Selected quad for the lemma: city_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
city_n aaron_n child_n verse_n 20 3 6.6782 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A46823 A help for the understanding of the Holy Scripture intended chiefly for the assistance and information of those that use constantly every day to reade some part of the Bible, and would gladly alwayes understand what they read if they had some man to help them : the first part : containing certain short notes of exposition upon the five books of Moses, to wit Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomie : wherein all such passages in the text are explained as were thought likely to be questioned by any reader of ordinary capacity ... / by Arthur Jackson ... Jackson, Arthur, 1593?-1666. 1643 (1643) Wing J67; ESTC R35433 692,552 595

There are 45 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

in the bringing Vers 26. And they went and came to Moses and to Aaron and to all the congregation of the children of Israel unto the wildernesse of Paran to Kadesh There was a city of the Edomites called Kadesh chap. 20. 16. from whence the wildernesse by it was called the wildernesse of Kadesh Psal 29. 8. But this was another Kadesh called usually Kadesh-Barnea Deut. 1. 29. and Rithma Numb 33. 18. That Kadesh upon the borders of Edom was in the desert of Zin chap. 10. 1. this was in the wildernesse of Paran The next station after they went from that Kadesh was mount Hor where Aaron dyed and that was in the fourtieth year after the Israelites came out of Egypt chap. 33. 37 38. but from this Kadesh they were appointed to turn back towards the red sea chap. 14. 25. because they refused to enter the land of Canaan and thereupon as God had threatned did wander eight and thirty years in the wildernesse Deut. 2. 14. So that it is evident that this Kadesh whither the spies returned was not that Kadesh upon the borders of Edom but another that was close upon the South parts of Canaan where Moses and the congregation had stayed for them all the while they were search●ng the land Vers 29. The Amalekites dwell in the land of the South c. This their reckoning up of so many mighty nations with whom they must look to grappel was purposely added to discourage the people from entring the land As for the Amalekites though they were not of the nations that inhabited the land of Canaan yet the spies first mention them because they border●d in the South parts close upon the land of Canaan where the Israelites were to enter and so were likely to come forth against them and to withstand them with all their power which they might the rather think because the year before at their first coming out of Egypt this nation had drawn out some forces against them to withstand them in their passage through the wildernesse and had there fought with them And the Canaanites dwell by the sea and by the coast of Jordan The sea here intended was not the mid-land sea which was on the West of Canaan but the dead sea which lay on the East of Canaan where the river Jordan ran into it as we may well conceive by that which seems most probable to be the drift of these words to wit that as they had told the people in the former words of the Amalekites dwelling upon the South of Canaan and the Hittites Jebusites Amor●tes dwelling in the mountains that is those mountains in the South of the land nigh unto the wildernesse where the Israelites now lay thereby intending to let the people see that there would be no entring the land on the South because of those mighty nations that would be there ready to oppose them as indeed it is said Deut. 1. 44. that when afte●wards the Israelites would needs go up against Gods expresse command The Amorites which dwelt in the mou●●ains ●ame out against them and chased them as bees do so in these words the Canaanites dwell by the sea and by the coast of Jordan they intended further to shew the people that in case they should think to fetch a compasse about and to enter into the East-side of the land there they would be kept out by the river of Jordan and the dead sea which ran along on that side and by the Canaanites one of the nations of the land so particularly called who dwelt by the sea and by the coast of Jordan and so being a valiant and strong people would improve those advantages for the best defence of their countrey and not suffer the Israelites to enter there Vers 30. And Caleb stilled the people before Moses c. And Joshua with him chap. 14. 6 7. And Joshua the sonne of Nun and Caleb the sonne of Jephunneh which were of them that searched the land rent their clothes And they spake unto all the company of the children of Israel saying The land which we passed through to search it is an exceeding good land yet now at first it may be Joshua advisedly held his peace because he was Moses minister However for this it was that Moses made promise to Caleb concerning Hebron and the country adjoyning Josh 14. 