in France where our Henry the fifth won the day the French were so confident of a victory that they sent to King Henry Speed 745. to know what ransome he would give A presumptuous confidence goes commonly bleeding home when an humble fear returnes in triumph Though it was turned to the contrary By a sweet and gracious Providence of God whose glory it is to help at a pinch to alter the Scene all on the sudden to begin where we have given over and to cause a strange turne of things according to that of the Psalmist God shall send from heaven and save me when it might seem to some that salvation it self could not save me he shall send forth his mercy and his truth Psal 57.3 and then what should hinder the Churches happinesse That the Jewes had rule over them that hated them They dominered over their enemies as so many Sultans So true is that of the Preacher Man knoweth not his time 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but as the fishes that are taken in an evil net and as the birds that are caught in the snare so are the sonnes of men snared in an evil time when it falleth suddenly upon them Eccl. 9.12 Security is the certain usher of destruction and God delighteth by turning the scale to retaliate as he did upon the Egyptians at the red sea the Philistines at Mizpeh these Hamanists and our powder-Papists See Psal 7.16 Verse 2. The Jewes gathered themselves together They were laeti in Domino sed non securi as Bernard hath it They had prayed but yet provided for the thirteenth of Adar which by many was meant still to be a bloody day notwithstanding the knowen favour of the King and the patronage of Mordecai The Hamanists would joyn together to perform that sentence whereof the Authour repented and had rued it That old enmity Gen. 3.15 will never out of the Serpents seed the Jewes therefore well and wisely get together and unite their forces that they may make a powerful resistance They are noted by Tacitus to be a nation at great unity amongst themselves and to hate all others On of the main scandals they do at this day take from Christians is their dissension Camer med histor cent 2. c. 23. that mother of dissolution as Nazianzen calleth it The Turks pray to God to keep us still at variance and say that their fingers shall sooner be all of one length then we be of one minde What a shame 's this If nothing else will yet our common misery and the hatred of our enemies should unite us as it did these exiles and it was foretold by Jeremy chap. 50.4 that Judah and Israel that could not agree at other times yet when they should be both in a weeping condition they should better agree So did Basil and Eusebius against the Arrians Ridley and Hooper against the Papists c. And it is high time for us now to set aside our private emulat●ons and exceptions as the creatures in the Ark laid by their Antipathies within because of the common danger of an inundation without To lay hand on such as sought their hurt To repel force with force to kill and spoil those that sought to do so to them This nature prompted them to as was forenoted and they had also the Kings warrant for it and they kept themselves within compasse thereof by not medling with any but only those that molested them See chap. 8.11 And no man could withstand them Tantum potest bona causa bonis usa consiliis mediis saith an Interpreter here A good cause a good conscience and a good courage what cannot these three do where they meet How should any stand before those who are Deo armati Eph. 610. strong in the Lord and in the power of his might Pilates wife could warne him of medling with such and Hamans wife could tell him that a Jew might fall before a Persian and get up again and prevaile But if a Persian or whosoever of the Gentiles begin to fall before a Jew he can neither stand nor rise chap. 6.13 There is an invisible hand af Omnipotency that striketh in for his owne and confounds their opposites For the fear of them fell upon all the people This was the work not of some Pan Deus Arcadiae as the Heathens fancied but of God the sole giver of victory who when he pleaseth affrighteth the Churches
Arian-Bishops out of banishment to breed new broyles in the Church The Jesuites have a practice at this day of running over to the Lutheran Church pretending to be Converts and to build with them but it is onely to keep up that bitter contention that is betweene the Calvinists and the Lutherans And what ill offices they do amongst us at this day to heighten our divisions and hinder the Reformation by their wiles much ensnared and hindered good men are very sensible of The Lord detect and defeat them For we seeke your God as ye do Nay not as ye do See 2 Kings 17.32 33 34. they feared the Lord not filially but for his Lions as the old Romanes worshipped their Veiones lest they should hurt them and as the Caffrani a people in India worship Devils in most terrible figure that they may not punish them Since the dayes of Esar-haddon Sonne and successour to Sennacherib 2 Kings 19.37 grand son to Salmaneser after whom it seemes he brought a new colony into the Land of Samaria who proved deadly enemies to Gods people Verse 3. But Zerubbabel and Jeshua Jeshua would be one to keep them out though they slighted him in their application to Zerubbabel and the chiefe of the fathers verse 2. You have nothing to do with us You shall neither conquer us nor compound with us This was right Roman resolution They were wont to say of cowards in Rome that there was nothing Roman in them I can never sufficiently admire saith one the speech of blessed Luther who though he was very earnest to have the Communion administred in both kinds contrary to the Doctrine and custome of Rome yet he professeth if the Pope as Pope commanded him to receive in both kinds he would receive but in one kinde lest he should seeme to receive the mark of the Beast As for these Reconcilers and Moderatours saith another learned man were they the wisest under heaven and should live to the worlds end they would be brought to their wits end before they could accomplish this works end to make a reconciliation betwixt Rome and us They have nothing to do with us to build an house unto our God From such stand off saith the Apostle 1 Tim. 6.5 Say to them when they offer their cost and service as here Pura Deus mens est procul ô procul este profani This was one of those ancient Lawes of the twelve tables among the Romanes Impius ne audeto placare donis iram deorum Let no profane person presume to think to pacifie the gods with their pains or presents But we our selves together will build c. This the adversaries call combination conspiracy faction sedition c. See verse 13. But what saith Tertullian Cùm boni cùm probi coeunt non est factio dicenda sed curia Et è contrà illis nomen factionis accommodandum est qui in odium piorum proborum conspirant When good men get together Apol. advers gent. num 520. and hold together it is not to be called a faction but a Court. As on to'ther side they are to be counted factious who conspire against the godly as these Malignants in the Text did As King Cyrus c. They had good authority for what they did and they hold them to it Verse 4. Then the people of the land Who the nearer they came unto a conjunction with the Jewes in matters of Religion the deeper hatred they bare them Thus at this day a Jew hates a Christian worse then he doth a Pagan so doth a Turk hate a Persian worse then he doth a Christian a Papist a Protestant worse then he doth a Turk a Formallist a Puritan worse then he doth a Papist Odia Theologica sunt acerbissima Weakened the hands of the people of Judah Discouraged them all they could endeavouring to transfuse as it were a dead-palsie into their fingers that they might surcease or at least slack their paines Well might Solomon say Wrath is cruel and anger is outragious but who can stand before envie surely the venome of all vices is found in this sharp-fanged malignity And troubled them in building Heb. Kept ado about them and terrified them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This was to do the work of their father the Devil that troubler of Gods Israel ad injuriam inferendam totus comparatus set upon 't to vex such as begin but to build the Tower of godlinesse and to hinder them to the utmost Verse 5. And hired Counsellours against them But good Counsellours would not have beene hired either to bolster out a bad cause or to out-face a good to justifie the wicked for a reward or to take away the righteousnesse of the righteous from him Spartian There is a notable instance of this in Papinian a Pagan Counsellour Thou mayest said he to Antoninus the fratricide command my neck to the block but not my tongue to the barre I prize not my life to the pleading of an ill cause These sordida poscinummia in the text were none such Some think they were Courtiers and Counsellours to the King such as by whom the King was even bought and sold as Aurelian the good Emperour was who might know nothing but as his Counsellours informed him This made Alphonsus King of Arragon say that Kings were herein most miserable that whereas they abounded with all things else the truth of matters they could seldome come by All the dayes of Cyrus King of Persia Who warring abroad committed the government of his Kingdome to his sonne Cambyses a light and lewd lossel easily prevailed with to hinder so good a work Even untill the reigne of Darius i. e. Of Darius Nothus say some the sonne of Artaxerxes Longimanus named verse 7. the father of Artaxerxes Mnemon Pemble But they do better in my opinion that understand the text of Darius Histaspis who succeeded Cambyses and married his sister seeking to ingratiate with the people by ratifying whatsoever Cyrus had decreed and this of the Temple among the rest See chap. 6.1 Verse 6. And in the reigne of Ahashuerosh That is of Cambyses who is also called Artaxerxes in the next verse for these two names were given to many Kings of Persia like as Pharaoh was to the Kings of Egypt as a title of honour Ahashuerosh signifieth an hereditary Prince Daniel calleth him the Prince of the Kingdome of Persia chap. 10.13 because he was Viceroy in his fathers absence Infamous he is for many lewd pranks as that he killed his brother and then his owne sister after he had first married her and made a Law that any man might do the like yet was he not so ungracious a sonne to Cyrus as our Henry the seconds eldest sonne was whom he not onely crowned King during his owne life but also to do him honour at his Coronation renounced the name of a King for that day and as Sewer served at the table For which he was thus
There the 〈…〉 or 〈◊〉 as do their cruell creditors and hard task-masters There that is in the state of the dead whether by land or sea the 〈◊〉 or 〈…〉 the miserable captives ●est such as were those poor Christians shut up so close by Barb●rus●a the Turkish Generall returning toward Constantinople under hatches among the excrements of nature that all the way as he went Turk hist 750. almost every houre some of them were cast dead over-board Such were many of the Martyrs kept fast shut up ●n ●ollards Tower in the Bishop of London cole-house a dark and ugly prison said Mr. Philpot as any is about London but I thank the Lord I am not alone but have six other faithfull companions who in our darknesse do lightsomely sing Psalms and praises to God for his great goodnesse Acts Mon. 1669 1670. but especially for this that I am so near the apprehension of eternall blisse God forgive me mine unthankfulnesse and unworthinesse of so great glory What pitifull hard usage Gods poor prisoners met with in the late troubles at Oxford especially from which death God graciously delivered me when I was in their hands and in the Western parts pag. 38. see Mr. R●nas Sermon called J●b in the West where he compareth the enemies cruelty to that of the American Cann●bals who when they take a prisoner seed upon him alive and by degrees to the unutterable aggravation of his horrour and torment They hear not the ●ice of the oppressors Their harsh and hard speeches Jude 15. that were as a murthering weapon in the poor prisoners bones Psal 42.10 Send me back to my frogs and toads again where I may pray for you conversion said one of the Martyrs to his rai●●g adversaries Art thou come thou villain how darest thou look me in the face for shame said S●even G●r●iner to Dr. Taylo● the Martyr● who told him his own freely Acts Mon. but fairely for the spirit of grace is 〈…〉 Est autem Saran● poctus 〈…〉 saith Luthex the divell and his agents are bitter railers fetching their words as farre as hell to brea● the hearts of Gods prisoners Psalm 69.20 But besides that they have their cordiall of a good conscience by them 2 Cor. 1.12 in the gr●ve they heare not the voice of the oppressor nor the barking of these dead dogs any more Verse 19. The small and the great are there In Calvary are sculls of all sizes say the Hebrewes Stat sun cuique dies It is appointed for all once to die Virg. Aeneid lib. 10. be they great or small low or high Mors sceptra liganibus aequat death makes no difference Kings and captives Lords and losels come then under an equall parity death takes away all distinctions William the Conquerours corps lay unburied three dayes his interment was hindred by one that claimed the ground to be his Daniel King Stephen was interred at Fever sham Monastery but since Speed 498. his body for the gain of the lead wherein it was coffined was cast into the river where at length it rested as did likewise the dead corps of Edward the fifth and his brother smothered in Speed 935. the Tower by Richard the third and cast into a place called the black deeps at the Thames mouth The servant is free from his Master Servant is a name of office he is not his own to dispose of but the masters instrument saith Aristotle and wholly his till he please to manumit him if he do not yet death will and by taking away his life give him his liberty his body resteth from all servile offices for a season howsoever and if with good will hee hath done service as to the Lord and not to men he shall receive of the Lord the reward of inheritance even a childs part Colos 4.24 Verse 20. Wherefore is light given to him that is in misery Job hath not done yet though he had said more then enough of this matter but for want of the oyle of joy and gladnesse his doors move not without creaking his lips like rusty hinges open not without murmuring and complaining Good therefore is that counsel given by David Cease from anger and forsake wrath take up in time before it hath wholly leavened and sowred you fret not thy self in any wise to do evill Psal 37.8 Hee shall not chuse but do evil who is sick of the fret David had the sad experience of this when he had carted the Ark and thereupon God had made a breach upon Vzzah David was displeased saith the Text and how untowardly spake hee as if the fault were more in God then in himself though afterwards he came to a sight of his own error 1 Chron. 