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A85769 The throne of David, or An exposition of the second of Samuell wherein is set downe the pattern of a pious and prudent Prince, and a clear type of of [sic] the Prince of Princes Christ Iesus the sonne of David and his spirituall kingdome by William Guild D.D. and minister of Gods word at King-Edward in Scotland. Guild, William, 1586-1657. 1659 (1659) Wing G2212; Thomason E984_8; ESTC R207805 271,425 357

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not onely spurring him on but also his ambitious aspiring not contenting himself with the Counsell table but to be also a commander and supream in the camp which has ever bene the bane both of the Common-wealth as also of the Church when men cannot content and contain themselves within their own station but ambitiously aspire above or beyond the same and will have a hand in all causes and rule both in Church and Commonwealth as especially the Popes their practise has been according to the saying of one Ecce duo gladii and of too many others 3. Vers 2. He vants and like another Goliah bragg's that he will do much without saying if God will where we see the truth of that which is spoken of the wicked that God is not in all their thoughts but they presume of their own strength and sacrifice to their own net which tendeth ever to their own destruction 4. He promises that he will come upon David unexpectedly and will make him afrayd and thereafter smite him and put all his Army to flight where we see the blind pride of the wicked speaking of events as if they were not in Gods hand who is the Lord of hostes but as if events and the lives of Gods Children were in their hands Although they have not power of one hair of their head without the good providence of God and as Davids preservation testifies As also as we see Act 23. 12. c. 5. He sayes likewise that he will come upon David while he is weary and weakhanded and in the night time so that like a subtile and sedulous Enemy he resolves to take hold of all advantages and make use thereof against godly David to his destruction The like subtile and sedulous Enemy have all the godly Satan who spies all his advantages of our weaknesse and makes use thereof to surprise us and bring us to destruction as we may see in Lot in Zoar in David with Beethsheba and Peters denyall and other godly men Let be in the wicked which should learn us to work out our salvation with fear and trembling and to watch and pray as our saviour exhorts us 6. Vers 4. It is said that this wicked Counsell of Achitophels of smiting the Father Vers 2. Pleased Absolom the Sonne well where we see the unnaturality of a wicked Sonne seeking after his life who gave him life and that where grace is not no expectation of duty is to be expected from the neerest naturall relations as we see in Cham Cain and here in Absolom 7. Vers 5. Though Achitophels Counsell pleased Absolom yet he acquiesces not therein but calles Hushai and asks his Counsell in this prosecution of the warre whose Counsell he asked not before in going in to his Fathers Concubines Where we see the Lords mercifull providence towards Hushai and in him towards the godly preserving them from many snares wherin they otherwise might fall as he did David from going with Achish against Saul 1 Sam. 29. And Hushai here from joyning in that wicked Counsell of Achitophels for Absoloms committing incest with his Father Concubines O happy then are they who rely on God 8. Vers 7. We see the modesty of Hushai in relation to the person of Achitophel though he opposes his Counsell or opinion not denying but he was a wise Counsellour and that his Counsell was good but not at this time Which shewes that in disputes or differences of judgements reflections on persons or bitternesse and the like should not be used but such modesty as verity may have place the cause it self handled unity sought after charity shewn humour and spleen avoyded and the way of reconciliation no wise obstructed Therefore Hushai to sweeten his opposition he yeilds the praise of wisdome to his adversary in other Counsells that he may have leave to deny it modestly in this 9. Yet in Hushai's boldnesse and freedome without fear in opposing Achitophels Counsell We learn what should be the like in the servants of God in opposing themselves with courage and zeal against errour and every wicked course which is against God his Church people and the Lords anointed 10. Vers 14. Absolom preferreth Hushai's Counsell to Achitophels as the better Hushai's Counsell being for Davids good and that which he rejected being for his own good Where we see the mercifull overruling and secret providence of God for the good of his own comfort in adversity making all things work together for their best but to the worst of their Enemies Who dig a pit for others wherein themselves do fall 11. The likeliest devices we see doe not alwayes succeed God finds the meanes to crosse the Counsell of Achitophel by a lesse probable advice of Hushai who had neither so deep a head nor so sure a Counsell as Achitophels yet his tongue refutes Achitophel and diverts Absolom Hushai's tongue then and Absoloms heart is guided by a power above their own who as he gives utterance to the tongue so he gives successe to the words therefore Hushai shall prevail with Absolom that Absolom prevail not against David he that worketh all in all things so disposeth of wicked men that while they think that they most please themselves and think themselves safest then they overthrow themselves as we see Exod. 1. 10. And their disappointment is surest 12. The reason why Absolom obeys Hushai's Counsell rejects Achitophels sayes the text was that the Lord had appointed to defeat the Counsell of Achitophel as David had prayed Chap. 15. 31. And that the Lord might bring evill upon Absolom Where we see the efficacy of prayer and that the Lord doth hear and grant the prayers of his own according to Psal 50. 15. Which have a twofold effect for the good of the godly and the evill of their Enemies wherefore the armour of his Church most prevalent has been ever prayers and tears 13. We see here likewise that the greatest punishment of sinne and which bringeth all other evill with it is when men are left to the Spirit of errour and to reject good Counsell or courses and to embrace the worse II. SAM Chap. 17. from the 15. vers to the end FOllowes now 1. The action of Hushai and his complices revealers of his Counsell to David and the circumstances thereof 2. The Tragicall and ignominious death of Achitophel and the causes thereof 3. The marching of both Armies over Jordan and the severall encamping thereof And 4. the furnishing of Davids Army and provision thereof In the first action there are many actours 1. Hushai who is the revealer of the Counsell and first advertiser according to his promise formerly made to David 2. The two Priests directed back by David to Jerusalem from mount Olivet to the same purpose 3. Their Sonnes Jonathan and Ahimaaz appointed to be the beares of this revelation 4. Two Women the one a wench sent by the Priests from Jerusalem to their Sonnes swho abode at Enrogell the other a mans wife
Judah and Israel are set down therein 3. As for the argument or matter contained in this second book of Samuel the same is the whole History of the estate of the Church of God of their Kings and Commonweale from the death of Saul to the decrepit age of David which is the space of 40 yeares wherein is declared the noble acts of David his entrie to the kingdome and how he inlarged the same also what troubles he had both intestine and forraine from all which at last the Lord did deliver him and gave him victory over all his enemies and how in the end in peace and rest he finished his daies 4. The utility and profit which this History affords is manifold which may be reduced to two heads the first for confirmation of Faith the second for example of Life which Paul joyneth 2. Tim 3. 10. The first appeareth in the verifying of the promise made by Samuel to David in the Lords name that he should be King after Saul albeit for the triall of his faith after many great sufferings and desperate like dangers the same came to pass and he all this while did relye on the Lords promise The second appeares in the prudence piety zeale humility equity and good government of David and all other his heroick and godly virtues worthy of imitation As also is set down David's infirmities and fall's as examples of the weakness of the best when they watch not over themselves or are left to themselves proponed to be eschewed ut majorum ruina sit minorum cautela as likewise his repentance to be imitated and the sharp corrections notwithstanding as medicinall corrasves wherewith he was chastised as we see in the Lords dealing with his dearest sonnes and servants Heb 12. 6 7. And therefore what sharper punishments may the impenitent and Satans slaves expect In this History likewise of David's reign and kingdome we have typified Christ Jesus the Sonne of David his condition and estate of his Church to the end of the world for 1. As David was anointed to be king over Israel so was Christ anointed to be King over his Church 2. But as David endured many troubles persecutions and sufferings before he entred into his kingdome so did Jesus Christ here on earth before he entred in his 3. After his entry he was mightily opposed and oppugned by them of Saul's house his enemie by armes force and violence and so was Christ Jesus and his Church and Gospell by the bloody persecution of the heathens Roman Emperors 4. Notwithstanding Davids house waxed still strong and Sauls house weake so the Christian Church and profession did the more flourish and heathenish idolatry and heresies decay 5. Hiram also a Gentile and King of Tyrus joyned in Amity with David and contributed to the building of his house in Sion both furniture and workmen typifying thereby how the gentiles should come into the profession of the Gospell and should contribute to the building of the Church of Christ as mysticall members thereof 6. Then doth David bring home the Arke of God and set it in his house at Sion and then in like manner was the true worship of God established in his Church which is the true Sion 7. But hereafter did Absolon craftily under a faire pretence of the good of Israel rise against David and stole away the hearts of Davids people who joyned themselves with him in rebellion many following him in the simplicity of their hearts and being deceived by his simulat and faire pretence of piety even so did Antichrist arise against Christ under a like faire pretence to be for him and therefore is said to be horned like the lamb though speaking like the dragon and who fraudulently stole away the hearts of Gods people who in like manner except a few like those who followed David followed him in the simplicity of their hearts till the time of evocation out of Babel Revel 18. 2. And that as David was thereafter brought back to Jerusalem by his people so that the truth of the Gospell and professors thereof was brought back in like manner which seemed before to be exiled as David and his followers were and driven like him and the church Revel 12. 14. Into the wilderness and desert But as Absolon was at last overthrown and Davids kingdome under him was thereafter peaceably established so shall Antichrist according to that prediction Revel 18. And the Church of Christ shall thereafter injoy peace and quietness II. SAM Chap. 1. to the 17. Verse THe principall argument of this chapter is the report of the event of the battle between the Israelites and Philistines under Saul upon mount Gilboa which generally comprehends these two particulars 1. The report it selfe from the first verse to the 17. The second is what fell out thereon from the 17. verse even to the end In the report we have to consider 1. The matter and circumstance thereof 2. The triall and how it was accepted And 3. the just reward of the reporter and actor therein 1. The matter reported is the losse of the battle on Israels side and death of Saul and Jonathan The first circumstance set down in the report is of the time to have been the third day after Davids victory against the Amalikites wherein the swiftness of the fame of the battle on Gilboa is to be noted seeing in less then the space of three daies It is divulged from Gilboa which is situated in the territory of Isachar at the border of Jordan in the east march of Canaan to David in the land of the Philistines dwelling then at Ziklag situate neer to the mediterranean upon the West-point of Canaan esteemed to have been each part distant from the other the bounds of a hundred miles or thereabout in the latitude of the land Next the person reporter is called herein generall one and there after in speciall an Amalekite probably the Son of one of that Nation whom Saul had formerly unlawfully spared in his expedition against Agag and therefore God had reserved him now to be his murtherer 2. His carriage or behaviour is very crafty and cunning he covereth his head with ashes he rents his garments and doth most humble curtesy to David as to his King This gesture of his was used ever by such who were displeased for the publick calamity of the Lords People as may be seen in the example of Joshua and of the messinger that came to report the event of the battle to Heli. But as they used this forme uprightly so doth this Amalekite use the same Hypocritically 3. His Oration testifies his further Hypocrisy which he useth very elaboratly and artificially by degrees beginning at the generall and coming to the particulars ascending from that which was most grievious and ending with that which he thought unto David should be most acceptable and good news in this manner the People are fled and many of them overthrown also Saul and Jonathan his