9. And Moses sware on that day saying Surely the land whereon thy feet have troden shall be thine inheritance and thy childrens for ever because thou hast wholly followed the Lord my God Vers 32. The land through which we have gone to search it is a land that eateth up the inhabitants thereof That is a land wherein the people of the land are continually devoured by reason of their bloudy warres wherein they are ever involved either with their neighbours or amongst themselves implying how little hope there was for them to prevail against such a fierce untamed people and how little comfort they could expect if they should drive out some of the inhabitants and plant themselves in their room they should be sure to be eaten out with continuall warres Look as formerly the Amorites had conquered the Moabites Numb 21. 28 29. the Caphterims or Philistins had destroyed the Anims Deut. 2. 23. so it would be with them and indced this very phrase was after used against this land when the heathen had destroyed the Israelites in it Ezek. 36. 13 14. Thus saith the Lord God Because they say unto you Thou land devourest up men and hast bereaved thy nations therefore thou shalt devoure m●n no more CHAP. XIV Vers 3. ANd wherefore hath the Lord brought us into this land c. Deut 1. 27. this is more fully expressed to wit that they said Because the Lord hated us he hath brought us forth out of the land of Egypt to deliver us into the hand of the Amorite to destroy us Vers 4. And they said one to another Let ●s make a captain and return into Egypt This above all discover●d their wonderf●ll rage and madnesse if we consider 1. the difficulties they must needs meet with in their return to Egypt for they could not expect to be fed with manna from heaven nor the red sea to be divided before them again and 2. the scorn and ●ruell bondage they might well expe●t when they came thither for if the Egyptians oppressed them so sorely before how much more hardly were they like to deal with them now even in remembrance of the death of their first-born and the drowning of Pharaoh and his army in the red sea How farre they proceeded in this their wicked intention may not happely be expressed but if they did no more but consult about it observable then it is that these thesr evil purposes are counted to them as if they had been done by them Neh. 16. 17. But they and our fathers dealt proudly And in their rebellion appointed a captain to return to their bondage Vers 5. And
within the compasse of three and twenty years they shew thus to wit 1. That Judah might marry and have his three sonnes Er Onan and Shelah by his wife the daughter of Shuah in the first three years after Joseph vvas sold into Egypt 2. That Er might be marriedto Tamar when he vvas sixteen years old Onan also the following year vvhich was towards the latter end of the seven plenteous years in Egypt about eighteen years after Joseph was sold thither and 3. That in the five following years Tamar might by Judah as is here related conceive with child and bring forth Pharez and Zarah a little before their going into Egypt And whereas it may be objected that Pharez had two sonnes Hezron and Hamul vvhen Jacob vvent dovvn into Egypt Gen. 46. 12. The sonnes of Pharez were Hezron and Hamul to this they answer That Hezron and Hamul are there reckoned amongst those that vvent dovvn vvith Jacob into Egypt not because they were then born but because they vvere of Jacobs family in Egypt vvhilest Jacob vvas yet living Thus I say some Expositours understand this place that Judah married this Canaanites daughter contrary no doubt to his father Jacobs mind who vvas himself strictly forbidden to marry amongst them by Isaac that very year that Joseph was sold into Egypt But 2. because Hezron and Hamul are so expresly reckoned amongst those that vvent dovvn vvith Jacob into Egypt Gen 46. 12. therefore many Expositours yea the most conceive that these vvords And it came to passe at that time must not be taken strictly that Judah married thus at that time vvhen Joseph was sold into Egypt but that it vvas done about that time that is say they at Jacobs first coming into the land of Canaan vvhen he left his uncle Laban and the ground of this their opinion is this because Jacobs coming from Laban vvhich vvas when Joseph vvas six years old as is evident if vve compare Gen. 30. 25. And it came to passe when Rachel had born Joseph that Jacob said unto Laban Send me away c. give me my wives and my children for whom I have served thee and let me go c. vvith Gen. 31. 