13.11 with 15.2 And so did Job no doubt when come to himself but here he proceeds to expresse his peevishnesse and impatience yea against God himself though not by name forsan sese cohibens ob bonae mentis reliquias saith Mercer out of his good respect to God which he still retained and calls for a reason why the miserable should be condemned to live since death would be much more welcome to them How apt are men to think there is no reason for that for which they can see no reason Verse 21. Which long for death and it cometh not The bitter in soul long for death those that are in paine or penury are apt to desire to be dispatch'd upon any terms and would freely pardon them they say that would give them their pasport But these for most part consider not the unsupportablenesse of the wrath to come that eternity of extremity in hell that death usually haleth at the heeles of it so that by death whereof they are so desirous they would but leap out of the frying-pan into the fire as Judas did they do as the asse in the fable who desired to die that he might be no more beaten at post mortem factus est tympanum but when he was dead he was made a drum-head of and so was ten times more laid on then ever in his life-time before And dig for it more then for hid treasures Covetousnesse is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all-daring saith an Ancient and men for love of wealth will dig to hell light a candle at the divel as they say With such an eagernesse of desire do some that have little reason for it all things reckoned long and labour after death not to bee rid of sin or to bee with Christ as Phil. 1.23 but to bee freed from misery incumbent or impendent Thus Cato having first read Plato's book of the souls immortality laid violent hands on himselfe that hee might not fall into the hands of the conqueror Thus Adrian the Emperour having lain long sick and could get no help by Physicians but was the worse for them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as he complained at his death would gladly have slaine himselfe if those about him would have suffered
NOw Heb. And for the former History recorded in the Chronicles is continued by Ezra that ready Scribe and perfect in the Law Chap. 7.6 Yet not so prompt or perfect can I deeme him as that he should by memory restore the Bible that was burnt together with the Temple Irenae Tertuil Clem. Alexi Hieron Aug. Euseb Alsted Chron pag. 267. Acts Mon. by the Babylonians And yet that was the opinion of many Ancients grounded upon some passages in that Apocryphal Esdras We reade also of one Johannes Gatius Ciphaleditanus who out of the vaine confidence of his learning and memory was wont to give out that if the Holy Scripture should be lost out of the world he would not doubt by Gods grace to restore it whole again Of Cranmer indeed a far better man and a profounder Divine it is storied that he had got most of the New Testament by heart And of Beza that being above eighty years of age he could say perfectly without book and Greek Chapter in Saint Pauls Epistles M. Leigh A● not on John 5.39 In the first year Heb. In the one year The Hebrews oft use One for First So do also the Apostles in Greek Matth. 28.1 John 20.1 19.1 Cor. 16.2 Rev. 6.1 One being the first number neither was it without a mystery that Pythagoras bade his Scholars ever to have respect 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Moses also his saying Hear O Israel the Lord our God is one Lord Deut. 6.4 Of Cyrus Heb. Coresh so named by God above an hundred years before he was born See the like Josiah 1 Ki● 13.3 Isay 40.28 and so honoured by the Persians as the founder of their Monarchy that they liked the better of all that were Hawk-nosed like unto him The Persian word signifieth a Lord or great Prince as Hen. Stephanus noteth and thence the Greeks have their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Authority 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lord and We our word Sir as some will have it Plutarch in Artaxerxes saith that the Persians call the Sunne Cyrus And it may very well be so Peacham for the Hebrews also call the Sunne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cheres from its glistering brightnesse King of Persia So he had beene above twenty years before this and done many great exploits but this was the first year of his Empire of his Cosmocratie of the Monarchy translated from the Babylonians to the Persians The greatest Kingdomes have their times and their turnes their rise and their ruine when they shall live by fame onely Persia having oft changed her Masters since Cyrus remaineth a flourishing Kingdome to this day but wholly Mahometan Turk Hist ●ol 5. Which abominable superstition the Turks received from them when in the year 1030. they won that Countrey under their Sultan Tangrolipix Where it is hard to say saith mine Author whether nation lost more the Persians by the losse of so great a Kingdome Blounts Voy. into the Leu. pag. 81. or the Turks by embracing so great a vanity To this day they acknowledge the Persians better Mahometans then themselves which maketh the Turks farre better souldiers upon the Christian then upon the Persian That the Word of the Lord For it was He that spake by the mouth of his holy Prophets Luke 1.70 and his word cannot be broken Psal 31.5 John 10.35 for he is the God of Amen asthe Prophet David somewhere calleth him and all his promises are the issue of a most faithful and right Will void of all insincerity and falshood Prov. 8.8 By the mouth of Jeremy That admirable Preacher as Keckerman calleth him that most eminent Prophet as another with whose writings De Rhet. Eccles about this very restauration Daniel consulted and therehence collected that the time was come Dan. 9.2 which put him upon that heavenly prayer for he knew that Gods promises must be put in suit and and it was to him that the Angel afterwards said I came for thy word Dan. 10.14 God will come according to his promise but he will have his peoples prayers lead him This liberty here granted to the Jewes after so long captivity was the fruit of many prayers founded upon the promise Jer. 25.12 and 29.10 Might be fulfilled As indeed it was exactly by the death of Belshazzar slaine by Cyrus who succeeded him Dan. 5.30 In that night was Belshazzar slaine because then exactly the seventy years were ended So for the same reason it is noted Exod. 12.40 41. that at midnight the first-borne of Egypt were slaine because just then the four hundred or four hundred and thirty years foretold were expired So punctual is God in keeping his word It is not here as with men A day breaketh no square c. for he never faileth at his time The Lord stirred up the spirit It was the mighty and immediate work of God in whose hand are the hearts of all both Kings and Captives Lords and Losels to bring this wise and great Prince in the very first entrance into his Monarchy before things were fully settled to dismisse so great and so united a people in respect of their custome and religion and so given to insurrection as was generally held into their owne Countrey with such a faire and full Patent This was the Lords owne work and it was justly marvellous in the eyes of his people who could hardly believe their owne eyes but were for a while like them that dreame Then was their mouth filled with laughter and their tongue with singing c. Psal 126.1 2. Then was the great power and goodnesse of God in stirring up Cyrus to do this acknowledged Then also was the Kings clemency and courtesie no lesse cried up and magnified then was that of Flaminius the Roman General at Athens where for delivering them from servitude he was little lesse then deified Or that of our Queene Elizabeth who for her merciful returning home certaine Italians that were taken prisoners in the eighty eight Invasion was termed Saint Elizabeth by some at Venice Whereof one told the Lord Carleton afterwards Viscount Dorchester being there Embassadour that although he were a Papist yet he would never pray to any other Saint but that Saint Elizabeth That he made Proclamation Heb. He caused a voice to passe sc by his Messengers and Ministers The Posts went out being hastened by the Kings commandment Esth 3.15 even those Angarii The Lord Christ also proclaiming liberty to the captives and the opening of the prison to them that are bound Esay 61.1 causeth his Word to run and to be glorified to spread like a Sun-beame as Eusebius saith the Gospel did at first to be carried as on Eagles wings or on Angels wings as it was thorough all Christendome when Luther first sent forth his book De Captivitate Babylonicâ of the Babylonish Captivity And put it also in writing That it might be posted up and every where published Vox audita perit littera scripta manet
Chaldee rendereth it such as was found in Araunah that famous Jebusite 2 Sam. 24.23 with Zech. 9.7 and is a quickening Spirit in every good soul causing them to make riddance as Baruc did Nehem. 3.20 Gen. 29. Ambrose and to take long strides toward heaven as Jacob did toward Padan-Aram for Nescit tarda molimina Spiritus sancti gratia The Spirit of grace knoweth no slow paces Mantuan but is quick of dispatch Up get these Chieftains when once they hear Surge age Summe Pater as one said once to the Bishop of Rome exciting him to make warre upon the Turk And the Priests and the Levites Fit it was that these should be of the first and forwardest at Temple-work whose proper employment is was to teach Jacob Gods judgements and to put incense before him continually Deut 33.10 to wait at the Altar and to be partakers with the Altar 1 Cor 9.13 With all them whose spirit God had raised up Not of Judah and Benjamin onely those best of the Tribes and truest to their Princes and principles but also of Ephraim and Manasseh 1 Chron. 9.3 with Ezek. 37.16 17 21 22. even as many of the Israelites as were acted by Gods Spirit of judgement and of burning Isa 4.4 firing them up to an holy contention in so noble and necessary a businesse and leading them into the land of uprightnesse Psal 143.10 The fruit of this good Spirit is in all goodnesse and righteousnesse and truth Ephes 5.9 the work of it upon the sonnes of God who are led by it Rom. 8.14 is not onely an external invitation by the Word and Sacraments or a meere moral perswasion Cyrus his Proclamation here would have availed but little with this people if God had not moved their hearts but an effectual drawing of the heart whereby operating irresistibly the sinner is converted and whereby cooperating infallibly he persevereth in grace unto the very end John 6.44 This conduct of the holy Spirit we must both earnestly beg with David Psal 14.10 and as carefully observe and obey his motions as ever David did the out-goings of God in the tops of the mulberry trees 1 Chron. 14.15 for these are the sound of his goings and the footsteps of his Anointed Psal 89.51 To build the house of the Lord This was that they aimed at rather then their owne liberty Choice and excellent spirits can easily drowne all self-respects in the glory of God It was the care of those good people in Joels dayes that there might be a meat-offering and a drink-offering unto the Lord their God what-ever became of their owne Carcasses Joel 2.14 And when the daily sacrifice ceased by the tyranny of Antiochus they looked upon it as an abomination of desolation Dan. 9.27 The Jewes at this day are very earnest to be rebuilding the destroyed Temple at Jerusalem out of their blinde zeale but they have neither any Cyrus to encourage them Julian the Apostate once did in spight to the Christians but it came to nothing nor the Spirit of God to excite them to such an unwarrantable work Verse 6. And all they that were about them Both their countrymen the Jewes that thought not good to go themselves or not yet till they should see further there is none so wise as the sluggard Prov. 26.16 and others of the neighbourhood for the Egyptians may lend Jewels to the Israelites dogs may lick Lazarus his ulcers and the earth may help the woman by opening her mouth and swallowing up the stood cast out after her by the Dragon to drown her Rev. 12.16 Strengthened their hands Which else for want of such support would have hung down and their feeble knees buckled under them ere they had come to their countrey neither could they without such supplies have so comfortable carried on the work they went about For if wisdome be a defence or a shadow to those that have seene the Sunne as in the former verse and are scorched with the hear of it so is money too saith Solomon Eccles 7.12 and though Wisdome without wealth is good yet it is better with an inheritance verse 11. which is not only an ornament but an instrument of vertue When men go on Virtute duce comite fortunâ then it is well with them as it was with good Josiah Jer. 22.15 16. But Agur would not be poor lest he should be put upon ill courses Prov. 30.9 put to his shifts Poor Hagar when the water was spent in the bottle cast the childe under the shrubs Gen. 21.15 With vessels of silver with gold with goods and with beasts See the Note on Verse 4. These are things that men do not usually so easily part with to others till they needs must Euclio in the Comedian sits abrood upon his heaps and hoards and will not be drawn off Shall Nabal take his bread and his flesh and give it to those he knows not 1 Sam. 25 Misers will as soon part with their blood as their good whence the Chaldees call their money Dam that is blood Many a man shewes himself like the Cornish-chough which will steale a piece of money and hiding it in some hole will never help her self or any other with it afterwards Hermocrates being loth that any man should enjoy his goods after him made himself by his Will heir of his own goods Athenaeus telleth of one that at his death devoured many pieces of Gold and sewed the rest in his coat commanding that they should be all buried with him But these in the text seeme to have beene of the race of those Persians spoken of Isa 13.17 which regarded not silver and as for gold they cared not much for it Or if they were Proselytes to the Church then they had learned with Tyrus now also converted to give over heaping and hoarding of wealth and therewith to feed and cloath Gods poor Saints and so to furnish them for their journey to their Fathers house that they may eat sufficiently and have durable cleathing Isa 23.18 This was Gods work upon their hearts And Quando Christus magister quàm citò discirur quod decetur Augustine Whereunto may be added that Cyrus who set forth this Edict as he was an absolute Sovereigne and so his word went for a law so he was a gracious and courteous Prince it a ut Patris nomen meruerit so that he merited the name and title of Father of his Countrey and might command any thing of them And with precious things Even the very best of the best they had The word signifieth praestantissimum pretiosissimum in quocunque genere fructuum metallorum gemmarum vestium the choycest and chiefest of all kinde of commodities Such as Eleazar gave to Rebecca and her brother Gen. 24. such as Jehosaphat gave his younger son● 2 Chron. 21.3 For the purchase of the pearle of price the wise Merchant makes a thorough sale of all Barnabas parteth with his lands Zacheus with his goods Matthew