Son are dead so that both the King thy persecutour and Enemy and Jonathan though thy friend yet apparent Heir between thee and the Kingdome are both out of the way and therefore this last news may asswage the grief of the former the slaughter to wit of thy Countrymen and People a crafty flatterer indeed The King also as a prudent Prince not facile to credit rumours inquires once and again the certainty he answers that he speaks as an ejewitnesse that which he saw and he affirmes the thing which he asked and to seal up the truth of his speechs he makes a reall exhibition of the royall ornaments of the crown and bracelet whereby he concludes with himself liberally to be rewarded of David Concerning the matter of his report and verity thereof there are divers opinions amongst the learned some thinking it a manifest lie made to gain favour thanks and reward in respect that it seems directly contradictory to the verity of the forme of Sauls death 1 Sam. 31. and 1 Chron. 10. Others as sundry of the Rabbins and Josephus holdes the opinion that he spake truly granting as is said in the forenamed places that Saul runne himself upon his owne sword and of that wound especially he dyed and that the Archers had formerly hit him and wounded him likewise but that immediatly not dyeing of these wounds especially by this last given by himself not entring so deep into his body as he speaks himself nam detinuit mè haec ocellata chlamys v. 9. And life being as yet within him as he also in the same verse testifies therefore he desires this Amalekite to stand upon him as being formerly fallen and to kill him outright which he performs and thereby altogether is made to give up the ghost After that David hath tryed and found it to be of truth that Saul and Jonathan are dead with great heavinesse and regret doth he receive this news and with great mourning and fasting he bewails Saul Jonathan and the People which mourning is upon two respects the one naturall the other godly and spirituall this first was the sorrow 1. for the King his Father in Law and Lord 2. for Jonathan his faithfull friend prevented by immaturity of violent death before he could get occasion of acquitting his former favours and 3. for his People his dearest kinsmen and of one country with him The spirituall is the apprehension of Gods wrath thus punishing Church and Commonwealth for sin and making his People to fall so before their Enemies whereby the honour of the name of God would be reproached and blasphemed amongst the heathen The reward of this messenger is death by orderly processe first David accuses how durst thou put thy hand on the Lords anointed Next he convicts him by his own confession which uncoactedly given and not enforced by torture is by all Laws holden pro confesso then he condemneth and commandeth execution upon good reasons the crime was capitall the party confessed David was a Judge in Siklag and the title by the death of Saul is increased to the Kingdome OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 1. BEfore David had newly gotten a notable Victory over his Enemies the Amalekites and recovered the prey of Ziklag and now the Lord takes Saul his persecutor also out of the way and makes the news thereof speedily to be brought unto him by whose death he is promoted unto the Kingdome so that the Lord heaps good things upon his chosen and renewes his benefits to the godly who rely upon him and in patience possesseth there souls witnesse Jacob and a cloud of others that may be brought out of Scripture 2. That Victory over the Amalekites was not without a preceding heavy disaster and this news containes likewise a sad theame Jonathan his trusty friend and the Lords People his dear Countrymen over whom he was to reigne was likewise overthrown with Saul in battle thus temper 's the Lord the Cup that he gives his owne comfort with the crosse and the mixture of some tartnesse with his sweetest morsels least they should overcloy us or we too much delight in them therefore with extraordinary Revelations Paul must have some buffetings of Satan least he should be puft up above measure and least we should put our felicity in them here or not thankfully with Job be content when he takes them back from us again our sweetest roses must have there sharp prickels 3. God stirreth up an Amalekite vers 8. an infidell in Religion an adversary to Israel and particular Enemy to David to become his favourer and with all diligence to carry this message whereupon we collect the generall that when the Church of God or any members thereof hath been in greatest adversities amongst forrain Enemies then God hath moved the hearts of there very adversaries to be there best friends Examples Abraham with Abimelech the Patriarches with the first Pharoah Moses preserved by the Daughter and brought up in the court David with the King of Gath and Moab of the Prophets of God in Achabs time fed by the governours of his house Obadiah Daniel the 3. Children Ezra Nehemiah Ester Mordecai and sundry others Then let us not fear the losse or want of friends the Lord who framed the heart hath the hearts of Kings and private men in his hands which he will turne as he did the heart of Esau in an instant to the comfort of such as depend with David upon his protection and providence 4. Vers 2. This messinger is a pattern of a cunning Hypocrite crafty flatterer brought up in the Atheist Schools of prophane courts temporizing in Religion and in matters of state composing his ingenie gesture manners and speech to the perfiting of that altogether which he thought should please the Prince upon the respect of his own advantage without all care of conscience Such an intelligencer was Doeg unto Saul such are may courtiers about Princes and great men now adayes few Mordecaies Nehemiah's or Daniels being promoted or few Ebed-melech's or Obadiah's to be found in courts 5. In his first report of the fall of Prince and People in Battle we see what is the miserable estate of a People under a wicked King oftimes they imitate his example as is said Regis ad exemplum c. and are punished with him yea he is punished in the person's and body of his subjects witnesse 70000 of Israel falling by Pestilence for the presumption of Davids numbring of the people and there Saul for going to the witch of Endor not onely dyeth himself alone but the people of the Lord are overthrown with him on the contrary O happy people that hath a godly Prince 6. Vers 10. Saul dyeth by the edge of the sword even by that same death which he had intended against David and yet David is alive thus is it verified that the wicked dig a pit for the godly but they themselves shall fall therein and the souls of the Lords chosen shall
will come and not delay mercy and truth shall kisse one another and one jot of his word shall not faile let that performance of the promises made unto Abraham concerning his seed Josephs preferment Israels deliverance and many others be witnesses hereof 15. In all the foresaid things we have the kingdome of Christ represented for as by Sauls tyranny David was persecuted so was Christ and his Church yet as Saul was overthrowne and an entry made to David so were the Churches persecutors taken out of the way and she began to be advanced as David did not his own will but followed Gods so Christ wrought not his own will but his fathers as David ascended to Hebron so hath Christ to heaven as David carried thither with him his wives and servants so hath Christ made his Church and servants participate of all his benefits and doth daily bring them to that same place to which he hath gone before them as David was received only by Judah but rejected by the greatest part so is Christ and his kingdome as Davids kingdome is not accomplished at one time so neither Christs as it had ist own competitours so hath Christs but as the kingdome of Ishboseth is short and declining but Davids longer and flourishing so is it between Christ and Satans kingdome and as David was often times anointed by Samuel by Judah and at last by Israel so was Christ which Paul reduceth to three the Spirit of power sanctification and first resurrection 16. Vers 5. Concerning the report made of the men of Jabesh Gilead unto David concerning their burying of Saul after whose body probably he had caused to inquire as is aforesaid others are of opinion that it was to inflame him against them others that he should beware of them seeing they were professed favourers of Saul or reconciled with them but David layeth all sinistrous opinions and suspitions of them aside charitably construing their fact and for their fidelity and kindness to their Lord he honours them with an embassage congratulatory and a promise of his favour and assistance whereby we are taught not to give eare and credit to detraction but being slow to misconceive of mens actions rather charitably to make the best construction of them till more manifest experience prove them otherwise thus greatly shall we disappoint Satan that ill seed sower stop dissention maintaine unity approve our selves to God and readily winne our neighbour 17. In the men of Jabesh we see the loyall and sinceer love of subjects to their prince obeying him being alive and honouring him being dead which fact as pleasing to God and approved by man is registred in Scripture like Mary Magdalens anointing of Christ to be recorded for ever for the memoriall of the just shall flourish that the name of the wicked shall be put out either with the silence of oblivion or else the black dash of the record of their foule deeds innumerable examples hereof may be collected in holy writ where they are recorded 18. Vers 6. That which David wisheth to them from God is mercy and truth in the assured performance but that which he himselfe promiseth is reward the one is free the other of debt no merit then will he ascribe unto them at Gods hands but will yeeld the same at his own in regard by his princely office he was bound to cherish the good as well as to chastise the bad and not to suffer such kind loyalty to his Father-in-law and predecessour which they with such care and hazard of their lives had shewne to be misknowne uncommended and rewarded as being assured that they who were loyall to one would be so to another Let this therefore informe aright the minds of all men how to esteeme of their own actions in all holy and humble sobriety never urging merit upon God howsoever we deserve at the hands of man but suiting free mercy and with Jacob professing our selves unworthy of the least of his mercies being but unprofitable servants and our goods deeds wherein as in the way to the kingdome ever we should walke extending no waies to him but to the Saints on earth as the Psalmist sayeth Psalm 16. 2. And availing our own soules but not God as we likewise see Job 22. 2. and 31. 7. 19. We have also in David here the patterne of a good King and loving who as he was carefull before to execute justice upon the Amalekite for his wicked fact so is he diligent here to practise kindness to the men of Jabesh for their godly deed thus ought all Magistrates who are the Lords deputies and gods on earth cherish virtue and chastise vice that so the one may grow and the other may be repressed being as an awfull Lyon to the one and a mild Lamb to the other rewarding the vertuous and godly and punishing the vicious and wicked so shall their throne be established their Crowne glister and their Scepter flourish In the Church let Abiathar therefore be cast out and Zadok set in his roome and let Joab suffer for his fault and Benajah in the policy be surrogat in his place 20. In respect that he promiseth unto them protection and therefore exhorteth them not to be discouraged by the Philistines late victory or Sauls death seeing God had raised him up and he was anointed King we see not only the duty of a lawfull prince which is to maintaine and defend his subjects but likewise that the Lord suffers never his own to be altogether destitute of comfort for if he humble with the one hand he will raise with the other and if he take one benefit from us he will give us another in the place thereof yea perhaps a greater as he did here David for Saul or as he restored holy Job if with thankfulness patience and constancy we depend upon him 21. Vers 8. In the election and anointing of Ishboseth who was made King by Abner we see no consulting of God against whose ordinance and express notified will confessed c. 3. 18. they were going an indirect course therefore they knew either with Saul they would get no answer or else contrary to their intended proceedings thus against God conscience and right they rebelliously prosecute that course which turned thereafter to their own ruine like many now adaies who if they may attaine to a pretended right and possession by policy and power to defraud the right owners and withhold their due from them whether it be holy things seperate from the common use or mans good and prophane they will never consult Gods Word nor conscience how lawfully they attained or detaine the same yea although the oracle of the one and prick of the other most evidently contradict and convince them yet Achan will take the execrable thing and Ahab will have Naboths vineyard though they should make sure with it Gods curse and heavy judgments unto themselves and theirs II SAM Chap 2. from the 12. verse to the 17. THe election
taking of Abner Thus the Lord in the promotion of his Kingdome chooseth not the instruments nor alloweth ever the meanes which appeare good to men but by the contrary he taketh away the same instruments and meanes in whom men have most confidence and by others more unlikely without mens expectation he advanceth the cause of his Church and worketh great things For God will not be subject to mens counsells but will have them to depend upon his wisdome that the whole glory of executions of great causes may turne to his own praise Examples in Josephs advancement Israels delivery Gideons victory Goliah's overthrow mans redemption the Gospells propagation and the truth's restitution II. SAM Chap. 3. from the 28. Verse to the end THe murther of Abner being hitherto handled followeth now Davids solemne purgation of himselfe from the guiltiness of that fact made by many arguments 1. By protestation 2. By imprecation 3. By injoyning publick lamentation 4. By deduction of his funerall himselfe 5. By his own deploration 6. By commendation of the defunct 7. By fasting 8. By referring the revenge to God seeing for the present he was too weake to take it in hand First he protests then according to the forme then used by lifting up his hands and purging himselfe by the witnessing of Heaven above and Earth beneath that himselfe his Counsell which he calleth his kingdome or estate are innocent of this murther and all this is done by David to satisfie the people who might be in opinion that it was committed by David his Counsell seeing Joab was his officer and kinsman and so might take occasion to make insurrection Secondly he maketh his imprecation upon Joab by five sorts of punishments 1. The bloody issue which was a disease filthy in it selfe and bringing with it the extenuation and consumption of the body as also such were excluded from the conventions and sacraments in Israel 2. Is leprosie a horrible disease in all the sorts thereof and for the contagious filthiness thereof making such to be secluded from the society of men to live in solitudes and in desert places 3. Are the palsie gout and such like impeding and taking away the pleasant part of mans life which consisteth in free motion and operations of the body and tying man in the tormenting fetters as it were of self-captivity and which leaveth to men not so much as bodies but rather dead and pained carcases 4. Is that sort which cutteth down the unripe harvest of life as it were violently by the cruell syth of the murthering sword The last is famine which of all paines is the greatest for eviting whereof some have put violent hands on themselves and have become self-Cannibals And some more than monstrously have devoured their owne infants yea their owne very dung and loathsome beasts