40. Thus have I been twenty years in thy house I served thee fourteen years for thy two daughters and six years for thy cattel c. vvas but eleven years before Joseph vvas sold into Egypt consequently not above foure thirty years at the most ere Jacob vvent dovvn thither to Joseph all vvhich time vvill be strait enough if not too little for all these things to be done in that are here related and for the birth of Ezron and Hamul the sonnes of Pharez vvho are reckoned amongst those that vvent dovvn vvith Jacob into Egypt for though Judah married the daughter of Shuah about tvvo years after their coming into Canaan and yet vvas he then but thirteen years old as being at the utmost but five y●ars older then Joseph and had by her Er Onan and Shelah in the three next years after his marriage and though he then married Er his eldest sonne to Tamar vvhen he vvas also but thirteen years old vvhich vvas sixteen years after their coming into Canaan three years at least after Joseph vvas sold into Egypt to this if you adde but three years for the death of Er the marriage and death of Onan the going home of Tamar to her fathers house Judahs incest with her and the conception and birth of her tvvo twinnes Pharez and Zarah the fruit of that incest and then fifteen years more ere Pharez could be marriageable and have those his two sonnes Hezron and Hamul who are numbred amongst those that went dovvn vvith Jacob into Egypt this vvill make the vvhole number of foure and thirty years from Jacobs coming into Canaan till his removing into Egypt And so they conclude that doubtlesse the time here spoken of vvhen Judah married this Canaanites daughter vvas vvithin a vvhile after their coming into Canaan And indeed neither of these Expositours do suppose any thing impossible yet the first may seem most probable because it were very strange if Judah and his sonnes Er and Pharez should all marry at twelve or thirteen years of ag● Vers 7. And the Lord slew him The like also is said of Onan his younger brother vers 10. and the meaning in both places is that they died not an ordinary naturall death but that they were taken away in an extraordinary manner by some remarkable judgement whereby it was manifest unto others that they were cut off by the revenging hand of God for their notorious wickednesse And this was the fruit of Judahs marriage with a daughter of that accursed nation of the Canaanites that were in time to come to be rooted out that the Israelites might dwell in their room his children that he had by her proved sonnes of Belial and were destroyed by the just judgement of God upon them Vers 8. Go in unto thy brothers wife c. By this it appears that God had given this in charge to the Patriarchs as many other things which was afterward established by the written Law Deut. 25. 5. If brethren dwell together and one of them die and have no child the wife of the dead shall not marry without unto a stranger her husbands brother shall go in unto her and take her to him for wife and perform the duty of an husbands brother unto her Vers 11. Remain a widow in thy fathers house till Shelah my sonne be grown It is evident that in these words Judah thought to assure Tamar that assoon as his sonne Shelah was marriageable he also should take her to wife and raise up feed to his deceased brethren but withall it is most probable that he meant nothing lesse but onely intended to put her off and that as suspecting that she had some way been the occasion of the death of his other two sonnes as the words following do import For he said to wit within himself Lest peradventure he die also as his brethren did And indeed why ●lse did he send her home to her father she might have stayed awhile unmarried with him and when Shelah was grown we see Judah minded not the performance of his promise as is noted vers 14. yea his own confession makes it manifest vers 26. where he accuseth himself of doing her wrong She hath been more righteous then I because that I gave her not to Shelah my sonne Vers 12. Judah was comforted and went up to his sheep-shearers to Timnath A city in the Philistines countrey which also befell Judahs children for a possession Josh 15. 20 57. This is the inheritance of the tribe of Judah c. Cain Gibea and Timnath Vers 14. And sate in an open place Such open places harlots used Ezech. 16. 25. Thou hast built thy high places at every head of the way Jer. 3. 2. Lift up thine eyes unto the high places and see where thou hast
corner for otherwise we cannot say whether the corner pillar was to be numbred amongst the twenty pillars appointed on each side for the length of the court or the ●●n appointed for the breadth Vers 16. And for the gate of the court shall be an hanging of twenty cubits c. See the note chap. 26. 36. Vers 18. And the height five cubits c. This court therefore of th● tabernacle was but half so high as the tabernacle and therefore the tabernacle might be easily seen yet these hangings were so high that men could not overlook them Vers 19. All the vessels of the tabernacle c. shall be of brasse That is such as were onely for the taking down and setti●g up of the tabernacle as the pinnes or stakes which were driven into the ground to fasten it Vers 20. And thou shalt command the children of Israel that they bring pure oyl olive beaten c. It seems that oyl which was first gotten out of the olives by beating or stamping of them was farre purer ●nd clearer from dregges then that which was afterward crushed out with a presse This therefore th e children of Israel were appointed to provide for the lamp in the golden candlestick even pure oyl olive beaten wherewith the priests were to maintain the lamps to cause the lamp to burn alwayes that is every night by renewing them still at the appointed times As the daily sacrifice is called a continuall burnt-offering Exod. 29. 