planted turned it into the same nature with it self as copres which will turn milk into ink or leaven which turneth a very Passeover into pollution See Mich. 1.5 with the Note Verse 12. Now therefore give not your daughters unlesse ye have a mind to pitch them into hell-mouth See ver 2. with the Note Nor seek their peace or their wealth for ever For they were devoted by God to utter destruction and therefore Israel might have no intercourse with them The Jewes at this day count and call us Canaanites Edomites c. and hold it an almesdeed to knock us on the head The best among the Gentiles say they is worthy cui caput conteratur tanquam Serpenti to be killed up as a Serpent Tacitus long since observed of them that as they were very kind to their own so to all others they bare a deadly hatred Thrice a day in their prayers Buxtorf Synag Jud. cop 5. they curse us Christians and in Polony where they have a toleration they print base and blasphemous things against Christ and Religion That ye may be strong viz. by my presence amongst you and providence over you for cui adhaereo prae est as Q. Elizabeth could write how much more may God Almighty He whom I favour is sure to prevail And cat the good of the Land The best of the best the finest Wheat the choyfest fruit and those a pledge and fore-taft of the happiness of Heaven where there is nec fames nec fastidium as one saith neither lack nor loathing neither measure nor mixture but sweetest varieties felicities eternities And leave it for an inheritance personal goodnesse is profitable to posterity the righteous shall leave inheritance to his childrens children Prov. 13.22 God never casteth out his good tenants nor leaveth his servants unprovided for See Psal 103.17 and 112.1 2. Verse 13. And after all that is come upon us Affliction like foul wheather cometh before it is sent for yet not but of Gods sending and then it is ever either probational as Jobs or Cautional as Pauls prick in the flesh or penal for chastisement of some way of wickednesse as here For our evil deeds These he thanketh as well he might for all their sufferings sin is the mother of misery and hales hell at the heeles of it Seeing that thou our God Our God still and this is the sixth time that he hath so stiled Him in this holy prayer besides three times My God These are speeches of faith and refer to the Covenant that pabulum fidei food of faith When ye stand and pray beleeve when ye humble and tremble before God keep up your faith still Nihil retinet qui fidem amisit lose that and lose all Seneca Take away the iniquity of they servant saith David 2 Sam. 24.10 'T is as if he should say I am thy servant Lord still though an unworthy one And to prove himself so he addeth For I have done very foolishly I confesse it Lord that thon mayest cover it Homo agnoscit Deus ignoscit This he beleeves and speeds when Judas confessing but withal despairing misseth of mercy Hast punisht us lesse then our iniquities deserve Heb. Hast withheld beneath our iniquities The just hire of the least sin is death in the largest sense Rom. 6.23 What then might God do to us for our many and mighty sins or rather what might he not do and that most justly How great is his mercy which maketh him say Jerusalem hath received at Gods hand double for all her sins Isai 40.1 2. Too much saith God there too little saith Ezra here and yet how sweetly and beautifully doth this kind of contradiction become both And hast given us such deliverance as this A fruit of free mercy and calls hard for duty Gods blessings are binders and every new deliverance calls for new obedience Servaeti sumus ut serviamus Verse 14. Should we again break thy Commandements There is so much unthankfulnesse and disingenuity in such an entertainment of mercy that holy Ezra here thinkes that Heaven and Earth would be ashamed of it And joyn in affinity with the people of these abominations Especially when we may hear God himself screeching out as it were those words of his Oh do not this abominable thing Save your selves from this untoward generation c Wouldst thou not be angry with us Id est Chide us smite us and so set it on as no creature should be able to take it off Sin may move God when we ask bread and fish to feed us to answer us with a stone to bruise us or a Serpent to bite us Shun it therefore as a Serpent in your way or as poyson in your meats Kisse the Son lest he be angry and ye perish from the way c. Psal 2.12 So that there should be no remnant So that our late preservation should prove but a reservation to further mischief as was Sodoms Senacheribs Pharaohs Verse 15. O Lord God of Israel So called because he is their portion they His Deut. 32.9 He had avouched them for his and they him interchangeably Deut. 26.17 18. Seneca could say that the basest people meaning the Jewes gave Lawes unto all the World that is had the true God Creatour of all for their God Thou art righteous In all thy judgments inflicted upon us or thou art faithful and true in thy promises but we have forfeited thy favour and deserved destruction Behold we are before thee in our trespasses Or guiltinesses which is that iniquity of sin as David calleth it Psal 32.5 whereby the sinner is bound over to condigne punishment For we cannot stand before thee But must needs causâ cadere being self condemned and such as must needs subscribe to thy perfect justice in our own utter destruction CHAP. X. Verse 1. Now when Ezra had prayed HAD presented himself as a Suppliant and opened his cause to God the Judge appealing to him that he might determine And when he had confessed And begged pardon deprecating the divine displeasure Hithpallel as the word signifieth Weeping Of this we read not in the former chapter but of other effects of his passion as renting his garments tearing off the hair of his head and beard c. His sorrow at first might be above tears which afterwards came gushing out amain as the blood doth out of a Wound but not till it hath first run back to the heart to bear the newes to it as I may so say It is said of Athanasius that by his tears as by the bleeding of a chast vine he cured the Leprosy of that tainted age May we not say the same of this good man And casting himself down before the house of God Where all might see him that their eyes might affect their hearts and contribute some tears of compunction and compassion toward the filling of Gods bottle as they had done sins toward the filling of his bag Of Men Women and
earth with his tears Also the hundreth part of the money That is all that they had received for interest whether money or else It appeareth by this text that they took twelve in the hundred for so much the hundreth part monethly amounteth to as at this day in Italy and elsewhere the Jewes are permitted to straine up their usury to eighteen in the hundred upon the Christian for among themselves they now use it not which causeth many of those Pseudo-Christians to use those Jews under-hand Sands his Survey in improving their unlawful rents to the utmost proportion Verse 12. Then said they We will restore them This was well said and Nehemiah took course it should be as well done ne dicta factis erubescerent as Tertullian phraseth it that their saying and doing might be alike We will require nothing of them But be of those that lend looking for nothing againe Luke 6. no not the principal So will we do as thou hast said Denying our selves and all worldly lusts that we may get and keep a good conscience that most precious Jewel that ever the heart of man was acquainted with Then I called the Priests As fittest to tender so solemne an oath and to bear witnesse in a case of that nature And took an oath of them That is of them that had promised restitution that they might not start back nor repent them of their good resolutions Our hearts are deceitful and must be by all good means held up to duty Quo teneas vultus mutantem Protea nodo else they will slip collar as those slippery Jewes Jer. 34.10 11. retracted and repealed their vow It was therfore well and wisely done of Nehemiah to bind them thus to the good abearance as Asa and Josiah had done before him An oath is an hedge which a man may not break which yet that great Heteroclite of Rome maketh a sport of For when the Cardinals meet to chuse a new Pope they make him swear to certain Articles And Sleydan saith that no sooner is he chosen but he breaks them all and checks their insolencies as if they went about to limit his power to whom all power is given in heaven and earth Is not this that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that lawlesse yokelesse masterlesse monster Saint Paul speaketh of 2 Thes 2.8 Verse 13. Also I shook my lap By this rite running into their senses this holy man runs with terrours into the eyes and hearts of all that should perfidiously forswear themselves by a direful denunciation of divine vengeance In all lawful oaths there is an imprecation though it be not alwayes exprest Gen. 14.23 Heb. 3. So God cast out every man from his house See Zech. 5.4 5. with the Note And from his labour i. e. From his layings-up the fruit of his labour his lands and estate got by a diligent hand The Hebrew word signifieth labour even to lassitude and fainting And all the Congregation said Amen In token of hearty assent and assurance And praised the Lord There was a general joy and many an humble chearful and thankful heart lifted up to God for sinne so redressed and poor people relieved And the people did according to this promise This was real thankfulnesse It is not the fumbling out of a few good words as God I thank thee praised be God c. that will passe Thanksdoing is the proof of Thanksgiving and the good life of the thankful is the life of thankfulnesse Offer unto God thanksgiving and pay thy vowes unto the Most High Psal 50.14 Verse 14. From the time that I was appointed to be their governour He was not ambitious of the office nor usurped it but was commanded to it as the word signifieth by the King of Persia and clearly called to it by God Almighty Otherwise he could have shrouded himself in willing secrecy as good corn lieth in the bottome of the heap and as good balsam sinketh to the bottome of the vessel I and my brethren have not eaten the bread c. Rulers as they are nursing-fathers to the people Isa 49.23 so by them they are to be nourished and their state maintained See 1 Kings 4.7 It is also observed that although our Saviour Christ wrought many miracles yet he never wrought any about honour or money but that about tribute rather then that should go undischarged he commanded a fish to pay it Hence also he saith not Date Matth. 22. Rom. 13.6 but Reddite Give but Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesars And Saint Paul saith ye pay tribute as being a due debt Neverthelesse in this great necessity Nehemiah le ts go his own right and leaveth it to others like as the Eagle is said Tostat ex Plin. when she seeketh her prey to leave a good part thereof to the birds that follow her for the same end Verse 15. But the former Governours Those that had been betwixt Zorobabel and Nehemiah Ezra was no Governour These had been strict in exacting their five pounds a day or for the head of every family so much besides bread for necessity and wine for delight Not so Nehemiah he would not use his power to over-burden those poore whom these Usurers oppressed This he here instanceth for their further conviction Yea even their servants bear rule over the people Exacting what they please of them this their masters should have seene to and not suffered for the servants sinne is the masters reproach When Charles the fifth resolved to lay down the Empire some of his Courtiers and Counsellours advised him to retaine still the name and authority of Emperour and to govern the Kingdome by his under-officers His answer to them was Ah me praesente ita res administratis c. Alas now that I am amongst you things are so ill carried that ye are complained of by all what then would you do if I should not have an eye upon you Val. Max. Christ p. 197. and how would you domineere like so many Sultans the word here used and follow the administration of Justice as a trade only with an unquenchable and unconscionable desire of gaine But so did not I because of the fear of God The best retentive from sinne certainly a spur to good a curb from evil Hence David calleth it a cleane feare Psal 19.9 and the fear of the Lord is to depart from evil saith Solomon And Aristotle hath this Probleme Why are men credited more then other creatures The answer is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because man alone holdeth and feareth God therefore you may trust him But where this fear is not no good is to be expected but the contrary Gen. 20.11 See the Note on verse 9. Verse 16. Yea also I continued in the work He meaneth saith Lyra that he wrought with his own hands to draw on others the more when they should see their Governour himself so intent to the work He was constant at it and held out till all was