and vermine as sundry histories beare record but especially that of the lamentable sacking and strait of Jerusalem He makes next a solemne lamentation both by himselfe and by others not so much for the death of Abner as for the manner thereof by treasonable Homicid tending to so great consequence as scandall and perill of insurrection He expresseth all the signes likewise of true dolour by teares of his eyes renting his cloathes lifting up his voyce and bursting forth in words testifying his affection He carryeth him then by the royall dignity of his own convoy to the grave even the honourable sepulcher at Hebron famous for the buriall of the Patriarches and their wives Where as in an Epitaph he setteth forth his praise taken from the civill vertues such as prudence and fortitude wherewith he was indued David fasteth also and albeit prayed by the people he refuseth to eate the custome was in the funeralls to joyne some forme of compotations which the Greeks called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Latines coenas exequiales and Viscerationes which as Augustine affirmeth de civitate dei lib. 1. cap. 12. were used ad solatia vivorum non ad subsidia mortuorum and which we call lykes but in this place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the Etymologie of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth the dinner after which men laboured as is probable by the text because David refuseth to eate while the evening then this is the dinner whereunto he is desired by the people David sat last purgeth himself to his courtiers to let them understand how he detesteth ●●od and excuseth himself that he might nor for the present exe●●te Justice because his Kingdome is but weak and he likewise being but a new King and his Sisters Sonnes are stronger then he● having the Army and populary favour and he feared the example of Abners defection from Ishboseth impatient of a very reproof In end he concludeth with an Epiphonema or exclamation imprecatory the Lord reward or God shall reward the wicked according to his wickednesse which is to be understood of the impenitent neither in equality or proportion of measure for God rewardeth more then the measure of good deservings and lesse than that of evill doth merit neither yet are good deservings the cause of life or the reward of glory the same being a gift and a free inheritance as evill are properly the causes of eternall punishment Rom. 6. 23. Hence ariseth two questions I. Did David charitably in these imprecations The Hebrewes answer not But uttering them in wrath carnally they fell severally upon his posterity as Rehoboam had the issue Osias the leprosie Asa the gout Josios fell by the sword and Joachin by hunger but seeing those were punished so for their own private offences we reject the negative Others approve David herein that he speaketh here prophetically and that he pronounceth the words of the Law wherein such cursings are contained and some conclude in generall that imprecations may be lawfully conceived if these conditions be observed First Gods spirit must be the mover and not the spirit of man next the forme must be conditionall in care of impenitency And the ●nd must be to Gods glory and not our vindict Then concerning this fact of David because his mind is not knowne therefore the resolution must be conditionall and disjunctive according to the said rules The second question was this omitting of Joabs execution by David lawfull or not Some answer it was moved by these arguments 1. It was perillous at that time to execute Joab in respect of the foresaid reason alleadged by David and other circumstance 2. The Law of capitall executions astricts not to a certain or prefixed time 3. Christs nature is to remit whereof David was a type and we are commanded to remit the revenge unto God as David in his last words here doth Refutation Ioab was strong 1. But Davids standing depended upon God who was stronger and upon his infallible promise confirmed by an oath which no flesh could disanull his manifold former deliverances out of farre greater perills evidently doth testify 2. Is is true executions ought
the King of Askelon taking the Sea they landed in an Island where they founded this City Tyrus out of which there came many colonies after who were the foundators of Carthage in Africke and so the Poet calls Dido Phaenicia a speaking of the origen of Carthage he writs urbs antiqua fuit Tyrii tenuere coloni It was situated betwixt Sidon and Caesarea and did abound with cedars and free stones whereof the holy Land did not so abound and therefore Hiram supplies David of his aboundance The substance of Hirams messengers probably has been a congratulation of Davids coming to the Kingdome and of his prospering and growing great therefore now he offers his amity to him which he did not before when he was in adversity according to the Worldly custome as the Poet sayes Si fueris flix multos numerabis amicos OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 11. HIram is here commended 1. For sending messengers to David to congratulate his prosperity a good disposition and not envious to rejoyce at the prosperity of the godly 2. He sends furniture and workmen for building his house in Sion whereof David stood in need in Canaan where we see 1. That God in his wise dispensation hath not given all things to every Land or Person but as the Apostles shew by the fabrike of the body there is a diversity of dispensation that none may contemne another but keep a seemly and necessary unity and corespondence together 2. Whereupon followes the right rule of dispensation which is each land and Person should communicate with others in the benefits of God the giver that he may behonoured and Gods people mutually may be conforted and mutuall charity entertained 3. In this we have 1. the mystery also of the increase of Christs Church typified by conjunction of the gentiles in building of the house of David or Church of Jesus Christs 2. In Hirams commendation we see that all such who contribute to he building of the Church and advancement of the Gospel their memory shall be flesh and fragrant to all ages like ointment poured out and Maria Magdalens anointing of Christ as we see in the register of Scripture whereas the remembrance of the wicked shall ●ot or stink in the records of posterity 4. David hath a good worke in hand therefore the Lord moves the heart of a very gentile to help to promote the same as he did also to the temple which may be an encouragement to do good and be forward in good courses and causes Pharaoh in Egypt to Ioseph Cyrus to Serubabell Ahasuerus to Nehemiah Darius to Esdras and Heathen Philosophers to defend the cause of God and of his servants as we read of Iustin Martyr and others converts 5. Vers 12. The godly advert the Lords gracious dealing and with a thankfull and humble heart acknowledge the same which wicked and worldlings do not 6. Princes and Magistrates should ever remember for what end next to Gods glory his Churches good they are advanced which is for the good of his people and not their own private good pleasure or preferment Vers 13. Followes how David in his great prosperity maries many Wives and Coucubines which did proceed from wordly wit which he chooses as a fit means to confirm his Kingdome and setle it in his posterity and yet this disagreed from Gods revealed will and institution of marriage and therefore did offend God as the sequels thereof did prove in the disagreement amongst his Sonnes in challening of his succession Absoloms rysing against him and defiling his Concubines which caused Davids divorce from them for notwithstanding of the diversity of names it is thought that all the Concubines were married Wives for in Israel whoredome was not permitted and therefore they make 〈◊〉 the difference that the Concubines were not of a like rank or authority in the family and the Concubines Children succeeded not to the heritage but ad bona mobilia as we see Genes 25. 5 6. The observatirn which we remarke on this is 1. How ready men are in prosperity to forget their due obedience to Gods will and commandements as we see also in the matter of Vriah 2. the cause of all errour in faith and manners is the declyning from Gods revealed will and the following of our own wit and fancy being the cause of all Popish superstition and will worship which ends in Idolatry therefore said our saviour concerning polygamy that from the beginning it was not so Vers 17. Followes the last part of the Chapter towit the warres betwixt David and the Philistines and his victories over them In which warres the Philistines are persuers and David the defender In the time of the civil warres between the house of David and Saul these common Enemies were spectators beholding the Jewes to wrake themselves by their own intestine dissentious● but now when they finde peace setled in Israel then they beginne to stir and persue David although they should rather entertained peace with him being now grown so potent but by the secret counsell of God they are drawn to their own destruction and blinded by Satan This warre is set forth from all the circumstances as time place persons occasion form of proceeding battles events and finall end 1. The time is when David looks for greatest quietnesse 2. The place is the valley of Rephaim which is a fruitfull part betwixt Jerusalem and Bethlehem towards the southwest 3. The persons are the Philistines Davids and the Jewes common Enemies 4. The cause is to withstand the rising of Davids Kingdome 5. The form of proceeding is diverse for David counsults and followes Gods command the Philistines depend upon their Idols which they carried with them as Vers 21. 6. The event is victory on Davids part and shame and destruction on the Philistines and the last the greatest from Gaba the Metropolitan of Benjamin to Gazar a City in the Territory of Ephraim so that Davids honour and fame is increased by his Enemies troubles moved against him OBSERVATIONS 1. WHen David is in greatest honour and looks for greatest quietnesse then his Enemies make him greatest inquietation where we see what the estate of Gods Church is when she is in greatest peace and flourishing then she is most exposed to the fury of Satan and her Enemies therefore in time of calm as Matth. 8. 24. prepare for a storm neither let us be discouraged when we see Satan with all his displayed forces rise up against the rising and flourishing of Religion but consider that this hath ever been the Churches lot and look to the joyfull issue of all Satans and his instruments opposition which shall be joyfull to his Church and confusion of his Enemies 2. We see here the envious nature of the wicked by the instigatiō of him that is called the envious man and envyed our first parents happy estate and so here his instruments envy David growing great and the prosperity of Gods people under him 3. The divers form that is
not suffer the good and laudable intentions of the godly to be unrewarded much more their pious and commendable actions no not a cup of cold water given to one of his which shall want its reward Which should be a great encouragement to pious and good works 16. As it is God that raises great houses so it is he that brings down great houses for their sinning against him and this is the cause why many great houses in the Land are fallen and their honour laid in the dust because they honoured not God as they ought in time of their prosperity 17. Vers 12. Where it is said when thy dayes are fulfilled we see the shortnesse of mans life numbred not like the richfools Arithmetike by many years but by dayes as Jacob professed and these few and evil so did Job count his life but by dayes as Moses also taught the people to do Psal 90. 12. 18. Likewise we see here that your life is limited and there is a fulfilling of our dayes which cannot beyond Gods pleasure be shortned or prolonged he being that secret Palmoni or numberer which we see professed by Job 7. 1. and 14. 14. 19. Where it is said when David should sleep with his Fathers we see what the death of the godly is as Rev. 14. 13. And therefore no more to be feared then sleep which makes us ly down in our beds or rest to a weary traveller or a hard labourer Job 7. 2. Which made the Apostle to desire to be dissolved that he might be with Christ and Revel 14. 13. to call it a rest from our labours 20. The Lord promises after Davids death to blesse his posterity whereby we see that it is true which the Lord sayes Exod. 20. 6. That he will shew mercy to thousands of them who love him and keep his commandments and that it is a happy blessing to come of good and godly parents if their ofspring insist in their footsteps 21. Vers 13. Where it is said that Davids Sonne towit Solomon should build a house to his name which was a greater honour to him then the honour of his Kingdome we see that in like manner it is the greatest honour that any Prince can attain unto to be the builder not of a materiall house but of the Church of Christ and promoter of his truth like a nursing Father to the Church as the godly Kings of Judah were and the godly Christian and Orthodox Emperours which would to God that all Christian Kings would now adayes consider and that they would not prop up Antichrists throne and persecute the true Church of Christ For this should be the way of the establishment of their Kingdomes as is here promised to him who should build the Temple 22. Vers 14. The Lord saies moreover that he should be his Father and he his sonne which is the greatest honour that any King can have and the only true nobility which Kings or any can claime unto and wherein to their singular comfort the poorest Godly house has a share and perceive therein the admirable love of God as the Apostle shewes 1 Joh. 3. 1. 23. But as this is the ground of singular and manifold comforts as of his love to us even when he is correcting us Heb. 12. 6. His care for us his protection of us and granting any good thing to us c. So this teaches us also our duty of sonnes to love him to obey him to honour him to serve him to be zealous of his honour to relye in him and his Fatherly goodness for all things we stand in reach of and at last for that heavenly inheritance which he has prepared for us 24. And if he commit iniquity where it is said I will chastise him with the rods of men c. We see the Godliest may have and have their own failings and falls as we see in David Salomon and Peter when they are ●eft never so little or short while to themselves or force of temptation and therefore should eve● be watchfull over themselves with prayer and as is said Phil 2. 12. Be working out your owne salvation with feare and wit trembling 25. Also here we see what the committing of iniquity procures even to the Godliest towit sharp correction as David and Salomon found And therefore let not the wicked though spared for a time expect impunity but that dreadfull punishment abides them who neither repent as the Godly do and who make a trade of sinne as Psal 1. 