42. and yet it was offered but twice every day at morning and evening And so this word alwayes is explained in the following verse Aaron and his sonnes shall order it from evening to morning before the Lord. At the East end of the ta bernacle either abov● the vail or at the opening of it there might come in light sufficient in the day time and therefore I conceive then the lamps burnt not but in the night onely and were put out in the morning which some inferre also from that 1. Sam. 3. 3. where it is said that the Lord appeared to Samuel ere the lamp of God went out in the temple of God to wit before the break of day Now by this pure oyl was signified the gifts and graces of the Spirit whereby the ministers of God are fitted to be as lights among the people Vers 21. In the tabernacle of the congregation c. The ●abernacle is here called the tabernacle of the congregation because though the people did not enter into this place yet to the doore of this tabernacle they brought their offerings and there did the Lord meet with the people and make known his will to them Aaron and his sonnes shall order it c. Signifying that the priests lippes should preserve knowledge CHAP. XXVIII Vers 1. ANd take thou unto thee Aaron thy brother c. Because Aaron was the brother of Moses to prevent any envy amongst the people this is in the first place expressed that it was by the Lords appointment and command that he and his sonnes were set apart to the office of the priesthood Vers 2. And thou shalt make holy garments for Aaron thy brother for glory and for beauty That is glorious and beautifull And hereby was signifyed 1. the insufficiency of Aarons priesthood that there was not in him if you look on him in his own person sufficient worth that he should mediate between God and man for th●refore was this holinesse in his garments to cover the pollution of his own p●rson 2. the more then angelicall purity and holinesse of Christ whose type Aaron thus attired was Heb. 9. 14. Christ through the eternall spirit offered himself without spot to God By whom also his Church is clothed with garments of beautifull glory Isai 52. 1. Put on thy beautifull garments oh Jerusalem the holy citie Rev. 19. 8. To her was granted that she should be arrayed in fine linen clean and white for the fine linen is the righteousnesse of the Sain●s 3. to shew the extraordinary degrees of holinesse required in those that serve at the altar Vers 3. And thou shalt speak unto all that are wise-hearted c. that they may make Aarons garments to consecrate him c. That is to be a signe of his consecration and sanctification from God therefore it was death to minister without these garments Vers 6. And th●y shall make the ephod of gold c. It was called the ephod of an hebrew word which signifieth to close compasse or gird about because it compassed fitly the body and was tied thereto it was the outmost of all Aarons garments and covered his whole body both back and breast from the shoulders down to the loyns excepting onely the breast where the breast-plate was fastened Vers 7. It shall have the two shoulder-pieces thereof joyned at the edges thereof and so it shall be joyned together These shoulder-pieces were either the pieces which went up both before and behind from the body of the ephod and so met together on the top of each shoulder and were joyned together in the edge thereof a hole being left in the midst through which the priests head went when he put on the ephod or else it is meant of certain wings as we call them which were joyned to the ephod in the edge round about each shoulder Vers 8. And the curious girdle of the ephod which is upon it shall be of the same c. By this is meant two pieces or slaps which came from the back part of the ephod under the arm-holes and are called the curious guard or girdle because the nether lappets served as a girdle to fasten it below and it is said that it should be upon it that is is joyned as a part of it which is added to distinguish it from the girdle mentioned ver 39. Thou shalt make the girdle of needlework which was not a part of the ephod as this which is therefore called often the golden girdle Vers 9. And thou shalt take two onyx-stones and grave on them the names of the children of Israel These two onyx-stones whereon were graven the names of the twelve sonnes of Jacob signified the firm and perpetuall love of Christ toward his Church and also how precious they be to him how continually mindfull he is of them Cant. 8. 6. Set me as a seal upon thy heart as a seal upon thy arm for love is strong as death See also Hag. 2. 23. In that day saith the Lord of hosts will I take thee O Zorobbabel my servant c. and will make thee as a signet Vers 10. Six of their names on one stone and the other six names of the rest on the other stone according to their birth That is first Reuben then Simeon and so the rest according to their age And this signified the like precious faith and dignity which all have obtained before God in Christ 2. Pet. 1. 1. To them that have obtained the like precious faith So Gal. 3.