are all young Virgins taken and stollen from forraine Nations where after they have been instructed in good behaviour and can play upon instruments sing dance and sew curiously they are given to the Grand Signior as presents of great value They live just as Nunnes do in great Nunneries c. That Esther was brought also In the general survey she was taken among the rest and brought to the Court an ill aire for Piety to breath in exeat aulâ Qui vult esse pius Fraus sublimi regnat in aulz Sen. But necessity is an hard weapon As the Turks at this day so the Persian Kings then took all their subjects to be their slaves holding not only their estates but their lives and all they have at their dispose without respect either to the cause or manner To the custody of Hegai keeper of the women Clapt up as it were in a glorious prison being not to come abroad but when the King calls nor to frequent any society but such as is appointed her for her necessary attendance and comfort See the like in the description of the Grand Signiors Seraglio chap. 4. Verse 9. And the maiden pleased him Hegai cast his favour upon her not because she was the fairest noblest most industrious most courtly c. but because God wrought his heart to it as he did Potiphars and Pharaohs to Joseph Jonathans to David Darius's to Daniel c. It is the Lord that gives favour and fashioneth mens opinions of us He gave Solomon honour and Paul prayes to him that his service may be accepted of the Saints Row 15.31 And she obtained kindnesse of him His favour was not empty favour professional only as that of Courtiers And he speedily gave her c. As resolving shortly to recommend her to the King who he knew would be much ruled by him in his choyce Here were shadows of many excellent vertues in a blind Ethnik who may in some sort teach true kindnesse and doth condemne those that boast of false liberality He dealt not basely but bountifully with Esther Her things for purification See ver 3.12 With such things as belonged to her Heb. Her portions or allowances of food raiment c. which this faithful officer interverted not for his own private gaine but rather inlarged himself in the true bestowing thereof And seven maidens When he might have put her off with one he enlargeth himself and even stretcheth his authority that he might by these maide of honour attending her set her forth as a Queen aforehand Which were meet to he given her Or which were very comely speciosa vel spectatae And he preferred Heb. He changed her sc for the better as God doth his people when he taketh them to heaven where they change place but not company as that good man said upon his death-bed and are brought from the jawes of death to the joyes of eternal life from shadows to substances D. Preston from misery to majesty c. a greater change then that of Queen Elizabeth from a Prisoner to a Princesse or that of our Henry the fourth Dan. hist 48. who was crowned the very same day that the year before he had been banished the Realme The Latines call prosperous things Res secundas because they are to be had hereafter they are not the first things Vnto the best place of the house of the women Or Vnto the best condition Gods best children shall have the best of the best fat things full of marrow wines on the lees well refined Esay 25.6 Jacob and his family had the best of the Land of Egypt that Granary of the world as one calleth it His posterity had a land that flowed with milke and honey What Countreys comparable to those that professe the Gospel Godlinesse is profitable to all things having the promises of both lives c. Verse 10. Esther had not shewed her people Because the Jewes were slighted as captives and forlorn how dear to the gods that Nation is faith Cicero it appeareth quòd est victa quòd elocata O at pro L. Hac quòd servata in that they are conquered captivated and not utterly destroyed by us they were also generally hated as different in Religion and would not so much as drink with Heathens lest they should drink things sacrificed to Idols They held it meritorious in after-times to kill an idolater as Tacitus testifieth and at this day they say Optimus inter gentes c. The very best among the Gentiles is worthy to have his head bruised as a Serpent A nasty people they are still and bloodthirsty odious and sordid An historian telleth us of an Emperour travelling into Egypt and there meeting with certaine Jews he was so annoyed with the stench of them that he cryed out O Marcomanut ô Quadi ô Surmaetae tandem alios vobis deteriores inveni Ammian lib. 2. This is the basest and most contemptible people that ever I light upon Aug. in Psal 58 The Romanes would not own them when they had conquered them as they did other Nations though they complied never so much and were their servants The Turks so hate them for crucifying Christ that they use to say in detestation of a thing Heyl. Geog. I would I might die a Jew then as when they would assure any thing in execrationibus dicunt Judeus sim si fallo they curse themselves Sanctrus in Zech 8.13 and say Let me be held a Jew if I deceive thee This lyeth upon them as a punishment for their unexpiable guilt in putting to death the Lord of life But in Esthers time they were hated chiefly for their Religion In prudence therefore she concealeth her kindred as being not called to give an account of her faith and living private might well performe her devotions and yet not thrust her self into observation For Mordecai had charged be● that she should not shew it Lest she should be cashiered the Court for a Jewe●se which was then held crime enough as afterwards it was in Nore's dayes to be a Christian and this hand perinde in crimine quàm odio humani generis as Tavitus hath it not for any great fault so much as by the hatred of mankind incensed and set on work by the Devil doubtlesse to root out the true Religion and to set up himself in the hearts of men as god of this present world Hence those complaints of Tertullian and Justin Martyr in their Apologies for Christians that their name and not their crimes was hated and hissed out of all companies Tert. Apo● c 1. 2.3 Just Apol. 2. Odio publico est confessio nòminis non examinatio criminis Solius hominis crimen est c. Wisely therefore did Mordecai charge Esther to conceal her self for present so long as it might be done without prejudice to the truth and scandal to her profession Worthily also did holy Esther in obeying Mord●cai her faithful foster-father in ruling
cared for nor called for unlesse it be to shew tricks and do miracles for a pastime Luke 23.8 The Kings and Courtiers of Persia must see no sad sight lest their mirth should be marred and themselves surprized with heavinesse and horrour But if Mourners might not be suffered to come to Court why did those proud Princes so sty up themselves and not appear abroad for the relief of the poor oppressed How much better the moderne Kings of Persia whom I have seen saith a certain Traveller to alight from their horses to do justice to a poor body How much better the great Turk who whensoever he goeth forth by land doth alwayes ride on horseback upon the Friday especially which is their Sabbath when he goeth to the Temple At which times they that go along by his Stirrup have charge to take all Petitions that are preferred to his Majesty and many poor men who dare not presume by reason of their ragged apparel to approach near stand afar off with fire upon their heads holding up their Petitions in their hands the which the grand Signior seeing who never despiseth but rather encourageth the poor sends immediately to take the Petitions and being returned home into his Seraglio reades them all and then gives order for redresse as he thinks fit By reason of which complaints the King oft-times taketh occasion suddenly to punish his greatest officers either with death or losse of place Grand Sign Serag 148. Which maketh the Bashaws and other great Officers that they care not how seldome the grand Signior stirres abroad in publike for fear lest in that manner their bribery and injustice should come to his eares 'T is probable that Haman had got this also to be decreed that none should enter into the Kings gate clothed in sackcloth lest passion might be moved thereby in any of the Courtiers or that be a meanes to make a complaint to the King of his cruelty Verse 3. And in every Province Heb. In every Province and Province c. not only in Susan which say the Hebrewes was called Elam Hammedina but throughout the Kings dominions Whither soever the Kings Commandment and his Decree The latter was irrevocable and therefore more dreadful There was great mourning among the Jewes Not murmuring or mutinying or meditating revenge against the King and Haman Not casting away their confidence in God or committing all to fate and blind fortune Not crying out of Religion as unhappy to the Professours 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 said he in the story O miserable vertue O practice of no profit Brutus apud Di●● c. Not taking up armes or betaking themselves to flight how should poor gally slaves at this day flie out of the middle of Turkie prayers and tears were the weapons of these condemn'd captives caitives It troubled them exceedingly as well it might that through fearfulnesse and negligence they had not ere this gone back to their own countrey with Zerubabel or some other when they had good leave to have gone with their brethren and God himself cried out unto them Hoc hoe come forth c. Zach. 2.6 Mich● 10. Arise 〈…〉 your rest because it is polluted it shall destroy you even with a sore destruction This was now a 〈◊〉 their hearts like as it shall be one day to those in hell to think we might have been delivered And fasting The word signifieth an abstinence from food and sustenance either à toto as 2 Sam. 12.16 Or at least à tanto à tali as Dan. 10.2 3. Hence it is called a day of restraint Joel 2.15 Hence Zech. 8.19 they separated themselves viz. from work meat and delights for the furtherance of their repentance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the enforcing of their prayers Preces nobis jejunits alendum quasi saginandum saith one our prayers must be pampered and corne-fed with fasting A practice in use not among Jewes and Christians only but among Egyptian Priests Persian Magi and Indian wizards of old and Turks to this day when they are in any great feare or pressure And weeping and wailing This was the way to get in with God though they might not come crying to the Court Oh the divine Rhetorick and omnipotent efficacy of penitent teares Psal 6.8 Weeping hath a voice Christ turned to the weeping women when going to his Crosse and comforted them He shewed great respects to Mary Magdalene that weeping Vine she had the first sight of the revived Phoenix though so bleared that she could scarce discerne him and held him fast by those feet which she had once washed with her tears and wherewith he had lately trod upon the lion and adder Psal 91.13 And many lay in sackcloth and ashes As many as were more deeply affected with their sins and the sad consequents thereof David lay on the bare ground 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Sam. 12.16 these and those Joel 1.13 lodged in sackcloth and ashes that they might watch as well as fast see how they go linked together Mark 13.33 See verse 17. Verse 4. So Esthers maids came and told it her She her self say Interpreters was kept in a closer place then they not having the liberty of going abroad as others had because the Persians that were of highest quality used so to keep in their wives and if they went forth at any time they were carried in a close chariot so as that none could see them Then was the Queen exceedingly grieved Dolens exhorruit So Tremellius The Hebrew is She grieved her selfe scil for Mordecai's heavinesse as our Saviour when he heard of the death of his friend Lazarus groaned in spirit and troubled himself Joh. 11.33 And here we see that of Plautus disproved Mulier nulla cordicitus dolet ex anime that is No woman can grieve heartily for any thing Holy Esther is here sick at heart of grief as the word importeth and yet as one saith of the Lady Jane Grey she made grief it self amiable her night-clothes becoming her as well as her day-dressings by reason of her gracious deportment And she sent raiment to clothe Mordecai That he might be fit to come unto her and make known the cause of his grief for she yet knew nothing of the publike calamity And although she were so highly advanced above Mordecai yet she condoleth with him and honoureth him as much as ever This was true friendship Ego aliter amare non didici said Basil to one that disliked him for stooping so low to an old friend And to take away the sackcloth c. To change his saccum in sericum sackcloth into sattin c. See verse 2. But he received it not Such was the greatnesse of his grief which he could not dissemble such was his care of community that he could not minde his own private concernments whiles it went ill with the publike Rom. 2.7 Such also was his patient continuance in well-doing that he would not give