1. and as we see Psal 73. 18. Nor yet let any think that want of correction and prosperity here is a mark of Gods Children 26. We see also when the Godly are corrected that those whom the Lord permits to trouble and afflict them are called the Children of wickedness Vers 10. They are nothing else but like the rods of men wherewith they chastise their dearest Children for their good and therefore as the Godly with David in Shimeis railing and as Job spoke Job 1. 21. They should look up to the hand of God so when the Lord by such hath sufficiently chastised them he will cast the rod in the fire which should be a terrour to all wicked persecutors and troublers of his Israel 27. Where it is said Vers 15. But my mercy shall not depart away from him as I took it from Saul Here we see with what sweetness the Lord tempers the bitter cup of the sufferings of his own which should comfort them in their sharpest corrections and be their prayer And what is the difference between the punishments of the wicked and corrections of the Godly the one is a mixed cup with the sweetness of mercy tending to conversion like the dealing of a Father with his Child the other a cup of wrath without mixture of mercy or love as we see Revel 14. 10. Tending to eversion like the dealing of a Judge with a malefactor condemned to death 28. Vers 17. Where it is said That according to these words and according to all this vision so did Nathan speak unto David We see the fidelity of the Lords Prophet which all his servants in the Ministry should imitate and that he is not ashamed to recall and recant what formerly he had said to David Vers 3. Upon better ground and information from the Lord. Which should teach all men humbly ever to submit to truth and quit errour and not to stand upon their owne credit in maintaining what once they have professed without retractation the contrary whereof we see good Aug●stine did to his ever and singular commendation II. SAM Chap. 7. from the 18. Verse to the end FOllowes the second part of the Chapter wherein is set down Davids thanksgiving both for the promise made to himselfe as also to his posterity and for the benefits past present and promised which he concludes with a petition for the continuance of the Lords favour and performance of his gracious promises Which Eucharisticall oration has 1. It
his treason which is Hebron in the Territory of Judah 15. Miles distant from Jerusalem where the sepulture of the Patriarchs was belonging to the Levites which place he chooseth not as he pretended for any act of Religion or serving of God there but as fittest to act his conspiracy there and to set himself down in the throne that same place were David his Father beganne his raigne and so to serve Satan and his owne ambition The third circumstance is the manner how he advances his rebellion which is 1. By taking with him in company 200. men from Jerusalem whom he had invited to take part of his feast at the paying of his vow in Hebron who went with him in the simplicity of their hearts knowing nothing of his treasonable design 2. He sends spies through the Land to try the disposition of the people and who were on his side or no and with them he sends Trumpeters and that these spies might inform the people that as soon as they heard him proclaimed King they might joyn with him 3. He sends for Achitophel Davids prime Counsellour the better to colour and promote his conspiracy and that the people might see that the wisest of the Kingdome and his Fathers chief Counsellour was on his side Whereupon a great confluence of people comes unto him and the conspiracy becomes strong thereby Some being deceived and thinking it had been by his Fathers appointment as was Solomons afterwards others affecting novelty and their own advancement and others who were not answerable to the Lawes being glad of alteration and as we say to fish in troubled waters OBSERVATIONS 1. IN the observations or application of this History I will follow the method of the actours and persons which are five 1. David 2. Absolom 3. The spies 4. The people 5. Achitophel 1. On Davids part in History we see in this act the just judgement of God on the perverters of justice especially in the matter of murther and bloodshed in not punishing the same according to the Law therefore Absolom who first took Amnons life the Son being spared now hunts after the life also and estate of the Father Let Magistrates therefore if they love their own security draw the sword of justice against vice and especially against that crying sinne of bloodshed impartially 2. In the Mystery in Davids troubles and his adherents here we see typified the condition of Christ and his Church against whom not onely open Enemies arose and bloody persecuters but also domesticke Enemies as pernicious Heretickes professing the Christian name and yet oppugning the truth of Jesus Christ and persecuting the true professours thereof as did the Arrians especially and as now do the Pope and Papists 3. Next in the Person and actings of Absolom in the History we see the example of a youth possest with all sort of vices like a legion of Divells as pride cruelty dissimulation fraud hypocrisy unnaturall rebellion Athiesme and in a word a Masse of monstrous impiety Whereupon we learn what man is by nature being unregenerate As we see Gen. 6. 5. And that goodnesse comes not by generation but by grace and regeneration As we see in the similitude of the pure grain that is sown whereof groweth that which hath both a win chaffe and straw Which should teach parents to pray for grace to their Children to curb vice in them timely and to bring them up in vertue and correction not being too indulgent and to remember that which is said Quod nova testa capit inveterata sapit 4. Absolom likewise and his followers in Mystery represents the malignant Church persecuting the true and the rising of Antichrist resembled here by him by counterfeit profession of great humility as a servant of servants and simulate piety being called therefore his holynesse and going about in deep hypocrisy to act the Mystery of iniquity thereby to dethrone Christ who is the onely head and King of his Church and to inthrone himself as head and monarch thereof for which he has his spies and Trumpeters as his emissary Priests and Jesuites in all Lands whereby multitudes which he makes a note of his Church are made to follow him which many do like the 200. that went with Absolom in the simplicity of their hearts and such a few number who follow Christ and his truth like these who followed David he cruelly did ever persecute to the death as the two witnesses were Revel 11. Having not onely policy like Achitophels wisdome but also power on his side as we see Revel 17. 12 13. 5. Absolom likewise we see rises not in open rebellion at first nor to the hight of his impiety but by degrees getting Chariots horses and a Princely attendance first and then preparing the peoples affections and fitting all other things for his purpose This being Satans craftines sowing first the seeds of sinne in the heart which therefore we are exhorted to keep with all diligence Prov. 4. 23. As he did the tares in the Lords field and then fomenting the same by all means possible till at last it come to the ripe harvest and burst forth openly as we see Judas covetousnesse did in betraying Christ Absoloms hatred in killing of Amnon and his pride here in rebellion against his Father And in Mystery as we may see in that defection of the Roman Church to grosse idolatry of worshipping of images and reliques prayer to sancts and Angels going in pilgrimage adoration of the hoste and the like all which rose from small beginnings at first and plausible pretences as we see Coloss 2. 23. These qualities also which being single grace others seem to have conspired to meet in Absolom goodlinesse of person magnificence of state gracious affability humility in greatnesse fellowfeeling sympathy love of justice care of the Commonwealth and exemplary piety and yet all in hypocrisy playing with God that he may deceave men O damnable vice justly therefore adjudged to the lowest Hell 6. Vers 2. Absolom to promove his purpose rises up early every day Which shewes us the restlessenes of insatiable pride till it attain its intent and how busy an agent the Divell is in driving on wicked men to the acting of wicked courses like Jehu marching furiously till they have accomplished their designe as we see here in Absolom as also in Judas selling of Christ and betraying him and as is said Prov 4. 16. Of the wicked that they sleep not except they have done mischief 7. Vers 3. and 5. In Absoloms flattering speech and putting forth his hand to them that came neer him and taking of them kissing them We see the nature of wicked men who will be content to use most base flattery and dissimulation and to stoope farre under their rank thereby to attain to their own ends Of which therefore it is prudence to beware 8. In his accusing his Father of negligence in the administration of justice and so to bring him in disgust and malgrace
he be our friend we shall not want friends 14. Vers 23. and 30. In the people and all the countries weeping with David We see the tender sympathy that we should have with those who are in distresse especially who neerly concerne us in any sort of relation as we are commanded Rom. 12. 15. to weep with them who weep and to rejoyce with them that rejoyce and a wo is denounced against such who rejoyce when the Church of God or the members thereof are in distresse or who regard not the affliction of Joseph Amos 6. 6. This want of sympathy shewing that they are not of the communion of Saints 15. Vers 24. In the Priests and Levites their loyall cleaving to David We see a worthy and imitable example for all Ecclesiasticall persons to follow in siding with a good cause laying aside all feare of danger and in being exemplar to all others by word and practise of love loyalty to their Prince and soveraigne Magistrate whom God sets over them II. SAM Chap. 15. from the 30. vers to the end HAving hitherto spoken of Davids patience and yeilding for the time to Absoloms fury and his followers as also of his prudence in part in sending back Zadok and Abiathar the Priests with the Arke and their two Sonnes to be intelligencers from Ierusalem unto him followes now to speak further both of his piety Vers 30. and 31. As also of his prudence in sending back Hushai the Archite a wise Counsellour of Davids to be an intelligencer in like manner and to insinuate himself to this end into the favour of Absolom and to defeat the Counsell of Achitophel From the 31. verse to the end First then Davids piety appears in these two actions 1. In his sorrowfull weeping for his sinnes that had procured this sharp correction which we see also exprest in the sixt Psalme and the other penitentialls The manner of which his humiliation is not onely set down by his weeping But by the other circumstances 1. of the place towit while he is going by the ascent of mount Olivet 2. By the manner of his going barefoot 3. With his head covered Which was the Jewish custome of mourners as we see Vers 32. and chap. 13. 12. 4. It is described from the universality of this weeping by the whole people that were with him so that it might have been called as Gen. 50. 11. A great mourning to the Israelites 2. His piety appears in his prayer which he made to God Vers 31 Upon the hearing that Achitophel was joyned with the conspirators that the Lord would turne his wicked counsell into foolishnes Next Davids prudence herein appears that with prayer he uses the means whereby Achitophels counsell may be disappointed and therefore when David was come to the top of the mount where he worshipped God being still exercised in piety and prayer and that Hushai the Archite Davids faithfull friend and Counsellour came to him in a sorrowfull and lamenting manner he sends him back to Jerusalem for three reasons 1. If he should passe on with him he should be no benefit but on the contrary a burden Vers 33. 2. By his returning and offering his service to Absolom he might do him better service by defeating and countermining the crafty Counsell of Achitophel 3. He might be a good Intelligencer unto him by revealing whatsoever he heard in Absoloms house to the Priests Zadok Abiathar who would send the same to David by their Sonnes that were with them Ahimaaz Zadoks Sonne and Jonathan Abiathars Sonne Vers 34 35. and 36. Which advise of Davids Hushai obeyes and returnes to Jerusalem Vers 37. OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 30. 31. DAvid in his great difficulties and distresse humbles himself greatly and has his recourse to God by prayer who onely could deliver him and overthrow the courses and counsells of his adversaries their plots though crafty and their cruell practises Which teaches us in all our distresses in like manner to have our recourse to God as he has commanded Psal 50. 15. And as we see was the practise of Jacob Gen. 32. Of Gods people in Egypt Exod. 3. 7. Of Moses at the red Sea of Gods people under the oppression of their Enemies Judg. 3. 9. and 15. and 4. 3. c. Of good Hezekiah 2 Chron. 32. 20. And of David here and frequently in the time of Saul As his Psalmes testifie and which was the armour that the Church under the Gospel in time of persecution used prayers and teares 2. In particular he prayes that the Lord would turn the counsell of Achitophel to foolishnes Where we see the great overruling power of God in all humane affaires that he not onely knowes the secretest counsells of men as we see 2 King 6. 9. But also that he can disappoint them and turne their wisest counsells into foolishnes As he did Pharaohs working wisely Hamans plot against his people and all Satans and his instruments their machinations against Christ and his Gospel as we see Psal 2. 4. For their is no wisdome nor counsell against the Lord. 3. Vers 34. David sends back Hushai the Archite by his wisdome to outwit and defeat the counsell of Achitophel as he did so that as he prayes to God to turne his counsell into foolishnesse so he uses also the ordinary means to have it so done Whereby we learn that with prayer to God for any good corporall or spirituall or avoyding any evill in either we should not neglect but use the ordinary means otherwise we but presume and tempt God against both that precept and practise of Christ Matth. 4. 7. And of the godly from time to time as we see Jacobs Gen. 33. 8. And Pauls Act. 27. 31. 4. Vers 35. David also sends back Hushai to Ierusalem to give him intelligence secretly what Absolom was doing or intending against him that he might prevent the same Whereby we see that intelligence is a necessary and laudable state policy being oftimes the very life of affaires and wherein for the good of his the godly and of his own people he has made his Prophets miraculously instrumentall as we see 2 King 6. 9. 5. Vers 37. At last Absoloms rebellion under colour of simulate piety comes to that hight that at last he enters into Ierusalem and possesses the holy City being herein a type of Antichrist who under the like colour of simulate piety and religious holinesse raised his rebellion against Christ to that hight by all deceivablenesse of unrighteousnesse in them that perish that he sitteth in the Temple of God as God 2 Thess 2. 4. Pretending to be Christs vicar or vicegerent in the Church and he usurps the power of God in deposing of Princes and disposing of their Kingdomes as also in dispensing with the Law of God against incestuous marriages and the like and many other wayes as I have shewn in my treatise of Antichrist Chap. 11. and 12. And who is said to sit in the Temple