why they might not go out as mourners to the buriall of their brethren to wit because they might not put off their priestly attire and so give over the service they had in hand the rather because they were newly consecrated and there were so few of them to attend the service Vers 9. Do not drink wine or strong drink c. Nadab and Abihu though not through wine had erred not in putting a difference betwixt holy and profane upon this occasion God gives charge that other things which might occasion the like errour may be avoyded Vers 12. Take the meat-offering that remaineth c. Namely the remainder of the meat-offering that is mentioned chap. 9. ver 17. Which Moses calls upon them to eat according to the directions formerly given them 1. Thereby to incourage Aaron and his sonnes to go on in their service lest they should have doubted because of the late judgement upon Nadab and Abihu whether God would ever be pleased that they should any more meddle with his sacrifices 2. Because this sudden destruction of their brethren had let them see how exactly carefull they had need to be that all things were done according to Gods appointment and thirdly Because there was great danger lest being disturbed by this heavy and unexpected accident they should forget or neglect their duty herein especially in this particular of eating the meat-offering it being usuall with men in sorrow to refuse their meat Vers 13. And ye shall eat it in the holy place c. That is the court of the Sanctuary as Levit. 6. 16. And the remainder thereof shall Aaron and his sonnes eat with unleavened bread it shall be eaten in the holy place in the court of the tabernacle of the congregation they shall eat it Vers 14. And the wave-breast and heave-shoulder shall be eaten in a clean place c. Moses here also puts them in mind to eat the shoulder and breast to wit of the peoples peace-offerings Levit. 9 21. And the breast and right shoulder Aaron waved for a wave-offering before the Lord and that in a clean place meaning the camp of Israel and in ages following the citie of Jerusalem where the like holy things were eaten Thou and thy sonnes and thy daughters with thee Namely such as were onely maids widows and divorced returned to their fathers house see Levit. 22. 11 12. where others are also mentioned that might eat of them Vers 16. And Moses diligently sought the goat of the sinne-offering c. Amongst other things wherein Moses feared lest Aaron and his sonnes should offend by reason of the sorrow which God had brought upon them this was one thing he doubted lest they should omit the eating of the sinne-offering and therefore he sought diligently to see what was done with it to wit that goat of the sin-offering spoken of Levit. 9. 15. And he tooke the goat which was the sinne-offering c. as appeareth vers 10. of this chapter where Moses saith it was given them to bear the iniquitie of the congregation Indeed it is clear that the sinne-offering for the congregation was to be carried without the camp and burnt by that law Levit. 4. 21. And he shall carry forth the bullock without the camp and burn him as he burned the first bullock But then the bloud of that sinne-offering was carried within the tabernacle Levit 4. 16 17. Now because Aaron had not yet accesse into the holy place till he had prepared a way by these first sacrifices in the court therefore the bloud of this sinne-offering was not brought into the tabernacle as in an extraordinary case and consequently it was not to be burnt without the camp but to be eaten by the priests by that other law Levit. 6. 26 30. The priest that offereth it for sinne shall eat it in the holy place shall it be eaten in the court of the tabernacle of the congregation c. This Aaron and his sonnes in their grief either forgetting or not duly considering did burn it without the camp which was not according to the law See the note upon Levit. 9. 15. And he was angry with Eleazar and Ithamar c. Though Aaron was also in fault and Moses in reproving Eleazar and Ithamar his sonnes in his presence did also reprove him yet he bends his anger chiefly against his sonnes as sparing what he could the father in reg●rd of his late heavie losse of his two other sonnes his sons faith the text that were left alive which is added to intimate one chief cause of his anger namely that they notwithstanding they had seen what was done to their brethren had exposed themselves to like danger but that God in mercy spared them Vers 18. Behold the bloud of it was not brought in c. Therefore it should have been eaten and not burnt See the former note upon vers 16. Vers 19. And Aaron said unto Moses Behold this day they have offered their sinne-offering c. This apology of Aarons consists of three parts 1. That though they had failed in this particular yet the main had not been neglected the sacrifices had been duly offered 2. That their failing in the rites and ceremonies requisite was by reason of grief occasioned by those dolefull accidents which had so lately befallen them 3. That this might now extenuate his fault though happely he did not omit it upon that reason that if they had eaten the sinne-offering it would not have been acceptable to the Lord because of that heavinesse and sorrow that was upon them which made them unfit and unworthy to eat those holy things for the law requires them that eat before the Lord to rejoyce See Deut. 12. 