how old he was answered that he was in health and to another that asked how rich he was answered that he was not in debt q. d. He is young enough that is in health and rich enough that is not in debt Now all this Job was yet and therefore Satan ill apaid and unsatisfied And all that he hath will a man give for his life Life is sweet we say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aesop 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist and man is a life-loving creature saith the Heathen fond of life and afraid of death which is Natures slaughterman and therefore the most Terrible of Terribles as Aristotle stileth it The Gibeonites refused not to be perpetuall slaves so they might but live Those that are overcome in battle are content to be stript of all so they may have quarter for their lives Marriners in a tempest cast their lading into the sea though never so precious in hope of life If Job may escape with the skin of his teeth it is some favour he may not think much to sacrifice all that he hath to the service of his life his conscience only excepted Some good people have strained that too for love of life as when Abraham denyed his wife David changed his behaviour Camd. Elis fol. 325. Peter denyed his Master Qu. Elizabeth though afterwards she could say When I call to mind things past behold things present and expect things to come I hold them happiest that go hence soonest yet in Queen Maries time shee sometimes heard divine service after the Romish religion and was often confessed yea at the rigorous sollicitation of Cardinall Pool shee professed her self a Romish Catholick yet did not Queen Mary believe her saith mine Author remembring that shee her self for feare of death had by Letters written with her own hand to her father both renounced for ever the Bishop of Romes authority Ibid. Introd and withall acknowledged her father to be supreme head of the Church of England under Christ and her Mothers marriage to have been incestuous and unjust Those good soules did better that loved not their lives unto death Rev. 12.11 that by losing their lives saved them Matth. 10.39 that held with that Martyr Julius Palmer that life is sweet only to such as have their souls linked to their bodies as a thiefs foot is in a pair of fetters Verse 5. But put forth thy hand now See notes on chap. 1.11 This God did at Satans motion yet non ad exitium Jobi sed ad exercitium Jobs temptation is of Satan but his triall and invincible constancy is of god God in a sense tempted Job Satan also even as the dog may be said to bait the beast and the owner of the beast too that suffered him to be baited And touch his bone and his flesh pinch him to the quick that not his flesh onely may feel it but the marrow also in his bones Psal 6.2 and 32.3 and 51.8 The bone and flesh are the chief materials of mans body which is fitly compared to a fabrick wherein the bones are the timber-work the head the upper-lodging the eyes as windowes the eye-lids as casements the browes as pent-houses the ears as watch-towers the mouth as a door to take in that which shall uphold the building and keep it in reparations the stomack as a kitchin to dresse that which is conveyed into it the guts and baser parts as sinks belonging to the house c. as one maketh the comparison Now in all these and the rest of his parts of body Satan would have Job to be smitten and then he made no question of a conquest Paine is a piercing shaft in Satans quiver of temptations hence he stirred up his agents to tympanize and torment the Martyrs with as much cruelty as the wit of malice could devise but all in vain Heb. 11.35 36. Apollonia had all her teeth pulled out of her head hence Papists make her the Saint for tooth-ach Blandina tired those that tortured her Theodorus was cruelly whipped racked Scerat Theodor. and scraped with sharp shells by the command of Julian but yeilded not Rose Allen had her hand-wrist burnt by Justice Tyrrell who held a candle under it till the sinews brake that all the house heard them and then thrusting her from him violently said ah strong whore wilt thou not cry thou shamelesse whore thou beastly whore c. But she quietly suffering his rage for the time at the last said Sir Acts Mon. 1820. have you done what you will doe and he said yea and if thou think it not well then mend it Mend it said she nay the Lord mend you and give you repentance if it be his will And now if you think it fit begin at the feet and burn the head also for he that set you a work shall pay your wages one day I warrant you As little got the divel by these worthies as he did by Jobs biles and carbuncles We are ashamed said one of Julians Nobles to him we are Ashamed O Emperour the Christians laugh at your cruelty and grow the more resolute And he will curse thee to thy face Heb. If he curse thee not to thy fade q. d. then damne me send me to hell presently This Satan holds in by an Aposiopesis being therein more modest then our desperate and detestable God-damn-mee's let them see how they gratifie the divel who curse and blaspheme or protest openly what they know to be false This the divel did not Verse 6. And the Lord said unto Satan who hath his request it is not alwayes a mercy to have what we wish Deus saepè dat iratus quod negat propitius Be sure we bring lawful petitions and true hearts Heb. 10.22 and then we shall have good things and for our greatest good Behold he is in thine hand Here God puts his child into his slaves hand to correct but not to destroy And surely if we give reverence to the fathers of our flesh who correct us for their own pleasure shall we not much more be in subjection unto the Father of Spirits Heb. 12 9 10. Busbeq chastning us for our profit and live The Turks though cruelly lasht are yet compelled to return to him that commanded it to kisse his hand and to give him thanks and to pay the officer that whipt them This last we need not do but the former we ought taking Gods part against our selves and resting contented though as Paul delivered up some to Satan that they might learn not to blaspheme so God deliver us up to him and his agents such as Satanically hate us and are divellishly bent against us Psal 32.21 causing us to suffer more then any ever did out of hell that we may learn not to be proud secure sensuall and may preach forth the vertues of him who hath brought us out of darknesse into his marvellous light 1 Pet. 2.9 Let us not say if God would take
from the fault And the night He would be sure so ●it the time whether it were day or night He that is 〈◊〉 out of Gods way knowe● not where he shall stop or when he 〈◊〉 step back Take heed therefore to they wayes that thou sin not with thy tongue Psal 39.1 Jam. 3. that unruly member Hanc fr●nis hanc ●● compesce catenis When Gods hand is on thy back let thy hand be on thy mouth keep it as with a bridle or muzzle Psal 39.1 Passionate speeches te●iter volant non ●●viter violant The best that come of them is repentance Job when he was once out could keepe no mean but what he had said against day and night he amplifieth by the parts and first for the Day ver 4.5 and then for the Night 6 7 8. c. Verse 4. Let that day be darknesse thick darknesse as that once was in Egypt Exod. 10.23 A day of trouble and distresse a day of darknesse and gloominesse a day of clouds and thick darknesse Zeph. 1.15 Let it be a dreadfull and a dismall day let sorrow and sadnesse overshadow it let mourning and tears overwhelme it let it be as when the Sun hideth his head in a mantle of black and is eclipsed at which time all creatures here below flag and hang the head In the gloomiest day there is light enough to make it day and distinguish it from night though the Sun shine not But Job would have no light to appear on his birth-day Thus be throweth out words without wisedome and as Hinds by calving so he by talking casteth out his sorrows Job 39.3 Let not God regard it● or require it let it passe as not worth looking after let him not take care of it or powre downe any speciall blessing upon it as he doth upon his people every day but especially upon the sabbath-Sabbath-day Gods market day called by the Jewes desiderium dierum the desire of dayes and by the Primitive Christians Dies Lucis the Day of Light Neither let the light shine upon it And what is the air without light that first ornament of the visible world so what are all creature-comforts unlesse God shine through them What a wo-case is that poor soul in that walketh in darknesse and hath none of his light Isa 50.10 how lamentable is such an one deserted ●e●ghted how doth he find himself in the very suburbs of hell it self where the paine of losse is greater then the paine of sense 2 Thes 1.9 and to note thus much Iob here after he had said Let that day be darknesse addeth as a greater evil Let not the light shine upon it Verse 5. Let darknesse and the shadow of death stain it Let it be ●●es luctuosus ●ethalis such a deadly dark day that each man may think it his last day fatall and feral Let there not be dimnesse only such as appeareth through a painted glasse died with some obscure colour but horrid and hideous darknesse such as was that at our Saviours passion when the Sun was totally ●●●●ed and a great Philosopher thereupon cried out either the God of Nature suffers or the world is at an end To darknesse Iob here emphatically addeth the shadow of death The shadow is the dark part of the thing so that the shadow of death is the darkest side of death death in its blackest representation Now let these stain it saith he or challenge it or espouse it In nocte funestatur mund● 〈…〉 saith Tertullian elegantly Let a cloud dwell upon it Cresc●t 〈…〉 Auxesin oratio Iob heapes up words like in sound and not unlike in sense Grief had made him eloquent as hoping thereby to ease himself Let a cloud dwell upon it a fixed cloud not such an one as continually hangeth over the Island of St. Thomas on the back side of Africa Abbo●s G●●g 251. wherewith the whole Island is watered nor such a●dloud of grace as God promiseth to create upon every dwelling place of Mount Zion and upon her assemblies that upon all his glory may be a defence Isa 4.5 But such as St. Paul and his company were under before the shipwrack Act. 27. when neither Sunne nor starre appeared for many dayes together the heavens being wholly muffled c. Let the blacknesse of the any terrifie it or Let the ●eat of the day terrifie it as it befalleth those that live under the torrid Zone where nothing prospereth The Atlantes a certain people are said to curse the rising Sun it doth so torture them with extreme heat When the dog star ariseth those are in ill case who dwell in hot Countries towards the East they are troubled and terrified Some take the word Chimrine here rendred blacknesse for those 〈◊〉 mentioned by the Prophets those Chimney-Chaplains of the Heathen idols and so render it thus Let the Priests of the day terrifie it that is Let those who used to observe and distinguish dayes note it for a terrible day other● understand it of the noon-day divels that should vex people on that day with hellish he●●●● and fures the ●●lgar Latine hath it thus Let Hinc forsan tenebra Cimmeria as it were the b●ternesse● of the day terrifie it and to the 〈…〉 the Chaldee Paraphrast Iob still riseth in his discourse making use of many poeticall figures and tragicall phrases pickt out for the purpose Verse 6. As for that night let darknesse seize upon it Having spent his spleene upon the day he now vents himself upon the night according to that division verse 3. As for that night of mine unhappy conception or birth let tenebrosus turbo as the Vulgar here hath it Caligo perpetua inufitata Mercer a dark tempest or a tempestuous darknesse grasp it or invade it let it be as dark as pitch by a darknesse superadded to its naturall darknesse Let it not be joyned unto the dayes of the yeare Let nature quite disclaime it and disjoint it from the day following let it not be reckoned as any part of time that measure of all our motions Some render it Ne gaudeat inter dies Let it not rejoyce it self among the dayes of the year as one of them The night hath glory by union with the day this he wisheth taken from it Disunion and division is a curse and the number of two hath been accounted accursed because it was the first that departed from unity And let it not come into the number of months Drus. Deleatur è calendario let it be razed out of the Calendar and not have any place in the computation of time The Hebrewes call the Moon and a Month by the same Name because the Moone is renewed every month Sic 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mensis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 luna Verse 7. Lo let that night be solitary And so consequently sorrowfull for alonenesse is comfortlesse optimum solatium sodalitium There is a desirable solitarinesse such as was that of
affairs Debile argumentum saith Vatablus here a poor argument but Job maketh use of all kind of arguments to move God to make an end of him Domine fac finem fac finem said dying Erasmus but what he meant by those words I know not saith Melancthon who reporteth it And that thou shouldst set thine heart upon him So as to make any account of so mean and miserable a creature Psalm 144.3 to magnifie him whom thou mightest rather vilifie or indeed nullifie or that thou shouldst set they heart against him sc to destroy him as chap. 34.14 That 's but an ignoble contest ubi vincere inglorium est atterisordidum Verse 18. That thou shouldst visit him every morning Be at so much pains as it were with him as to chasten him and every morning to do it that is certainly and early God took Job to task so soon as he was awake every morning and this hee thought much of and had rather have been without but that was his weakness sith the rod is as necessary as food And try him every moment Proving by affliction both what corruption and what grace is in his heart this David reckoneth upon the score of Gods favours and prayeth for Psal 139. ult This God promiseth as a special blessing J●● 9.7 and withall assureth that he will try and ●efine his people but not as silver Isa 48.10 He will not deal with them as in rigour of justice he might do because if he should do so they having more dross in them then good ore more corruption then grace they would soon be consumed in this fiery trial this God considered and so should Job have done and have given over his growling Verse 19. Psalm 139.10 How long wilt thou not depart from me Here he seems desirous to be rid of Gods company of his afflicting presense so true is that of the Apostle Heb. 12.11 No chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous but grievous till patience come to have her perfect work and men be brought to cry out as one did under a great fit of the stone The use Lord the use not so much ease of my pain as a good use of my suffering this Job came to at length no doubt mean while we have in him as Mercer observeth mirum ubique specimen a wonderful instance of that conflict between Flesh and Spirit that is in the Saints Nor let me alone till I may swallow down my spittle That is not afford me the least intermission no not a spitting-while He will not suffer me to take my breath chap 