of God sayes Theodoret on 2 Thess 2. 4. Because he shall usurp the first and chief place in the Church towit are universall Bishop thereof and thus also sayes their own Aquinas and Canonised saint Antichrist is said to sit in the Church because many of the Church shall receive him or according to Augustine he shall pretend to be Prince or Monarch thereof and shall rule therein as if he onely and his followers were the Church or Temple of God which Christ onely and his are truly sayes Augustine cited by Aquinas and thus he was prefigured by Absolom sitting in Ierusalem by which ordinarily in Scripture the Church of God is signified David and his followers being forced to flie to the Wilderness as the Church is said to do under Antichrists prevailing Rev. 12. 14. II. SAM Chap. 16. from the 1. vers to the 15. IN this Chapter we have 1. What befalls to David in his flying both from a professed friend Ziba and from a professed foe Shimei The first to the 5. verse the second from that to the 15. Next we have Absoloms proceedings after his entrie in Iervsalem 1. In accepting of Hushai Davids fri●nd And 2. in committing that incestuous fact with his Fathers Concubines by the wicked counsell of Achitophel From the 15. verse to the end So that this whole Chapter comprehends fouractions the first between David and Ziba the second between David and Shemei the third between Absolom and Hushai and the fourth between Absolom and his Fathers Concubines This first action of Davids between him Ziba is amplified by these circumstances 1. Of the time when David was past a little the top of the hill Olivet which comprehends also the place being yet upon that mount in his journey towards Iordan and and from thence to Bahurim 3. The Persons are Ziba the servant of M●phibosheth mentioned Chap. 9. And David the King Ziba his action being his meeting David now on his journey with his Army with a couple of Asses loded with provision for him and them a small gift indeed if we consider either the dignity of the King or number of his Army but yet great if we consider the present necessity and condition of David now flying in haste deserving thanks if it had been offered of his own goods and of an honest minde and not as a share 1. To abuse the simplicity of the King And 2. by this means craftily to hunt after a greater prey which was the whole estate of his Master and so the ground and motive of his coming was neither love to David nor yet liberality but self love and coveteousnesse for satiating whereof upon Davids asking him where Mephibosheth his Master Jonathans Sonne was most falsly he calumniats and delaites him as one who abode at Jerusalem upon expectation to be restored to his Grandfather Saul's his Kingdome and so he accuses him of the greatest and most incensing crime of lesema jesty where as like a faithfull and honest servant he should rather excuse his Masters abode at Jerusalem because being lame of his inability Whereupon followed Davids rash action of adjudging to the false accuser the whole estate and possessions of Mephibosheth falsly accused Wherein he commits these grosse errours 1. He condemnes the party accused before he be heard 2. He is credulous of a false report without any triall of the truth thereof 3. He bereaves an innocent man of his whole estate and gives it to an unjust calumniator and lier 4. He incourages calumniatours hereby to follow Ziba's example upon like hope of reward 5. Having received a gift from the accuser and thereafter giving sentence in his favours he gave an ill example in this and in all the former to inferiour judges And 6. being in choler and passion upon Ziba's report he pronounces a rash and unjust sentence whereby he gaines nothing but a base and ungratefull flatterers thanksgiving The second action is between David and Shimei From the 5. verse to the 15. Which injurious fact of Shimei against David is amplified by the circumstances 1. Of the place Bahurim a City chosen by David after his first travells to rest and refresh himself and his army in being sore weary as we see Vers 14. 2. Of the persone Shimei by name and a man of the house of Saul his old Enemy whose malice before did lurk and now upon this occasion of Absoloms rebellion bursts forth against David 3. The manner of this injurious fact is both by word and deed cursing David by word and by deed casting stones at him as a dog and at his followers the particular words of whose cursing is set down vers 7. By ingemination saying come out come out shewing thereby the vehemency of his malice and passion as if he would say lay down thy wrongfull title of King who deserves to be thrust out justly therefore 2. In place of due reverence he calles him by two vile titles a bloody man and a man of Belial that is a most wicked man or which is by interpretation a rebellions libertine 3. He declared that it is the hand of a just revenging God that was punishing him for the bood of Saul and his house and for the usurpation of his Kingdome and therefore by Lex talionis the Lord has stirred up his own Sonne to take the Kingdome from him as he had taken it from Saul his Father in Law and from his house so that he was taken in his own snare and was done unto as he had done to others Upon which injurious fact of Shimei Abishai Iocabs Brother is so incensed that he offers to be avengend upon him by taking off his head from doing whereof David disswades him and dissents thereto by three reasons 1. Affirning that he looks on Shimei onely as the instrument but on God as the supream cause correcting him so for his sinnes and against whom he was not to repine but abide what his good pleasure was and patiently to submit thereto The second reason is taken from comparison that seeing his Sonne who was come of his loynes was seeking his life much more might Shimei that Benjamite do as he did and so if he suffered the greater injury much more ought he to suffer the lesse patiently The third is from the fruit that by Gods providence that fact of Shimei farre contrary to his intention might bring forth that the Lord would look on his affliction and requite good for his cursing that day By which arguments of disswasion David mo●lifies the heart of Abishai and his servants and abates their rage Notwithstanding whereof Shimei still insists in his injurious fact untill David and his men came to Baharim where they were to refresh their weary bodies Onely there remaines one doubt to solve before we come to the observations which is this it is said by David that Shimei Vers 11. Was bidden by God to curse David And therefore it would appear if Shimeis cursing was sinnefull that God
were the Author of sinne Whereunto I answer 1. That hereby is not meant that Shimei had any commandement from God as a warrant whereon he could grond that sinnefull action of his which doubtles he had then alleadged and afterward when he excused himself Chap. 19. Because in Gods Word an expresse commandment is in the contrary Ezod 22. 28. Saying Thou shall not revile the Gods nor curse the ruler of thy people and God cannot be contradictour to himself and therefore these words Vers 10. The Lord hath said unto him curse And vers 11. The Lord hath bidden him are not to be taken properly as any such warrant of Gods Word or commandement to do so but onely to shew how David took that cursing as a correction for his sinne from a just God See the like Isa 10. 6. as if he had said to Shimei curse David or as he had bidden him curse which made him to be so patient then and afterward Chap. 19. 23. And not to suffer Abishai to revenge it 2. In this sinnefull action of Shimei's as in others the like we must consider that these three have a hand and each one their severall ends towit Satan stirring up Shimei's lurking malice now to break forth in cursing and casting stones at David whose end herein was to afflict and trouble David more and more now in his distresse the next is Shimei obeying Satans instigation acteth this sinnefull deed out of the hatred of his heart Whose end therefore herein was wraithfull revenge The third is God making use of this their sinnefull action to the correction of his servant whose end was his own glory and his servants good As Joseph speaks of his brethrens wrong done to him Gen. 50. 20. Ye thought evill against me sayes he but God meant it unto good the like may be said of Amnons incest with Tamar and Absoloms with his Fathers Concubines as also Absoloms murther of Amnon and his rebellion now against his Father that Nathans prophesy concerning both might be fulfilled and in like manner in Christs delivering up to death wherein God had an hand and is said to have done it Rom. 8. 32. For the redemption of mankinde and Satan had an hand in it who entred into Judas heart out of malice to Christ and as Enemy to mans redemption and Judas had a hand in it for his owne wicked end to satisfy his covetousnesse These wicked ends in these two wicked actours making the act sinnefull in them which in God directing it to his glory and mans good is the greatest testimony of his over-ruling power and love to mankinde So likewise in Iob 1. 21. and Isa 10. 5 6. The same is evident as here in Shimei's fact God wills that as Davids chastisement which he hates as Shimeis wickednesse so that wicked men are never the freer from guilt and punishment for that hand which the holy God has in their sinnefull actions OBSERVATIONS 1. IN Ziba and Shimej Absolom and Achitophel recorded in this Chapter We see the memory of their wicked deeds dye not as themselves did but the same survives to the posterity in the publick register of sacred history as on the contrary the good deeds of the Godly survive in the same register to their eternall praise and for others imitation as it is said of Maryes breaking of the box of oyntment which she powred on Christs head that it should be recorded wheresoever the Gospell should be preached Which should serve to the disswading of men from doing of evill and to the encouragement of well doers especially when they consider at the last day how both good and evill works shall be remembred and have their severall rewards given to them accordingly And how they survive men even in this life as it is said post fata facta 2. Vers 2. Ziba under a faire pretence and profession of love to David but out of selfe-love only to himselfe hunts after his own gaine and preferment Which shewes the disposition of many crafty worldlings who under a faire shew of religion to God or love and respect to others have their own private and selfish ends which they propose making their gaine to be Godliness but not Godliness to be gaine and pretending love to others by their smaller gifts which like crafty fishers or fowlers they use as baits only to attaine to greater being as one saies more skilfull in the Ablative than liberall in the Dative and like that woman who swept the house not for love of clean-lines but to find out the lost groat pretending love to religion and reformation but intending their owne sacrilegious gaine and ambitious preferment 3. Vers 3. Ziba likewise to attain to his forenamed end by calumnies and false accusation he sowes sedition between David and his loyall and true subject Mephibosheth Which shewes that they who are greedy of gaine and preferment will let loose reines to all sort of wickedness whereby they may attain to their end even to take away the life of man As we see in Judas and here in Ziba accusing his Master of less Majesty and treason 4. In Ziba likewise we see the pattern of a wicked and ungrate servant leaving his impotent and lame Master at such a time of danger to which he did not only expose him but also did back-bite him falsly and sought himselfe to be possessour and owner of his Masters estate whereof before he had the trust only and government So little trust is to be had in men and especially worldlings and such as want the feare of God 5. Vers 4. David who had overcome the sword of many and mighty enemies before and Absoloms great Army hereafter Yet is himselfe overcome by a small gift and a flattering lying tongue of Ziba Which shewes how dangerous and of what great power insinuation by gifts and flattery is even to the best and that oftimes what may not be obtained by force is obtained by fraud which made Satan after his persecution of the Church like a reed Dragon to turn himselfe next into an Angel of light and the vicar of his power to be horned like the lamb though he spake like the Dragon Whereby he attained to so great and universall a following as we see Revel 13. The like effect of which fraud and flattery we see also in Satans deceiving of our first parents 6. David without triall of the truth or hearing first the party accused pronounces through rash crudelity an unjust sentence against just Mephibosheth in favours of an unjust calumniator and so sinneth against the duty of a just judge or Magistrate Which should teach all judges or men in place and power to beware of rash credulity and to trye well before they trust or decree in judgment 7. David under the rod suffers wrong patiently and yet under the same does wrong unjustly Which shewes unto us the frailty and infirmities that are in the best that none should confide in their own strength but