7. 26. 14. Hose 9. 4. Vers 20. And when Moses heard that he was content Either as approving his fact and allowing his excuse to be sufficient or else rather as finding it a lesse fault then he supposed it had been to wit that he did it not willingly but of humane frailty and perplexed with grief whereupon he passeth it by with pity as loth to adde affliction to affliction and perhaps deferred his further admonition till another time CHAP. XI Vers 1. ANd the Lord spake unto Moses and to Aaron saying unto them c. The former laws concerned the sanctification of the priests and the rites and ceremonies of the sacrifices now generall laws are given concerning the sanctification of the people and first for avoyding that uncleannesse which cometh from things without the man and in giving these laws the Lord spake both to Moses and to Aaron because it belonged both to the magistrate and priest to see these laws executed the priest being to teach the difference between clean and unclean Ezek. 44. 23. And they shall teach my people the difference between the holy and profane and cause men to discern between the unclean and clean and the Magistrate to take care that this difference was observed and hence is that
now to go up and take possession of the land which God had promised them Deut. 1. 20 21. And I said unto you Ye are come unto the mountain of the Amorites which the Lord our God doth give unto us Behold the Lord thy God hath set the land before thee go up and possesse it the people already no doubt through i●fidelity beginning to fear the event desire that first they might send some certain men not onely to search out the fertility and strength of the land but also to take knowledge of the wayes and passages rivers fords and mountains by which they were to go ver 22. Moses not knowing their distrustfull hearts likes well the motion vers 23. and consulted with God who thereupon returned this answer here set down yielding or giving way to their motion but in displeasure for their greater hurt and that no question because of their present infidelity and appointing them to send men that might search the land of Canaan even the land which God before had spied for them Ezek. 20. 6. and searched out Deut. 1. 33. Vers 2. Of every tribe of their fathers shall ye send a man every one a ruler among them There was one sent of every tribe that every tribe might be satisfied by a witnesse of their own and all Princes in their tribe as most likely to be courageous and that their testimony might be of more credit not of the baser sort because the businesse was weighty Vers 6. Caleb the sonne of Jephunneh His name signifieth hearty and he brought Moses word again as it was in his heart Josh 14. 7. Vers 11. Of the tribe of Joseph namely of the tribe of Manasseh Why is this clause prefixt before the tribe of Manasseh rather then Ephraim either because Manasseh was Josephs first-born or rather onely as a hint of that priviledge which Joseph had and so it is no more then if he had said of that tribe which came of Josephs other sonne namely of Manasseh you shall send Gaddi the sonne of Susi Vers 16. And Moses called Oshea the sonne of Nun Jehoshua This name Jehoshua is elsewhere ordinarily written Joshua and sometimes Jeshua as Neh. 8. 17. and in Greek Jesus as Acts 7. 45. where Stephen saith that the tabernacle of witnesse made in the wildernesse their fathers that came after brought in with Jesus into the possession of the Gentiles and Heb. 4. 8. If Jesus that is Joshua had given them rest then would he not afterward have spoken of another day and Jesus we know signifieth a Saviour Matth. 1. 21. Thou shalt call his name Jesus saith the Angel to Joseph concerning Christ the sonne of the virgin Mary for he shall save his people from their sinnes so that evident it is that this faithfull servant of God who afterwards succeeded Moses in the government of Israel and was now one of the spies sent to search the land of Canaan was called Jehoshua or Joshua by Moses to signifie that he should save his people from their enemies the Canaanites and bring them into the promised land and should therein be a notable type of Christ the onely Saviour of the world But may some say Oshea which was his former name doth also signifie a Saviour and why then was his name changed I answer many reasons are given for this by Expositours but the most probable is this that by adding Jah which is the proper name of God Psal 68. 