9.18 Hierome thinks that Job was troubled with a squinsey or sore throat which hindred the swallowing of his spittle neither had he power to spit out the corrupt matter that ran down his throat Oh what a sweet mercy is health and how ill able are the best without special support from heaven to bear sickness the Stoicks who said that he who lived honestly might live chearfully though under may bodily weaknesses senserunt ipsi in morbis se magnificentius locutos esse quàm verius saith one Wolsi●● that is when it came to their own turn to be sick they well perceived that they had spoken rather bravely then truely Verse 20. I have sinned or Have I sinned Have I fallen into any foul offence as these men charge me Am I guilty of any thing more then involuntary failings unavoidable infirmities although I know that these also are downright sins fruits of the flesh properly so called missings of the mark as the word here signifieth and for such I humbly confesse them I put my self into the hands of thy justice in hope of thy mercy and what wilt thou more of thy poor creature What shall I do unto thee No sooner had Job confessed his sin but he is desirous to know a remedy Reprobates can cry Peccavi I have sinned but then they proceed not to say as here What shall I do they open their wound but lay not on a plaister and so the wounds made by sin are more putrified and grow more dangerous Job would be directed what to do for remedy he would have pardoning grace and prevailing grace upon any terms and more then this what can I do unto thee as the Septuagint render this text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O thou preserver of men Of all men but especially of t●em that b●lieve 1 Tim. 4.10 The Grecians called their Jupiter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Deliverer or Preserver of their persons and again 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a wall as if he were the watch and defender of their houses Some tender it O thou observer of men But these are praises proper to the true God the Keeper of his Israel Psalm 121.4 The Preserver of the Faithful Psalm 31.23 Whom he keepeth as the apple of his eye Psalm 17.8 that tenderest piece of the tenderest part most diligently and strongly guarded by nature with ●unicles It is the wisedom of a Christian in his addresses into God to make choice of fit and apposite titles and Attributes for the strengthening of his faith and increasing of his fervency Why hast thou set me as a mark against thee As a bul-wark as an object or as a rock of offence against which thou mayest alwaies dash so Vatablus rendreth it to the same sense Job asketh chap. 19.11 and 13.24 Wherefore holdest thou me for thine enemy So Lam. 3.12 and Job 16.13 Job conceived that God dealt with him no otherwise then the Turks did with the great Crucifix of Constantinople Turk hist 347 upon the head whereof they put a Turks cap and so settting it up in derision shot at it with their arrows calling it the God of the Christians Or as the same Turks at the taking of Tripolis in Barbary dealt with one John de Chabas a French man who in the time of the siege had shot off the hand of the Clark General of the Army Ibid. 756. They brought him into the town saith the story and when they had cut off his hands and nose they put him quick into the ground to the wast and there for their pleasure shot at him with their arrowes and afterwards cut his throat So that I am a burden to my self How can he be otherwise who is a but-mark for Almighty God who cleft his very reins a sunder and powred our his gall upon the ground Job 16.13 Job had once before complained that the poison of Gods arrows had drunk up his spirits chap. 6. Neither did any thing lie so heavy upon him or was so burdensome to him as this that God seemed to frown upon him and to fight against him with his own hand The Septuagint and Talmudists read thus So that I am a burthen unto th●e viz. with my complaints and expostulations this say they was the ancient reading Verse 21. And why dost thou not pardon my transgression Heb. Lift
special favour A man may have together with them animam triticeam as that rich fool had Animas etiam incarnavimus as a Father complaineth These outward things are got within men and have stolen away their warmest and liveliest affections from God Not so in the Saints They must have God or else they dye The people mourned and put on black when they heard that God would not go with them himself but send an Angel with them Exod. 33.2 3. And when great gifts were sent to Luther he sent them back again with this brave speech I will not be put off with these poor things I look for better Let God bestow himself upon me and it sufficeth As with Manna there fell a dew so to a good Soul together with Corn and Wine be it more or less there is a secret influence of God which the carnal heart is not acquainted with A fly cannot make that of a Flower that a Bee can do The treacherous Shechemites had plenty of Corn and Wine Judg. 9.27 but having not the grace of God withall they were soon after destroyed by Abimelech Vers 8. I will both lay me down in peace and sleep Heb. In peace together will I lye down and sleep that is saith the Syriack interpreter Non solum cubabo sed etiam Dormiam I will not only lye down but also sleep which many cannot do for fears and cares those Gnats that keep them waking The Arabick hath it I sleep as securely in adversity as those can that are in prosperity Others thus I wil lay me down together with the joy before spoken of and confidence in God this shall be my Bed-fellow and then I am sure to rest sweetly and safely For Thou Lord only makest thou settest me in safety thou givest to thy beloved sleep Psal 127.2 that is extraordinary quiet refreshing sleep as the learned note upon the Aleph quiescent in 〈◊〉 which is not usual PSAL. V. TO the chief Musician See on Psal 4. title Vpon Nehiloth Upon Wind-instruments Pneumatica tribulata The Rabbins say that this Psalm was made and appointed to be sung concerning Doeg and Ahitophel Vers 1. Give ear to my words O Lord David knew him to be a Prayer-hearing God Psal 65.2 and that his ears were always open as the doors of the Roman Aediles were to hear complaints and requests hence this prayer Consider my meditation i. e. the conception of my soul uttered with a low voyce Murmur meuns Hieron but with most vehement affection All this Mussitatione●● meam the Hebrew word importeth Vers 2. Hearken unto the voyce of my cry He thrice repeats the same request to shew the greatness of his grief and the necessity of help from Heaven Let mind and mouth spirit and speech go together in prayer and then its right the voyce of the Heart is simply necessary Moses cried to God at the red Sea though he said nothing The voyce of the lips is of great use also 1. For preventing of distraction 2. For exciting devotion My King And therefore help O King as she said 2 King 5.24 And my God who art in covenant with me both offensive and defensive For unto thee will I pray Thou art the proper object of Prayer as being Omnipresent Omniscient Omnipotent and a God in covenant with thy people Vers 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 My voyce shalt thou hear in the morning That fittest season usually for Prayer or any other serious business The very Heathens chose the morning chiefly for Sacrifice as Nestor in Homer the Argonauts in Apollonius The Persian Magi sang Hymns to their Gods at break of day and worshipped the rising Sun The Pinarii and Potitii certain Idolatrous Priests sacrificed every morning and Evening to Hercules upon the great Altar at Rome The Jews counted and called it an Abomination of desolation if at any time the Morning and Evening Sacrifice to the Lord were intermitted So should Christians if they offer not unto him twice a day at least viz. Morning and Evening prayers and praises Mass and Meat hinder no mans thrift say the very Papists A whet is no let a bait by the way hindreth not the journey so neither doth prayer in a morning hinder a mans business be it never so hasty or weighty but furthereth it rather Cardinal Wolsie though hee were Lord Chancellour His Life and Death by his Gentle Ush pag. 18. when he came in a morning out of his privie Chamber would not go abroad till he had heard two Masses nor go to bed at night with any part of his service unsaid no not so much as one Collect. Mahometans what occasion soever they have by profit or pleasure pray constantly five times a day Christians have a charge to continue instant in prayer and to let all business wait upon it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 12.12 with Act. 6.4 David knew that if prayer stand still the trade of godliness standeth still He therefore will be up and at it betimes and rather break his sleep than leave such a duty undone In the morning will I direct my prayer unto thee and will look up Or look out spy like a Watch-man Gnarach Or dinavit aciem disposuit Tsaphah Speculando expectavit Two Military words the Prophet here maketh use of hee would not only pray but marshal up his prayers put them in array And when he had done he would be as a Spy upon a Tower to see whether he prevailed whether he got the day Some men pray of course or as a task but never look after their prayers or mark what answer This is very great folly and oscitancy Who sends forth a Ship and waits not for the return thereof Who shoots an Arrow or casts a Boul and looks not where it lights Prayer is the Souls Arrow Angle Seed Dove Messenger c. And they that take not notice how they speed deal as scofling Pilat did who scornfully asked Christ What 's truth but stay'd not for the answer If God shall hearken what David speaketh David must likewise hearken what God will speak He must look up to God if God shall look out of himself to David sith he humbleth himself to behold things done in Heaven Psalm 113.6 by a wonderful condescension how much more then to look upon man that is a Worm and the Son of man that is a Worm Job 25.6 Tantus tantillum Vers 4. For thou art not a God that hath pleasure in wickedness As the Kings of the Earth have saith R. Solomon Alexander the Great promising a Crown of one hundred and eighty pound to those of his Guests that drank most caused one and forty to kill themselves with drinking for that Crown King Charls the Ninth of France gave one Albertus Tudius an Hucksters Son six hundred thousand Crowns Camera Med. H●stor to teach him to swear with a grace But God perfectly hateth wickedness and wicked persons There were more
wee rather do deserve So Psal 116.7 110.17 142.8 PSAL. XIV VErs 1. The fool That saplesse fellow that carcase of a man Nabal a foo● or a churle Nebalah a 〈◊〉 kass Levit. 1● 40 that walking sepulchre of himself in whom all Religion and right Reason is withered and wasted dryed up and decayed That Apostate in whom naturall Principles are extinct and from whom God is departed as when the Prince is removing hangings are taken down That meer Animal that hath no more than areasonable soul and for little other purpose than as salt to keep his body from putrefying That wicked man hereafter described 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 2.14 that studieth Atheism Hath said in his heart As David proves afterward by his practice for there are practicall Atheists as well as Dogmaticall See a like passage Psal 36.1 the transgression of the Wicked saith within my heart that is my mind gives mee and I am strongly perswaded that there as no fear of God before his eyes This is the charge but what proof is there proof good enough vers 2 3 4. For hee flattereth himself c. So here Hee is a flat Atheist for corrupt hee is and become abominable c. That which Cicero saith of Epicurus that lest hee should offend the Athenians verbis reliquit deos re sustulit De nat Deor. in words hee affirmed there were Gods but in deed hee denied a deity is found true in many even at this day for all places are full of them and so is Hell too Lucian is their old Testament and Machiavell their New Worse they are than Agrippa who was almost a Christian worse than Protagoras with his De diis utrum sint non ansim affirmare For in their hearts and lives there is heard this hellish language There is no God Oh horrible Not that Atheism can ever find a perfect and continuall assent in mans heart For there is no Nation under Heaven so barbarous but yeelds that there is a God When man fell from God this Truth stood as when Cities and great buildings are overthrown by war some Towers some Pinnacles survive the violence They lye saith Seneca whosay that they hold there is no God Theat Hist 127. for though to thee they say so by day yet to themselves and by night they doubt of it at least And when they come to dye they sometimes cry out they are damned as did Thomas Blaverus chief Counsellor sometimes to the King of Scots and one Arthur Miller a profest Atheist and before them both a certain desperate Dean of Pauls Sword against Swearer● Pa. ●4 Corrupt are they and become abominable Or loathsome how should they bee better that have laid hands upon al the principles in their heads and made a clean riddancst of them that they may run riot in sin without restraint or controule which while others see they also are ready to say with that Poet Sollicitor nullos esse putare Deos. I have read of a Woman who living in professed doubt of the God-head after better illumination and repentance Mr. Wards Hap. of Par●● did often protest that the vicious life of a great Schollar in that Town did conjure up those damnable doubtings in her soul There is none that doeth good i. e. None to speak of no considerable number Apparent rarinantes in gurgite vasto Vers 2. Virgil. Ae●eid The Lord looked down from Heaven upon the Children of men As opposed to the Children of God so some take it as Gen. 4 26. 