in Bahurim 5. A young man discoverer of the Priests Sonnes And 6. the exploratours that were sent by Absolom to search and apprehend them The next History is the Tragicall end of Achitophel wherein we have to consider seeing he was a man of such wisdome and estimation what were the causes moving him to runne to so desperate a self murther which I shall reduce to three 1. The guilty conscience of his irremissibile offences 2. The fearfull apprehension of the rigour and just punishment which he expected from David 3. The defeat of his Counsell and disappointment of his ambitious project Reasoning therefore thus with himself by Absoloms receiving the Counsell of Hushai Davids reall friend But Absoloms dissembled foe I foresee that he and his cause shall perish But as for me above all others my danger is then greatest For 1. my conscience condemnes me that I have given wicked Counsell against God my King and the Commonwealth and perswaded Absolom to defile his fathers bed and persecute him to death and so am unworthy to be called an Israelite 2. Though I should repent and crave pardon yet I apprehend no favour but justice to be executed upon me by David as an open example to all traitours before the World And 3. though I were spared yet I cannot draw my self to a private life and live as one justly disgraced and discourted therefore to eschew all these inconveniences I resolve upon this onely remedy to execute my self Upon which resolution he departs deserts his Master and his cause returnes to his City of Gilo disposes upon his worldly estate and hangs himself against the Law of God of nature and of Nations The third is the History of the passage of both Armies over Iordan and their camping in Gilead where it is remarked Vers 22. That of all Davids Army that passed over Jordan when they were mustered by daylight their lacked not a man so sweetned was his troubles with this divine preservation and so they came to Mahanaim a City in Gilead renowned Gen. 32. 2. By the vision of Angels which Jacob saw for his protection At this time also Absolom collected his whole forces who were like the sand of the Sea for number and followed after David and his small number and made Amasa his generall who was Sisters Children with Joab and Davids Sisters Sonne whose ambition made him make no conscience of all these naturall conjunctions to joyn against David In the last place we have the History of the furniture and provision for Davids Army 1. By whom And 2. what it was The Persons by whom are three Shobi an Ammonite whom David placed as is thought in Hanuns place who had abused his Embassadours for which cause he meets now David with gratitude in his adversity the other is Machir of Lodebar and the third Barzillai a Giliadite OBSERVATIONS 1. HVshaj the Archite and Zadok and Abiathar Priests and their sonnes Jonathan and Ahimaaz neither for feare of danger nor hope of reward are diverted from their fidelity and duty to David but postponing both feare or favour of man they look to God and a good conscience discharges a loyall and faithfull duty to their Prince even in his greatest adversity and leaves the success to God A good and imitable example to all subjects and sorts of men but alas few Hushai's are now in the civill estate but many Achitophels and few Zadoks in the Ecclesiastick 2. Vers 16. Hushaj discovers to David by Zadok and Abiathar and their sonnes the Counsell that he had given to Absolom and forewarnes him what to do It is commendable then but the contrary to reveale the Counsells or courses of a traytour to a lawfull Prince and to forewarne him of his danger that he may prevent the same 3. Vers 17. This message of so great concernment is carried from the Priests to their sonnes at Eurogell by a maide and themselves thereafter are hid from Absoloms searchers and preserved by a woman of Bahurim Which teaches us that God who hath variety of instruments both in heaven and earth yet in his wisdome sometimes singles out weakest instruments to performe greatest enterprises that his power in them may be seen and he may have the glory of the work Examples whereof we may see in Pharaoh's daughter preserving and educating Moses the woman of Tebes killing Abimelech Deborah overthrowing Midian Jael killing Sicera and poore fisher men converting the whole world the like may be said of Rahab Esther and the late Queen Elizabeth 4. Vers 18. The Priests sonnes are discovered delated persued preserved and though many other dangers appeare in this matter yet the Lord delivers them out of them all Wherein is seen the disappointment of wicked and cruell enterprises the protecting hand of God of his own and a great ground of comfort and confidence to those who follow good courses 5. Vers 22. David hearing of his danger prevents it albeit he was weary and loaded with sorrow yet he spends the night in his removing and passing over Jordan So that Gods promises of his deliverance and confirming him in his Kingdome make him not neglect the ordinary meanes of his safety as we see the like in Paul Act. 27. 31. Which teaches us the like and that we must not refuse to do what God requires for furthering of that which he decrees 6. Vers 23. In Achitophel we see three causes of his desperation 1. The unmeasurable weight of his sinnes 2. The severity of Davids judgment which he feares 3. His diffidence of pardon and his rejection from any participation of honour or advancement in Davids Court or Kingdome Whereupon we collect the like causes and degrees of others their disperation 1. The weight of guiltines which with Cain they count irremissible 2. The apprehension of Gods wrath and justice as we see in Judas 3. Diffidence of pardon and their rejection from any part or place in the Kingdome of heaven The cure whereof or preservative in the contrary is 1. Confidence in the mercies of God exceeding farre the number or weight of our sinnes Psal 103. 8. 2. Relying on the merits of Christ and like the wounded Israelites by the fiery Serpents looking upon him by the eye of faith Zach. 12. 10. 3. Considering the freedome of the Lords love Hos 14. 4. And that life everlasting is his free gift Rom. 6. 23. And lastly remembring the examples of the Lords mercy to Manasseh Marie Magdalen the thief on the Crosse Christs Crucifiers Act 2. 36. And to Paul when he was persecuting him 7. We see in Achitophel what shamefull and comfortles end such may expect who for their own ambitious or covetous ends give Counsell or go on in courses against God Lawfull authority and the good and quiet of Church and Common-wealth 8. Achitophels wisdome was great and highly esteemed and yet in the end he proves a furious fool by his selfmurther so his wisdome was turned into folly because he abused
finding that it was but one alone that was running the King conjectures that it was the bearer of tydings the reason of this conjecture being from common experience for if the Army had been overthrown not one but many had been seen flying and reparing to the City but being victorious and busily occupied in following and dividing the prey as Sisera was thought to have been exercised Judg. 5. 30. Therefore one onely was sent to report the Victory who in his drawing neerer beeing discovered to be Ahimaaz the Son of Zadok David conjectures the newes to be good by the goodnesse of the bearer and who first in the general reports that all was well thereafter most religiously as became the pious Son of such a Father he ascribes the praise of the victory and of the deliverance of Davids Enemies into his hand to God onely not to the wisdome of David or valour of Joab as a flatterer would have done therefore blesses the Lord for that happy successe and when he was asked by David how the young man Absolom was he warily and wisely remembring the cause why Joab would not had him the first reporter dissembleth his knowledge thereof till Cushi who came after him answered Wishing that all the Kings Enemies were as that young man is Whereupon the King justly apprehending that he was killed was much moved and having retired himself to his Chamber made a grievous lamentation for him For these three causes for which as we have formerly said he had given direction to deale gen●ty with him and not to touch him OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 19. IN Ahimaaz his rejoycing at the Victory and desire to carry the new●s thereof to David that he might also rejoyce We see the sympathy that ought to be amongst the Godly that as they are willed to weep with them that weep like fellowfeeling members of one body and as they are willed so to do 1 Pet. 3. 8. So ought they to rejoyce with them who re and especially at the prosperity of Gods Church and people and their deliverance from their Enemies and that the Lord has manifested his justice on them as his mercy towards his own 2. In Ahimaaz desiring from Ioab leave to go and a warrant from him who was chief in power to give him a call and runnes not unsent to tell these glad tydings We see it is the duty of inferiours to submit to the direction of their superiours and especially that the bearers of the glad tydings of salvation should not runne before they be sent and have a call from those who have power to give it them in the Church of Christ Though like Ahimaaz they be never so willing or forward or able also to discharge that function 3. Vers 27. When David is in greatest fear and solicitude concerning the event of the battle he gets good newes of a happy successe and victory even so when the Godly are in greatest feares dangers and difficulties the Lord in their extremity shewes his owne gracious deliverance and opportunity witnesse Jacobs deliverance from Esau Israels at the red Sea Davids from Sauls oruelty his people 's from Hamans bloody plot Eliahs from Achab Peters from Herod Act. 12. And many more others therefore let none despare of the Lords care of them as he had of Daniel and the three Children though they seem to be like the Lamb in the Lyons paw but in a holy confidence let them constantly rely on him 4. David speaking of Ahimaaz Zadok the Priests Sonne sayes He is a good man and brings good tydings joyning well these two together as indeed they ought to be in all the messengers and Ministers of the Gospel in whose mouth the good and glad tydings of the Gospell is put to declare to Gods people of the Summe of Davids victory over all our spirituall Enemies and of our deliverance from them and their overthrow that as the newes is good so they should be good men that carry them their carriage being suitable to their calling and message both holy that their life belies not their tongue nor that it be not said of them as of he Pharisees they say but doe not or as Psal 50. 16. What hast thou to do to declare my statutes or to take my covenant into thy mouth seeing thou hatest to be reformed 5. How welcome was Ahimaaz to David when he brought these newes of his Armies safety and that all was well and how much more welcome should they be And their feet counted beautifull on the mountains who like the Angels at Christs birth bring the glad tydings of salvation to the Lords people and as the Galatians welcomed Paul Gol. 4. 14. As an Angel of God even as Christ Jesus 6. Vers 28. Ahimaaz blesses the Lord for the Victory and ascribes the same onely to him who is the Lord of hostes and neither to Davids wisdome in directing nor Joabs and the Armies valour in executing but onely to the Lords power and Almighty Arme who had given the same Thereby teaching all men in all conditions or successe of affaires to look higher then to instruments and to acknowledge him to be supreame governour to whom the glory of all the good we have belongs that we may say Not unto us but to thy name be the glory and praise for ever 7. V. 32. As David hears the joyfull newes of the Victory so he hears by Cushi the sorrowfull tydings of his Sonne Absoloms death which he so laments Whereby we see how the Lord tempers the cup which he gives mixing to his own some sowrenesse with their sweetnesse so that their joy here is neither full as it shall be hereafter Psal 16. 11. Nor unmixed lest we should be too much inamored with this life and cloyed with Worldly delights contentments therefore our sweetest roses have their prickles Et nil omni ex parte beatum 8. Here likewise we see the miserable condition of civill and intestine warre troubles that in these even such Victories that are obtained by the party prevailing are not without sad losss of some who were dear or neer unto them as is said of the warres between Caesar and Pompey Bella gerit placuit nullos habitura triumphos as our proverb sayes Wherein we lose a friend with a foe which should disswade from civill or intestine division and dissent and perswade to peace and unity both in Church and Commonwalth 9. As has been said on the 5. Verse and explication of the charge given to Joab and the others concerning Absoloms preservation and the causes thereof so here the cause of Davids lamenting for his death was especially with intuition first of his own sins of adultery and the murther of Vriah as the cause why he was so sharply corrected in him who was his Son and a part of himself and which all of us ought to look unto when we are corrected in the persons of our Children or any that are neer and dear unto
might not goe with the King for the forenamed reasons he makes offer of his Sonne Chimham to go with him he to do to him what he thought good Which offer David doth kindely accept and promiseth that whatsoever he would ask of him he would do for him And so having blessed Barzillai he dismisses him home again and so goes on in his journey to Gilgall a famous place in the territory of Benjamin neer to Jericho accompained with Chimham the tribe of Judah and the halfe of the people of Israel The second action is between the ten tribes of Israel and the tribe of Judah the men of Israel complaining to David of the men of Judah That they had stolen him away and brought him and his houshold and men over Iordan and so despised them whose advice should been first had in bringing back their King To whom the men of Iudah answer that they were first in that action 1. Because the King was neer of kinne unto him being of that tribe and therefore collecting that they where causesly angry at them for that cause 2. They shew that it was not for any benefit or reward that they expected or had for this their being first in his conduct To whom these of Israell reply especially concerning that right by kindred to David which the men of Judah pretended affirming that their right to him was greater as having ten parts in him because they were ten tribes whereas they were but one whereby arises such a contention between them in bitter speeches that it occasioned the rebellion of Sheba in the next Chapter and in which contention it is said That the words of the men of Judah were fiercer then the men of Israell OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 33. IN Davids kinde remembrance of Barzillais favour and bounty to him when he was in distresse and in the gracious offer that he now makes unto him for the same We see the praise worthy vertue of gratitude commendable in all persons as the contrary vice is odious and especially in Princes for which we see the thenth leper who was healed by Christ and came back to give him thanks so commended as likewise Pharaoh his gratitude to Joseph in giving Goshen to his Father and friends to whom his successor proved so ungratefull thereafter and was plagued in like manner Davids gratitude to the King of Ammon ungrately requited which was the cause of the Ammonites utter ruine likewise Eliahs gratitude to the Widdow of Sareptah Elisha's to the Woman of Shunem Davids also to the posterity of Jonathan and our Saviours promise That a cup of cold water shall not be given to one of his which shall want its reward as he also shewes at the last day how it shall be said When I was hungry ye fed me not c. Inherit therefore the Kingdome prepared for you before the beginning of the World Which should teach us to be thankfull both to God as we see Psal 103. 