4. contracted of Jehova or as some think by adding the first letter of Jehova to Oshea so to make his name Jehoshua thereby was signified that he should not onely be a Saviour but also the Lords Saviour implying that he should by authority from God and by the help and assistance of God be the Saviour of his people and therein also the more manifestly a type of Chri●t who is the Lords anointed and the Lord our righteousnesse Jer. 23. 6. When his name was thus changed it is not expressed onely we see that he is called Joshua in the story of Moses before this to wit at the ●ight which he had with the Amalekites Exodus 17. 9. Vers 17. Get you up this way South-ward c. Or by the South meaning the South part of the land of Canaan which was nearest to them Vers 21. So they went up and searched the land c. It may be probably thought that they went not all together but divided themselves for going all together they would have been suspected neither could they have viewed the whole countrey in so short a time and so they went quite through the land from one end to the other that is from the South to the North for so much is implyed in these words so they went up and searched the land from the wildernesse of Zin c. for the wildernesse of Zin here spoken of is not the wildernesse of Sin that bordered upon Egypt Exod. 16. 1. but a wildernesse called by a name much like the wildernesse of Zin which lay on the South of the land of Canaan Numb 34. 3. Joshua 15. 3. and Rehob and Hamath are cities that were on the utmost North part of the land onely Rehob lay more towards the West-side of the land and Hamath towards the Ea●●-side and therefore it is said that they searched the land unto Rehob as men come to Hamath because being come to Rehob they struck over East-ward from Rehob to Hamath or because they searched all that Northern tract as men usually go from Rehob to Hamath Vers 22. And they ascended by the South and came unto Hebron where Ahiman c. Having in the former verse generally related how the spies searched the land quite through from the South to the North and from the West to the East here Moses undertakes to relate ●ome particular passages that were most memorable either in their going out or coming back again and so shewing how they went up by the South for there they entred the land he tells us how they came to Hebron a citie in the South parts of Canaan where Abraham and Isaac and Jacob with their wives were buried and there they saw certain huge giants Ahiman Shesui and Talmai who were afterwards expelled thence and slain by Caleb Josh 15. 14. and are here called the children of Anak ether because they were indeed his son●es which seems most probable because it is said Josh 15. 13. that Arbah from whom Hebron was called Kiriath-arbah or the citie of Arbah was the father of Anak or else because all giants were in those times called the children of Ana● Now Hebron was built seven years before Zoan in Egypt This declareth not onely the antiquity of Hebron but also by consequence the goodnesse of the land Vers 23. And they came unto the brook of Eshc●l and cut down thence a branch with one cluster of grapes c. Of admirable bignesse which therefore they brought upon a staff betwixt two that it might not be marred
against the Lord. The greatest difficulty in thesewords is what is meant by the first clause every oblation of theirs But the most of Expositours agree that this is mentioned as a generall comprehending all those particulars after mentioned as if it had been thus expressed every oblation of theirs shall be thine that is every meat-offering every sinne-offering and every trespasse-offering of theirs and indeed I see not of what particular sort of sacrifice it can be meant because they are all besides expressed by name Vers 10. In the most holy place thou shalt eat it That is in the court of the tabernacle or the tents or houses round about it which is called here the most holy place to wit in respect to the camp of Israel and afterwards the citie Jerusalem which were holy places for the like holy things as they were called to be eaten in the Passeover peace-offerings c. yea and in respect to the great court for the people which was without the priests court mentioned 2. Chron. 4. 9. and called therefore the outer court Ezek. 42. 14. Vers 11. And this is thine the heave-offering of their gift with all the wave-offerings c. That is the right shoulder and the wave-breast of their peace-offerings with all other gifts that they were heaved and waved no part thereof being burnt upon the altar Vers 12. All the best of the oyl and all the best of the wine and of the wheat the first-fruits of them c. These things here mentioned were allotted for the priests sustenance Some of the first-fruits of their land were brought to the Lord at their three great feasts as a sheaf of their barley at the feast of Passeover or unleavened bread chap. 23. 