6.2 As a Judge he looketh down he vieweth he taketh cognizance ere hee proceedeth to sentence Thus he dealt with the old World with Sodom with Egypt c. to teach us not to bee over hasty No more hast than good speed saith one The caelestiall Spheres the higher they are in situation the flower in their proper motion and the supreme Judge of all useth much forbearance Any that did understand and seek God These only are they whom God looketh after not the rich but the righteous And because Knowledge is the ground of all goodnesse as folly is of wickednesse vers 1. therefore is it here said any that did understand and seek God Loe these are those precious ones whom God regardeth such as are full of goodnesse filled with all knowledge Rom. 15.14 The Father seeketh such to worship him Joh. 4.23 Vers 3. They are all gone aside c. This is Gods own report of the matter fully answering to that before given in by David vers 1. Good men have the mind of Christ 1 Cor. 2.16 and do fully concurre with him in Judgement and affection David was a man after Gods own heart and the heart of Paul is the heart of Christ saith Chrysostome But why then doth not David except himself out of this universitas declinantinus community of straglers that are gone aside and why doth St. Paul argue from this Text that all both Jews and Gentiles are stark naught● Rom. 3.10 11 12. I answer because by nature there is never a better of us but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Greek Proverb hath it All we like sheep have gone astray saith the whole Church Isa 53. Home est inversus decalogus we naturally all stand acrols to all goodness The word here rendred gone aside signifieth to give back sturdily as a stubborn Heifer that refuseth to receive the yoke They are altogether become filthy Heb. stinking yeelding a worse smell than Carrion doth or than the filthy Fox doth of whom Oppianus reporteth and experience sheweth it to be true that when he is beset on all sides by the Doggs that hunt him he bewrayeth his tail with urine and dung of a most loathsome smell Bodin ● Nat. 352. and besmearing therewith the Doggs Noses driveth them away therewith many times But all this is nothing to the filth and stench of sin which made their very Incense an abomination Isa 1.13 and rendreth them most like the Devil that foul Spirit that ever goeth out with a stench as they say of him The Hebrews have the same word for sin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and a dead Carcass and again the same word for sin and stench Gods Vine-yard brought forth stinking Grapes Isa 5. and the wicked utter rotten Language Ephes 4. Hence Longinquus est Jehovah ab impiis The Lord stands aloof off from the wicked Prov. 15.29 Psal 5.5 that is from all for whom Christ hath not given himself an Offering and a Sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour Ephes 5.2 The Apostle rendreth it They are useless or as he elsewhere phraseth it to every good work reprobate Tit. 1. ult There is none that doth good Spiritually good andunto divine acceptation There is many times Malum opus in bona materia How can you that are evil do good works Good they may be materially but not formally and eventually such were the good parts and practices
He chose it for his love and then loved it for his choice The word Tribe we borrow from the Romans who at first divided the multitudes into three parts called thereof Tribes The Hebrew name signifieth a rod or scepter and fitly agreeth to Judah Vers 69. Like high palaces Not places as some books absurdly have it Like the earth There shall be a Church to the Worlds end Vers 70. He chose David also God chuseth not as man doth 1 Cor. 1.26 yet Alexander the great advanced Abdolominus a poor Gardiner to be King in Sidon And took him from the sheep-folds The art of feeding cattle and the art of ruling men are sisters saith Basill Vers 71. From following the ●●es So Saul from seeking Asses Agathocles from making pots Hist tripart lib. 9. Valentinian 〈◊〉 c. Pla●illa called upon her husband Theodosius the Emperour to remember from what mean estate God had called him to the highest honours 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vers 72. So he fed them c. See vers 70. He was not malus vir bonus pr●●ceps as is said of our Richard the third but every way accomplished and active for the good of his subjects PSAL. LXXIX A Psalm Of like subject with Psalm 74. bewayling the same calamity of the Jews whether under Nebuchadnezzar or Antiochus is uncertain but foreseen by Asaph or described by some other Prophet and committed to some of Asaphs successours to be sung Cantant justi etiam in adversis as birds in the Spring tune most sweetly when it raineth most sadly Vers 1. O God the Heathen Ex abrupto ord●tur q. d. canst thou endure it Is it not high time for thee to set in Lo they have filled the breadth of thy land O Immanuel Isa 8.8 that is O thou who art God with us who givest with the Father Cum parte dator inter nos petitor Aug. who prayest with the suitor and who in all our afflictions art afflicted The holy Temple have they defiled Spoliando funestando omnia profana impiaque munera obeundo See Psal 74.7 They have laid Jerusalem on heaps In rudera into an Orchard-keepers cottage 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept. saith the Vulgar An elegant Hypotyposis Vers 2. The dead bodies of thy Servants Either they denyed them the honour of buriall which is reckoned among the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the dues of the dead or else they mangled their dead bodies and exercised their rage upon them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. as the Papists did upon Husse and Zuinglius and many of the English Martyrs A barbarous practice as Pausan●as judged it in Herodot Call●ope The flesh of thy Saints c. Of thy beneficiaries whose souls are with thee in Heaven these have not so much as a burying-place on earth but lye like common carrion Morticina like cattle that dye of the murrain and are most ignominiously dealt withall And yet these are Gods Saints and in some sense Martyrs Vers 3. Their blood have they shed like water They made no more reckoning of it than of ditch-water and were ready to say as Hannibal did when he saw a ditch full of mens blood O formosum spectacutum O beautifull sight Contemptim vel abjecte And there was none to bury them Either none to bury them at all Immaniatis est Scythicae non sepelir● mortuos Sen. ad Ma●tiam which the Jews accounted worse than death Eccles 6. and the Romans extreme cruelty Or none to bury them cum ritibus with the accustomed rites and ceremonies as Jacob was buried Gen. 50. but not Jeconiah Jer. 22.18 Vers 4. Wee are become a reproach to our neighbours To the Edomites Philistines Syrians Tyrians c. who do now compose comedies out of our tragedies A scorn and derision to them that are round about us Quorum opprobriis Iudibriis contumeliis sumus expositi This was more grievous to them than stripes or wounds saith Chrysostom because these being infflicted upon the body are divided after a sort betwixt soul and body but scorns and reproaches do wound the sould only Hebet quendam aculeum contumelia they leave a sting behind them Act. 5 in Ver. as Cicero observeth Vers 5. How long wilt thou be angry c Or How long wilt thou be angry for ever The Psalmist knew that the enemies were but Gods executioners and that if he were but once pacified they should soon be put out of office Shall thy jealousy viz. For our Idolatry Exod. 20. Vers 6. Pour out thy wrath c. Even the full vials of it That have not known thee More than by the book of the Creatures wherein there is indeed a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 something of God manifested Rom. 1.19 20. even his eternal power and God-head rendring men without excuse but nothing of his goodness and patience leading them to repentance chap. 2.4 That have not called upon thy Name A note of prophaneness Psal 14.4 Vers 7. For they have devoured Jacob As Wolves and other ravenous creatures do the simple sheep His dwelling-place Or his cottage his sheep-coat Vers 8. O remember not against us former iniquities Or The iniquities of them 〈◊〉 were before us wherewith we also are justly chargeable the sin of the golden calf saith the Arabick here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diodor. Curt. lib. 7. an ounce whereof is in all our sufferings to this day say the Jews Alexander slew the Bran●hidae and utterly destroyed their City because their Fore-fathers had long before indeavoured to betray Greece into the hands of Xerxes Speedily prevent us Lest they come too late for we are at last gasp Vers 9. Help us for the glory of thy Name A speeding argument God will do much for his own glory his wife as it were Purge away our sins Which nothing can do but tender mercy Vers 10. Where is their God See Psal 42.3 So Turks at this day when they have the better of Christians cry where is the Christians God We are the right Musalmans c. By the revenging of the blood of thy Servants c. For the which make thou inquisition and do justice Vers 11. Let the sighing of the prisoner c. It was lately in many places of this land a like difficult thing to find a wicked man in the enemies prisons or a godly man out of them The sights of such were shril in Gods ears Preserve thou those that are appointed to dye Heb. The children of death those that being destined to destruction seem to be as much in deaths power as children are in their Parents The Arabick rendreth it Redime filios occisorum Redeem the children of those who are slain lest the name of their Parents be blotted out Vers 12. Into their bosomes Full measure pressed down shaken together and running over Luk. 6.38 See Isa 65.6 7. Jer. 32.18 Wherewith they have reproached thee viz. In reproaching us who do quarter armes as
see He saith formeth because there are many formes or species in the eye continually and as the optick vertue in thy eye seeth all and is seen of none so doth God much more All Davids wayes were in Gods sight all Gods lawes in Davids sight Psal 119.168 Vers 10. He that chastiseth the Heathen shall not he correct Qui totis gentibus non parcit vos non redarguet He that punisheth prophane Nations that know him not shall he spare you Amos 3.2 Shall not tribulation and anguish be upon the Jew first Rom. 2.9 The Chaldee thus paraphraseth He that gave a law to his people shall he not punish them when they transgresse it He that teacheth man knowledge Shall not be know is to be supplied to make sense The Psalmist seemeth so displeased at mens doubting or denying of this that he could not perfect his sentence through passion of mind Some causes indeed do give that which themselves have not as the lifelesse heaven inliveneth the dull whetstone sharpeneth But here it is far otherwise and woe be to such as act not accordingly Isa 29.15 Vers 11. The Lord knoweth the thoughts of man that they are vanity Or worse that they are ever weaving spiders webs or else hatching Cockatrice eggs Isa 59.5 This sentence St. Paul allegeth against the Worlds wizzards 1 Cor. 3.20 who the wiser they were the vainer they were Rom. 1.21 As Austin writing to a man of great paris saith Ornari abste Diabolus quarit the Devill would fain bee tricked up by thee Vers 12. Blessed is the man whom thou chastenest c. And thereby effectest that his vain thoughts lodge not within him Jer. 4.14 but that the wicked forsake his wayes and the unrighteous man his thoughts and return to thee c. Isa 55.7 Feri Domine feri said Luther strike whiles thou pleasest Lord only to thy correction adde instruction Vt quod noceat doceat See my Love-tokens And teachest him out of thy law Lashing him but withall lessoning him ut resipiscat serviat tibi corde perfecto saith Kimchi here that he may repent and serve thee with an upright heart for which purpose affliction sanctified is of singular use Crux voluntat is Dei schola morum disciplina felicitatis meditatorium gau dii Spiritus sancti officina breviter bonorum omnium thesaurus saith Brentius on Job 33.16 Vers 13. That thou mayest give him rest Here usually but hereafter certainly Mors arumnarum requies was Chaucers Motto those that dye in the Lord shall rest from their labours Mean-while they are chastened of the Lord that they may not be condemned with the World 1 Cor. 11.32 Vntill the pit be digged for the wicked Untill the cold grave hold his body and hot Hell hold his soul Vers 14. For the Lord will not cast off his people Though he cast them into the furnace of affliction The wicked he bringeth into misery and there leaveth them to come off as they can Ezek. 22.20 29.5 Not so the Saints Zach. 13.9 Isa 43.2 Heb. 13.5 Nor for sake his inheritance Because His. Senecai Patriam quivis ama 〈◊〉 quia pulchram sed quia suam All love their own Vers 15. But judgement shall return unto Righteousness All shall be set to rights and every one have his due according to Rom. 2.6 7 8 9 10. if not sooner yet at the day of judgement without fail Some give this sense severity shall be changed into mercy the rigour of the law to the clemency of the Gospel Others thus judgement shall return to Righteousness that is to its own place licet defertur judicium non aufertur And all the upright in heart shall follow it viz. In their affections they are carried out after it earnestly desiring that dear day when God will unriddle his providences and clear up his proceedings with the sons of men Some read shall follow him that is God being brought home to him by their afflictions they shall follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth Not so every loose ungirt Christian or profligate professor Vers 16. Who will rise up for mee q.d. But a very few fast friends find I at Court Jonathan excepted Some there are that will sprinkle mee with Court-holy-water as they say give glozing speeches but 't is little that they will do and yet lesse that they will suffer for mee Faithfull friends saith One are gone on pilgrimage and their return is uncertain Vers 17. Except the Lord had been my help He loveth to help at a pinch he usually reserveth his hand for a dead lift See 2 Tim. 4.16 17. My soul had almost dwelt in silence i.e. In the dark cloisters of death The Greek and Latin Translators render it In Hell Vers 18. when I said my foot slippeth I stand on a precipice and shall be down Hypotyposis est Thy mercy O Lord held mee I have subsisted meerly by a miracle of thy mercy by a prop of thine extraordinary pitty and patience Vers 19. In the multitude of my thoughts within mee My perplexed intricated insnarled intertwined as the branches of a tree cogitations and ploddings upon my daily sufferings when I know not what to think or which way to take to Thy comforts delight my soul The Beleever is never without his cordiall he hath comforts that the World wots not of The good Lantgrave of Hessen being held prisoner for a long time together by Charles the fift Emperour said that he could never have held it out so but that he felt the divine consolations of the Martyrs August Martyr etiam in catena gaudet c. saith Austin Crux inunct a est saith Bernard Godlinesse hath many crosses and as many comforts like as Egypt hath many venemous Creatures but withall many Antidotes against them Vers 20. Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee Shall Tyrants and Oppressours who do exercise regiment without righteousness intitle thee to their wicked proceedings and go unpunished See Isa 36.10 with 37.36 the Throne or Tribunal is called The holy place Eccles 8.10 wo then to those that pollute it Which frameth mischief by a Law As did the Primitive Persecutors with their bloudy Edicts against Christians and the Popish Bishops or whose Laws that of Politian was verified Inventum Actiae dicuntur jura Draconis Vers est fama nimis nil nisivir us habent Some render it Praeter vel contra legem beside or against Law Vers 21. They gather together Heb. Run by troops as Theeves do Against the soul Which they would gladly destroy if it lay in their power This the Popish persecutors oft attempted but God hath better provided Mat. 10.28 Vers 22. But the Lord is my defence Heb. My high place where I am set out of their reach Vers 23. And he shall bring upon them c. See Psal 7.15 16. PSAL. XCV VErs 1. O come let us sing unto the Lord It is thought by this beginning that this Psalm was not