2. And to men who have deserved well of us 2. Barzillai is said to have been a very rich and great man and in Davids distresse both helps and hazards with him Whereby we observe the right use of riches and a great estate towit when occasion calls for it both to help and hazard in a good cause wherein either Church or Commonwealth or both have their interest and not to mispend upon pride ryot or superfluities farre lesse to use their greatnesse or bestow their goods for persecuting Gods Church and opposing his cause As we see that Roman Antichrist and his followers which are the hornes of the beast doe Revel 17 12 13. 3. Vers 34. Barzillai speaks of the shortnesse of his life and Vers 37. Of his death and buriall teaching all thereby especially the aged in the midst of their greatnesse and prosperity to be mindefull ever of these things which made Joseph of Arimathea to have his tombe into his garden which made Moses also to teach Gods people Psal 90. 12. to pray Teach us Lord to number our dayes that we may apply our hearts unto Wisdome This was Jobs waiting Job 14. 14. All the dayes of his appointed time till his change should come and which like practice counting every day the day of our death account and entring into eternity if it were ours daily it would further our mortification of sinne and prevent falling therein where as while men with the rich fool being in health and strength promised to themselves long life they lull their souls in security put off repentance and amendement of life and are snatcht away by death unawares and presented to judgement 4. This remembrance of the shortnesse of his life of death and buriall weanes Barzillai from regarding worldly or court delights and from high offered promotion so that he becomes dead to the World in affection before he be dead in the World in condition Which in like manner should teach us how to wean our hearts from regarding any worldly pleasures or profit honour or advancement and specially not to hunt after the same by unlawfull meanes as many do by seriously considering how short momentary an a time we have to enjoy the same how uncertain also the honour of death is and that we must leave all when we go to the grave and are presented to judgment 5. V. 41. When David had made an end of the troubles raised by Absoloms rebellion by the victory which he had obtained over him now followes a new trouble by the division dissention that fell out between the tribe of Judah the other ten tribes of Israel So that we see as is said of old age Eccl. 12. 3. That the cloud returne after raine so in this life the Godly may expect trouble after trouble as one wave followeth in the neck of another or as Jobs messengers of evill newes came one after another 6. We see here also Satans pollicy to hinder a good work which was an unanimous and peaceable reduction of David by raising a dissention between the tribes of Judah and Israel who were of one stock of one religion under one King and fellow members of one Commonwealth And which hath ever been Satans practise since he made the first division between God and our first parents as we see in that attempt of dissention between Abraham and Lot Cain and Abell Saul and David Korah and Moses Israel and the Ephramites Judg. 12. Israel and the Benjamites Judg. 21. Israel and Judah here and Paul and Barnabas Act. 15. ●9 And in the Schismes that he hath ever stirred up in the Christian Church and still does to hinder the Gospell and make the greater way to the propagating of his damnable errours 7. We see here likewise in this dissention from whence it and all other the like proceeds to wit from envy jealousy and pride for precedence and preheminence as Salomon speaketh saying by pride cometh contention which was the cause of of Joabs killing of Abner and thereafter
light is comfortable so they may be comfortable instruments for the good of their people And as lights and lanternes goe before and leade as the fiery pillar did Israell in the wilderness and the starre the wise men so they may go before in a Godly and good example and not be as darkness by the contrary 31. In David and his servants victory at last over all those gyants that invaded them We see that bodily abilities are not to be trusted or gloried in and that there is no wisdome also nor strength against the Lord nor them for whom he stands As we see Rom. 8. 38. As likewise we see what the Godly and they who trust in him may expect against all their most mighty or malicious enemies to wit deliverance and victory in the end So that they may say with the Apostle Rom. 8. 31. and 37. If God be for us who can be against us Nay in all these things we are more then Conquerours through him that hath loved us II. SAM Chap. 22. from the 1. Verse to the 21. IN the former Chapters we have set down Davids many victories against his divers and potent enemies both forraine and domestick After which when he enoyes peace in the end of his raigne he praises and extolles the goodness of God towards him So that as he began his kingdome with prayer as his sonne Solomon also did so he closes and concludes the same with praise these two religious exercises being the Lords prerogative Psalm 50. 15. Which song of praise in this Chapter is coincident both for matter and words with the 18. Psalm in the exposition whereof we mind not therefore copiously and accurately to insist and which we remit to the many worthy Divines who have written upon the book of the Psalmes but generally to illustrate the matter proponed in this Chapter so farre as is requisite for the continuation and more clearing of the history The purpose then of David in this Psalm is to praise God for his many deliverances and victories over his Enemies bearing the type of the trophe's that Christ and his Church shall in like manner obtaine over all his and their Enemies And because the matter proponed here is high mixed and of great variety and therefore hardly can be reduced to an uniforme method yet for facility and instruction we divide the sam into a Preface a proposition a confirmation and a conclusion The preface is the inscription of the Psalm vers 1. The proposition is the commendation of the omnipotent power and gracious favour of God towards him to the 5. vers The confirmation and probation thereof is taken from two arguments the one is from the commemoration of the power and mercy of God delivering him from his Enemies amplified from the 5. vers to the 29. the second is from the narration of the victories given to him over them from the 29. to the 47. vers Whereupon he inferres the conclusion that therefore he will praise God serve him and call upon his name for all his benefits past present and promised to his seed forever and will make a perpetuall profession thereof and leave the example of the same to his posterity for their imitation Concerning the Preface which we supply from the inscription of the 18. Psalm it containes five things 1. The Author 2. To whom it is directed 3. The nature thereof 4. The time when it was composed And 5. Upon what occasion First then the Author is David who albeit he had other glorious styles yet he chooses this as the most honourable to be the Lords servant professing in humility and truth his subjection to God whose Vicegerent he was over others He is called therefore the servant of the Lord in respect both of his publick estate as all Kings are called Rom. 13. 4. And by whom they raigne as also in his private estate common with all others that are Godly and serve him 2. He to whom this Psalm is directed is to the chiefe musitian who was over the others who were appointed both by voyce and instruments to praise God melodiously in the Temple of Solomon and thereby implying the dignity of this excellent Psalm 3. The nature of this Psalm is Eucharisticall or a song of thanks-giving used to be sung after victories or benefits received such as were the song of Moses and Miriam of Deborah and Barak the women of Israell after the killing of Goliah the song of Simeon 4. The time was when David had peace within and without his Kingdome which the ungodly abuse to insolency lust ease excesse and the like 5. The occasion is his deliverance from all his Enemies and especially his most mighty and capitall Enemy Saul which occasion wicked men would abuse to their own glory and ostentation and not to Gods onely as here doth David Next in the proposition we have 1. Davids profession of the Lords goodnesse towards him in preserving him from all his Enemies exalted and amplified by eight severall Epethits whereunto he compares God as not being able sufficiently by one or a few to expresse his thankfulnesse and the Lords goodnesse 2. We have the meanes whereby he procured the Lord to be so gracious which is prayer and therefore Davids resolution to continue in that holy exercise from two arguments 1. Taken from Gods dignity as worthy to be praised and therefore also to be prayed unto 2. From the utility that should redound to himself thereby towit that thereby he shall be saved from all his Enemies The exalting and amplifying of the Lords goodnesse by the Epethits which he ascribes unto him are Metaphoricall And 1. He calles him his Rock 2. His Fortresse 3. His Deliverer 4. His Shield 5. The Horne of his salvation 6. His Tower 7. His Refuge And 8. His Saviour whence he gathers 1. That therefore in him he will trust Vers 3. and 2. That he will call upon him Vers 4. First then God is called a Rock and by application of faith his Rock 1. Because men take refuge when they are persued to Rocks as we see Judg. 20. 47. The Benjamites did to the Rock Rimmon and so Cant. 2. 14. The Spouse is said to be in the clifts of the Rock 2. Because wise men who would build upon a sure foundation which can neither be undermined nor overthrown by storm they build upon a Rock which indeed is Christ Jesus against which the gates of Hell shall never prevail and he is also that Rock spoken of 1 Cor. 10. 4. Which affordeth to us in the Wildernesse of this World spirituall drink and refreshment whereof he spake to the woman of Samaria Joh. 4. 14. 2. He calleth God his Fortresse from a Metaphor of strong holds whereunto men have their recourse in time of warre placeing therein their safety from their persuing or assaulting Enemy and which the Lord proveth to be to all such who put their trust in him 3. David calleth God his Deliverer from
Enemies as he professeth Vers 3. and 4. Yet this his confidence we see is not without fear the Spirit bidding him trust in God but the flesh causing him to fear man such is the battle in the Godliest between the flesh and the Spirit and there being no perfection in this life that so we may watch pray and be humble working out our salvation in fear and trembling 12. By the rehearsall which David makes of his miseries calamities and dangers wherein he was and out of which the Lord to the glory of his grace delivered him We learn that the chief way to glorify God and be pertaker of his mercy is to be sensible and understand our own misery and seriously and truly to acknowledge the same as we see Revel 3. 17 18. 13. Vers 7. David sayes That in his distresse he called upon the Lord. Whereby we learn that sanctified troubles drive us to God as the hardship which the prodigall indured drove him home to his Father and as we may see in the book of the Judges at large Judg. 3. 9. And elsewhere as the bodily diseases also which Christ cured brought the sick unto him and as the storm Matth. 8. 24. drove Peter to come to Christ and pray to him for safety 14. David also sayes That he called upon the Lord and he cryed which shewes unto us two things towit the frequency of his prayer as also by crying the fervency of his prayer which like a loud cry sounds in Gods ears whereby we are taught in like manner to be frequent in prayer asking seeking and knocking and as our Saviour prayed in the Garden and we are exhorted Luk 21. 36. Rom. 12. 11. Eph. 6. 18. and Col. 4. 2. As also to be fervent in prayer and not tepid or luke warme but as the importunate Widdow and friend and as the Cananitish Woman for her Daughter to be carnest wrestling with Jacob. t●ll we get the blessing for as the Apostle sayes The prayers of the Godly availe much if they be fervent and therefore it is said Act. 12. 5. That the Church made earnest prayer to the Lord for Peter 15. David in like manner sayes not onely that he called upon the Lord but also I cryed sayes he to my God Whereby we see the application which faith makes as David made in his greatest distress Psal 22. 1. And as Thomas said my God and my Lord. Which application and appropriation as it were excites the Godly to prayer emboldens them in prayer and gives them a holy assurance after prayer of obtaining their requests 16. He also saies that the Lord did heare him and his cry entred into his eares thereby signifying what a comfortable returne the Lord made of his prayer Whereby we are taught not only that we should pray but also that we should try what returne is made of our prayers as when we pray for grace mortification and other spirituall gifts that are necessary to salvation the defect of which triall makes our prayers to be more out of formality then fruitfull As likewise this is an argument that prayer should be made only to God and to no other because this is his property that he heares the prayers of the Godly wheresoever they are which no creature can do who is not omnipresent and omniscient as the Lord is and who heares not only vocall but mentall prayers as we see Exod. 14. 15. and 1 Sam. 1. 13. Therefore saies the Psalmist Psal 65. 2. O thou that hearest prayer untō thee shall all flesh come and consequently to no other 17. Vers 8. This allegoricall expression of the manifestation of the Lords presence for the terrour of his foes vers 15. And comfort of his own vers 17. Shewes how many waies the Lord hath for the confusion of the Enemies of his Church and the deliverance of his own from their rage and all other danger When we behold then these meteors and mutations in the elements albeit there be naturall causes thereof yet we should ascend higher than nature to supernaturall considerations and deeply contemplate in them the might and Majesty the power and presence in them of the creator for the ends forenamed 18. If the manifestation of the Lords presence be so terrible to his foes as by such ●empests that are temporary and but transient here as is exprest and as we see was at the giving of the law in Sinaj How much more unspeakably terrible shall the Lords presence be as a dreadfull judge to malefactours when he shall come at the last day to exact a strict account of the breach of his law and when the tempest of his dreadfull wrath and dint thereof shall rest upon them unto all eternity 19. Where it is said that the earth shook being without sense and so great a body when the Lord was wroth and that it trembled and that the very foundations of the heaven also moved and shook which is a farre greater and glorious fabrick then the earth O then when the Lord is angry for sinne how should the greatest and most high and glorious Kings and others on the earth who are but the dust thereof and ashes tremble and shake and feare to offend so dreadfull a Majesty and so almighty a God and if his wrath be kindled but a little as is said Psalm 2. 12. How restless should they be till by humble submission they pacify his anger 20. Vers 11. It is said That the Lord rode upon a Cherub and did flie and was seen upon the wings of the wind All which Allegoricall speeches are used to express the Lords celerity which he uses for deliverance of his own people when they are in straits or in danger As we see when his people were pursued by Pharaoh at the red sea were also in danger of an universall massacre by the procurement of Haman How many wayes and from how many dangers David was delivered Daniel from the Lyons den the three Children from the fiery furnace Peter from the prison and imminent death Act. 12. The Lords people in this Island from the Spanish Armado in 88. And the Powder treason 1605. Which should make us in dangers or distress not only to go to God as David speaks who is our present help and our shield but also to wait upon him and have our eyes towards him who assuredly will come and not tarry and make our extremity to be his opportunity 21. Vers 12. By darkness which he made his pavilion dark waters and thick clouds though he dwelleth in unaccessible light is purtrayed out unto us as he comes with speed for the comfort and deliverance of his own in the former verse● so here how he comes to execute his judgments upon the wicked to wit as it were in darkness unseen or perceived by them till they light upon them unawarres as we see in the destruction of Pharaoh and his Army in the red sea and of Herod Act. 12. Haman Achab Jesabell Eglon the