though an heathen could say Inter caetera providentiae uivina opera boc quoque dignum est admiratione c. Among other works of the Divine providence this is admirable that the winds lye upon the Sea for the furtherance of Navigation c. Vers 26. They mount up to heaven they go down c. An elegant hypolyposis or description of a storm at Sea like whereunto is that in Virgil. Tollimur in coelum curvate gurgite iidem Subducta admanes imos descendimus undâ Tollimur in c●●●um nanc 〈◊〉 tadimus undas Their soul is melted because of trouble They are ready to dye through sear of death Junius understandeth it of extreme vomiting as if they were casting up their very n●●●ts Anocbarses for this cause doubted whether he should reckon Marriners amongst the living or the dead And another said that any man will go to Sea at first I wonder not but to go a second time thither is little better than madness Vers 27. They reel to and fro c. Nutart nautae vacillant cerebro pedibus And are at their wits end All their skill and strength faileth them at once they can do no more for their lives Heb. All their wisdome is swallowed up that is the art of Navigation is now to no use with them Vers 28. Then they cry unto the Lord Then if ever Hence that speech of One Qui nescit ora●e discat navigate He that cannot pray let him go to Sea and there he will learn See vers 6. Vers 29. He maketh the storm a calm He that is God Almighty whose the Sea it and he made it Psal 100. not the Pagans Neptune or the Papagans St. Nicholas So that the waves thereof are still If therefore the voluptuous humors in our body which is but as a cup made of the husk of an Acorn in respect of the Sea will not be pacified when the Lord saith unto us Be still every drop of water in the Sea will be a witness of our monstrous rebellion and disobedience Vers 30. Then are they glad because they be quiet All is husht on the sudden as Mat. 8.26 both their fears and the Seas outrages being quickly reduced to a peaceable period So he bringeth them to their desired haven This is more than they then wished for God is many ties better to men than their prayers Vers 31. Oh that men would c. See vers 8. Vers 32. Let them exalt him also in the Congregation c. i.e. In all publick meetings Ecclesiastical and Civil Vers 33. He turneth vivers into a wilderness Hitherto the Psalmist hath set forth Gods good providence in delivering men from divers deaths and dangers now hee declareth the same in his just and powerful transmutations in nature whilst according to the good pleasure of his will he changeth mens condition either from good to evil or from evil to good beyond all expectation It is even He that doth it whatsoever a company of dizzy-headed men dream to the contrary as One phraseth it It is God who dryeth up those Rivers whereby the land was made fat and fertile Isa 41.17 Vers 34. fruitful land into barrenness Heb. Sal●●ess See Luke 14.34 35. Deut. 29.23 Jud. 9.45 Sals beendeth barrenness by eating up the lat and moisture of the earth Some think the Psalmist here alludeth to Sod●me and her sisters turned into the dead Sea For the wickedness of them that dwell therein Hereof Judea is at this day a noble instance besides many parts of Asia and Africa once very fruitful now since they became Mabemetan dry and desert Judea saith One hath now onely some few parcels of rich ground found in it that men may guess the goodness of the cloath by the fineness of the shreds Greece which was once Sol sal gentium saith Another terrarum flos fons lite rarum nunc vel Priams miserands manus nunc in Graecia desideremus Graeciam 't is nothing like the place it was once Vers 35. He turneth the wilderness c. Some place a again God to shew his power and providence of steril maketh to become fertil Pol●●ia for instance and other Northern Countries Germany and France were of old full of Woods and Lakes as Cesar and Tacitus testifie now 't is otherwise So in America at this day So divers desert places of Egypt and Ethiopia when once they became Christian became fruitfull Vers 36. And there he maketh the hungry to dwell As our English and other Plantations in America where sundry poor people get fair estates That they may prepare a City The building of Cities is of God and so is their conservation Vers 37. And sow the fields and plant vineyards These are noble imployments such is the ancient Patriarchs we re much in and the most honorable among the Romons as Coriolanus M. Curius Cate Major c. Our forefathers if they could call any one Bonum colonum a good husbandman they thought it praise enough saith Cicero Which may yield The thankful earth yeelding by Gods blessing her gratum onus full burden to the laborious tiller Vers 38. He blesseth them also c. See Prov. 10.12 Psal 127.1 Jam. 4 15. They are out that rest in natural causes Vers 39. Again they are minished Minorati sunt This also is of the lord who hath treasuries of plagues and cannot be exhausted Vers 40. He poureth contempt c. See Job 12.21 24. with the Notes Poena tyrannoram est contemptus exilium nex saith Genebrard All their policy or King craft cannot save them Vers 41. Yet setteth be abe poor The godly poor as he did David And maketh him families like a flock of sheep which multiply exceedingly in a short space Vers 42. The righteous shall see it and rejoyce It shall cheer them up to see that the reigns of Government are in Gods hand and to behold such love in such providence And all iniquiry shall stop her mouth Shall be down in the mouth as we use to fay See Job 5.16 and have her tongue chambered Vers 43. Whose is wise Heb. who is wise q d. not many Rari quippe boni Exclamatio querulatori● Piscat None but those that observe providences and lay up experiences which if men would do they might have a Divinity of their own were they but well read in the story of their own lives Even they shall understand c. And as for those providences that for present he understandeth not rejicit in Dei abyss●s he beleeveth there is a reason for them and that they shall one day be unridled PSAL. CVIII VErs 1. O God my heart is fixed For the five first verses of this Psalm see the Notes on Psal 57.7 8 9 10 11. And for the eight last see the Notes on Psal 60. vers 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12. PSAL. CIX A Psalm of David Written by him usque ad●● terribili b●rrifica eratiom saith Be●●● in such terrible terms as
to provoke him to wrath A heavy curse indeed Vers 16. Because that he remembred not to show mercy Here the Prophet beginneth to shew why he useth such doleful imprecations against his enemies viz. not out of a spirit of revenge or a false zeal but as truly seeking Gods glory and his Churches safety which could not other wise be procured unless these merciless men were devoted to destruction He remembred not that is de industria oblitus est omisit he forgot and neglected it for the nonce Vers 17. At he loved cursing c. The back-slider in heart shall he filled with his own Wayes Prov. 14.14 Cursing men are cursed men as were easie to instance in sundry as Hacket hanged in Q. Elizabeths Reign and Sir Jervase Ellowaies Lieutenant of the Tower in K. James his dayes according to their own wishes See Mr. Clarks Mirror p. 210 c. The Jews are still great cursers of Christians they shut up their daily prayers with Maledic Domine Nazaraek and how it cometh home to them who knoweth not even wrath to the utmost I Thess 2.16 Vers 18. As he cloathed himself with cursing as with his garment Ut vestis commens●rata corpori as the inner garment that sticks closest to the body and is not done off but with much ado as he hath wrapped and trussed up himself in cursing So let in come into his bowels like water Let him have his belly full of it and his bones full too And like ey Which easily soaketh through See Nam 5.22 Vers 19. Let it be unto him as a garment Not as an inner but outer garment also Actio merces that men may see and say This it an accursed person the visible vengeance of God pursueth him Vers 20. Let this be the reward Opus vel Oper a precium The same Hebrew word signifieth Work and Wages Job 7.2 Isa 49.4 persecutors shall be sure of their payment Vers 21. But do thou for me Fas mecum sis mibi à latere stick to me act on my behalf and for my behoof Vers 22. For I am poor and needy As a Lazar sheweth his ulcers to move pity so doth David his indigency and aylements And my heart is wounden I have mine inward troubles also or I am cordicisus vulneratus almost dead animam age Vers 23. I am gone like the shadow Abii perii evenui I vanish as the long shadows do so soon as the Sun setteth As the Locust Leapeth from hedge to hedge so do I from place to place being tossed from post to pillar 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I Cor. 4. Vers 24. My knees are weak through fasting Either for lack of meat or stomach to it genua la●am my knees buckle under me the strong men bow themselves Eccles 12.3 My flesh faileth of fatness I am lean and low brought Christ might well cry out My ●●a●●ess my leanness so busie he was for his Father and so worn out that they judged him well nigh fifty when he was not much above thirty Job 8.57 Vers 25. I become also a reproach In respect of my leanness They shaked their beads This is threatned as a curse Deut. 28. but may befall the best as it did our Saviour Psal 22. Mat. 27. Vers 26. Help me O Lord Prayer like those arrows of deliverance must be multiplied as out trouble is lengthned and lyeth on Vers 27. That they may know That I am delivered meerly by thy presence and power It is the ingenuity of the Saints in all their desired or expected mercies to study Gods ends more than their own Vers 28. Let them curse but bless thou Yea the rather as a Sam. 16.12 and I wot well that those whom thou blessest shall be blessed as Isaac once said of his son Jacob Gen. 27.33 When they arise To plead their own cause cousa extidant Vers 29. As with a mantle Sicut diploide saith the Vulgar as with a doublet q.d. Let them be double ashamed for which purpose also he here doubleth his prayer Vers 30. I will greatly praise the Lord Diligenter impense Gods blessings are binders and great deliverances call for suitable praises the neglect hereof is crimen stellionatus cousenage Vers 31. For he shall stand at the right hand As a saithful and powerful 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Champion and not as Satan standeth at the persecutors right hand vers 6. From those that condemn him Heb. From the judges of his soul sc Saul and his Courtiers who judged him worthy of death PSAL. CX A Psalm of David Concerning Christ saith R. Obadiah and so say Christ himself Mat. 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost and his Apostles I Cor. 15. Heb. 7. 10. though some Rabbines maliciously say otherwise as R. Joseph ca●us qui bic cae●li● to say the best of him and other Jew Doctors who stagger here in their expositions as drunkards Vers 1. The Lord said unto my Lord In this one verse we have a description of Christs person his ware and his victory so that we may say of it and so indeed of the whole Psalm which is an Epitome of the Gospel as Tully did of Bru●as his Laconical Epistle Quàm multa quàm pancis How much in a little See the Note on Mat. 22.44 Sit thou at my right hand Sit thou with me in my Thron● having power over all things in heaven and earth Matth. 28. Christ as man received what as God hee had before Vntil I make thine enemies thy footseel Foes Christ hath ever had and shall have to the worlds end but then they shall be all in a place fittest for them viz. under Christs feet even those who now se● up their Crests face the heavens and say unto the King Apos●●●t● 〈◊〉 it 〈◊〉 with him Vers 2. The Lord shall send the Ro●of thy strength That is the Gospel that Scepter of Christs Kingdome that power of God to salvation unto as many as beleeve mighty through God to work 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 10.5 Act. 20.31 even the preaching of Christs cross Out of Sin For salvation in of the 〈◊〉 Job 4. 〈◊〉 lem till c. Act. 1. Rule thou it the midst of thin● enemies Among Jews Pagans Turks Papaga●s those that will not bend let them break those that will not stoop to thy Government let them feel thy power Psal 45.5 Vers 3. Thy people shall be willing All Christs subjects are Volunteers free-hearted In Psal 1. like those Isles that wait for Gods Law Isa 42.8 Zech. 8.11 They love to be his servants Isa 56.6 Lex voluntaries quaerit saith Ambrose In the day of thy power Copiarum tuarum of thine Army or of thy Militia when thou shalt lead on thy Church Militant and be in the head of them conquering and to conquer Rev. 6.2 Some understand it of the Christian Sabbath day In the beauties of holiness i.e. In Church assemblies in the beauty of holy Ordinances at the