against God as he shewes Psal 119. 11. As also if by Gods judgments his punishments of sinne were meant the same likewise serves as a powerfull preservative from sinne to the Godly as we see Psal 119. 120. 7. Whereas he sayes That all his judgments were before him which is all one with that which he sayes Psal 119. 6. That he had a respect to all Gods commandments we observe that it is not the practise of the Godly to nourish any one bosome sinne as Herod did in hearkning to the Baptist in many things except in the matter of Herodias but as it is the commendation of Zachary and Elizabeth Luke 1. 6. That they walked in all the commandments of God blamelesse so to abandon and mortify all sinnes whatsoever and to observe all Gods ordinances and so to strive to be perfect by that perfection which we call of parts though we cannot in this life attain to that perfection which we call of degrees 8. Vers 24. Where David sayes That he was upright before God We see not onely wherein the Lord delights towit sincerity in his service and worship which Psal 51. 6. He calleth truth in the inward parts But likewise that it is the care of the Godly to be sinceer without hypocrisy and to approve themselves to God as doing all before him and in his sight whom they know to be omniscient and the searcher of the heart and reines 9. Likewise where he sayes And have keept my self from mine iniquity He shewes the difference between grace and sinne in the Godly the one is from God onely for what have we which we have not received And therefore sayes the Apostle Yet not I but the grace of God which was in me but the other which is sinne is onely from ourselves and our corrupt nature and therefore justly should we own it as ours and be humbled therefore 10. Vers 26. 27. From the properties whereby he describes the Godly that they are mercyfull and not cruell or uncharitable as also upright and not hypocriticall nor dissemblers and that they are pure both in heart and life and not unclean like Dogs and Swine Let us learn to be like them as herein they are like to God and do as the Apostle sayes 1 Cor. 10. 1. Follow me as I follow Christ. 11. Where he sayes With the forward God will shew himself unto them unsavory or displeasant We see not onely the naturall disposition of the unregenerate that they are froward rebellious and perverse but also that themselves are the cause why the Lord delights not in them as he doth in the Godly and that the Lord is as an unsavory thing and unpleasant to them especially when he punishes them justly for their sinnes who otherwise to the Godly is so sweet and desireable that they exhort others to taste how sweet he is and excellent and to seek after him Cant. 5. 9. So that he is like that cloud Exod. 14. 10. That was darknesse to the Egyptions but gave light to Israell 12. Vers 28. Gods people is called an afflicted people where we observe what their condition is and ever has been in this World as our Saviour foretold his Disciples and therefore are compared to a Lilly amongst Thornes Cant. 2. 2. Sheep amongst Wolves and to Noahs Ark tossed upon the Waters with which condition they should rest content seeing the same was of their head and Saviour and that the Lord does this for their good as David professes Psal 119. 71. And as the Apostle many wayes shewes Heb. 12. 13. As for the comfort of his afflicted people it is said That God will save them so to the terrour of the proud and ungodly who afflicts them it is said that the Lords eyes in wrath is upon them that he may bring them down whereby we see that as the Godly should referre their cause and wrongs to the Lord so that assuredly he sees there injuries and hears their cryes as he did Israells in Egypt And his peoples in the book of the Judges and will certainly revenge their cause for vengance is his and he will repay and he will bring down the haughtiest of them all who oppresse them as he did Pharaoh Sisera Synacherib Haman Herod and others and has brought down since mighty Princes noble houses and the flourishing estates of many for their pride and oppression 14. Vers 29. As the Lord was Davids Lamp and enlightned his darnesse so is he the author of our prosperity to whom therefore with a thankfull acknowledgment we should referre the same and it is he also who lightneth the darknesse of our minds by his Word and eye-salve of his Spirit whereof he speaketh Revel 3. 18. And maketh his Church also like Goshen wherein was light only when all others are like the Egyptian who were plagued with darknesse or like the Sodomites who were stricken with blindnesse before their destruction Whereupon we collect what a great blessing to any Nation or people the light of Gods Word is and a faithfull Ministery 15. Vers 30 34. and 35. c. We see by the many endowments which David rehearseth for fitting him for warre and for Victory that the Lord when he calleth any man for any work in his Church or Commonwealth he furnishes him with abilities fit for the work as he did Bezaleel and Aholiab for the work of the Tabernacle Sampson for delivering his people from the Philistims the artificers for building the Temple and as our Saviour furnished and fitted his Apostles with the gift of tongues and miracles so that they who want this furniture and fitnes with suteable gifts cannot pretend to a calling from God for the work 16. Hence also we see the Lawfullnesse of some warres whereof we have spoken before and of the art military which serves to confute the errour of the Anabaptists And in the example of David that it is Lawfull for the civill Magistrate to punish rebellious and seditious offenders this being the Lawfull use of the sword given by God to such for correction of them who do evill and to whom they should be a terrour as the Apostle shewes Rom. 13. 3 4. 17. Vers 36. David thankfully acknowledgeth that the Lords gentlenesse or kindenesse to him had made him great as Job also professed That God had given him all that he had whose example O that these who are great in honour or wealth in promotion and advancement would follow and that they would honour God and be comfortable instruments to his Church and people as Joseph was and David here and as his Sonne Solomon Josiah Hezekiah Esther Nehemiah and Daniel with others were and not Enemies to Gods Church to their own destruction as Pharaoh and the wicked Kings of Israell were especially Ahab and Jesabell and as Haman Herod and others 18. V. 42. David tells us That his Enemies in their straight they cryed to the Lord for help but he answered them not Which shewes that in their
beginning and therefore is called the tempter as also to what end he tempts to sinne which is to kindle Gods wrath against man and to bring Gods plagues upon man here and eternall destruction upon him hereafter and therefore he is called a murderer also from the beginning and is an Enemy both to God and man fy then on foolish sinners that are slaves to such a one 4. He moves David to sinne an eminent person yea a man according to Gods own heart Which shewes that Satan dare adventure on the best and strongest as he did on our first parents in their estate of Innocency and on Christ himself and therefore the best of men ought to watch and pray that they be not led by him into temptation remembring the examples of David here and in the matter of Vriah and of Peter notwithstanding of his forewarning by our Saviour As also that the higher any are in place in Church or Commonwealth they are in greatest danger to be tempted because their fall is most scandalous and the occasion by their example of the fall of many Majorum ergo ruina sit minorum cautela 5. In Davids sinne of numbring the people through pride curiosity and confidence in the arme of flesh We see that the Godliest whosoever have their own infirmities which should keep them watchfull and humble and that there is no perfection during this life the fairest face having its own blemish the cleerest day its own clouds and the Godliest on Earth being like Jacobs spotted sheep and with the Apostle Rom. 7. 24. Having occasion to cry out O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death 6. Vers 3. David a Godly man yet sinneth Joab a wicked man yet disswades from sinning Where we observe that no man is so leud or wicked but that sometimes he will dislike some evill and it will be abhominable to him as the Kings word was to Joab 1 Chron. 21. 6. As on the contrary their is no man on Earth so holy but that sometimes he may sinne grosly but as we say one swallow makes not the spring so by one onely act men are not to be Judged holy or wicked 7. Joab gives good counsell to David though he was a wicked man Where may observe that there are many who can give good counsell to others for the avoyding of some sinnes who in grosser trespasses have not grace to take good counsell themselves like the Pharisees who could espy the moat in their neighbours eye and offer to take it out who would not spy nor let the beam be taken out of their own eye Such was Joab who counted Davids command to number the people abhominable though having no great shew of evill and therefore disswaded him therefore who in the matter of Vriah Abner and Amasa could not take good counsell to himself from his own heart Neither let any look who gives the counsell but what it is and if good not to reject it for him who gives the same as our Saviour taught the people concerning the Pharisees 8. Vers 4. Notwithstanding of Joabs good counsell we see that David persists obstinately in his resolution and will have the people numbred that he might know their number a fault too ordinary in Princes who would use arbitrary government and to have their will a Law as the proverb is Sic volo sic jubeo stat pro ratione voluntas Whereas their will should be submitted to Gods and their actions ruled by Law by which they would have the actions of their subjects and inferiours to be ruled 9. David not onely sinnes in commanding the people to be numbred but also in an obstinate resolution notwithstanding of good counsell in the contrary which therefore brought a plague upon his people Which shewes not only how farre foulely the best sometimes may fall and fail but likewise that for the sinnes of a people oftimes either the Lord takes away a good Magistrate from them or else withdrawes his grace from such and leaves them to themselves to commit such sinnes as in the Justice of God and for their offences punishment is inflicted upon them as the three years samine was for Sauls trespasse against the Gibeonites and Davids here in numbring the people 10. Notwithstanding Joabs resistance unto Davids command at first yet for worldly respects and corrupt ends against knowledge and conscience he obeys Davids command at last and prefers obedience to man to the obedience of God contrary to that worthy speech of Peter Act. 5. 29. And which teaches us in like manner that we should in all things obey God rather than man whereof our Saviour gives the reason because he has power both of soul and body to cast both into Hell fire which no man hath II. SAM Chap. 24. from the 10. vers to the end FOllowes now after Davids sinne 1. Davids repentance wherein are three things 1. Davids contrition 2. His confession And 3. his deprecation In the first it is said That after he had numbred the people which was after nine moneths and twenty dayes Davids heart smote him Which is the same phrase that is used 1 Sam. 24. 5. Whereby is signified the awaking and accusation of his guilty conscience and sense of his sinne now wherein he had layed so long in a deep and dead security without either sight or sense of his own guiltynesse before Which smiteing is called Psal 51. 17. The breaking and contrition of the heart Whereupon ensues the second part of his repentance which is a confession to God of his sin exprest by two phrases 1. That he had sinned greatly And 2. that he had done very foolishly and last is his deprecation That the Lord would take away the iniquity of his servant The second thing which we have in the text is the message from God to David which ensued upon his repentance From the 10. vers to the 15. Wherein we have 1. The time 2. The messenger that is sent to David 3. The message it self or Option given to David And 4. Davids answer and election First then the time was when David was up in the morning the smiting of his conscience raising him from his bed which as he sayes Psal 6. 6. He had been watering with his tears in the night time before 2. The messenger whom the Lord sends to him is described from his name Gad. 2. From his office a Seer and more particularly from his relation to David that he was his Seer or one whom familiarly David used to consult with in his doubts or difficulties The word Seer being an ordinary stile given to the Prophets of God because of the Lords revealing by visions words or dreams of his will to them and by them to others As we see 1 Sam. 9. 9. 3. The message it self is an Option of any of three plagues whereby the Lord was to punish Davids people for their own sinnes that had angred him against them