10. and two loaves of their new wheat at the feast of Pentecost ver 17. and the first of their wine and oyl at the feast of tabernacles But these were brought in the name of all the inhabitants of the land in generall Besides these there●ore particular men were of their own corn and fruits to bring the first-fruits unto the Lord as is enjoyned in severall places Exod. 22. 29. and 23. 19. c. concerning which there is no other direction given but that th●y should be of the first and of the best as is here expressed the quantity being left to the free bounty of the owner according as he had found the blessing of God upon his grounds and of these first-fruits is this place to be understood Some indeed make a difference betwixt the first-fruits mentioned here ver 12. and the first ripe mentioned in the following verse What soever is first ripe in the land which they shall bring unto the Lord shall be thine which they say is meant onely of those first ripe fruits which the people were to bring to the priests concerning which the Law speaks Deut. 26. 2. But whether there can be any such difference gathered from the Scripture is very questionable Vers 16. And those that are to be rede●med from a maneth old shalt thou redeem c. That is the first-born of men for though in the foregoing verse there is mention made of the redemption of the first-born both of man and beast Neverthelesse the first-born of man shalt thou surely redeem and the firstling of unclean beasts shalt thou redeem yet this hath reference onely to the first-born of men as is evident 1. because it is said here they were to redeem them at a moneth old which was indeed the time for the redemption of the first-born of men but the firstlings of beasts were to be given to the Lord at eight dayes old Levit. 22. 27. and therefore it seems were at that age to be redeemed and secondly because the estimation or price with the priest is here appointed to set upon the first-born that were to be redeemed is five shekels which was indeed the price for the redemption of the first-born of men Numb 3. 46 47. and Levit. 27. 6. But it is no way probable that the same price of redemption was set upon the first-born of men and the firstlings of unclean beasts of the firstling of an 〈◊〉 we reade expressely that it was to be redeemed with a lambe Exod. 13. 13. and therefore the like may be conceived of the firstling of other beasts or else that they were reasonably rated by the pri●st acco●ding to their value Vers 17. But the firstling of a cow or the firstling of a sheep or the firstling of a goat thou shalt not redeem they are holy See Deut. 15. 19. Vers 19. It is a cov●nant of salt for ever c. That is in liew of your service in the tabernacle I have allotted you this for your maintenance by a perpetuall and unchangeable coven●nt Now this covenant in regard of its perpetuity is here called a covenant of salt and so also Gods covenant with David 2. Chron. 13. 5. either in reference to that Law Lev. 2. 13. Every oblation of thy meat-offering shalt thou season with salt neither shalt thou suffer the salt of the covenant of thy God to be lacking from thy meat-offering as if it had been said that this covenant made with the priest for their maintenance in the particulars before mentioned should continue for ever even as that which he had made with the Israelites that every sacrifice should be salted with salt or else because salt having a virtue to preserve any thing from corruption therefore by a cov●nant of salt is meant onely a stable firm and incorruptible covenant Vers 20. Thou shalt have no inheritance in their land neither shalt thou have any part among them That is when the land shall be divided by lot there sha ll be no lot for the Levites Indeed they had cities to dwell in and suburbs but tho se also were given them from the other tribes Numb 35. Vers 22. Neither must the children of Israel henceforth come nigh the tabernacle c. To wit as they offered to do in the rebellion of Korah Vers 23. But the Levites shall do the service of the tabernacle of the congregation and they ●hall bear their iniquity That is the Levites shall bear the punishment of their own iniquity if they transgresse yea and of the peoples if by their not watching over the holy things they be suffered to transgresse Vers 27. And this your heave-offering shall be reckoned unto you as though it were the corn of the threshing floore That is this tenth of your tithes which you shall give to the priest the Lord will accept at your hands no lesse then if having lands you should pay tithe of the increase thereof as the rest of the people do unto you Vers 32. Neither shall ye pollute the holy things of the children of Israel lest ye die Which might be done by the uncleannesse of the priests and many other wayes CHAP. XIX Vers 2. SPeak unto the children of Israel that they bring thee a red hoifer
c. This is the Law for making the water of separation as it is called ver 9. that is the water that was to be kept for the cleansing of those that were legally unclean and for that cause were separated from the holy things of the tabernacle When this Law was given we cannot say but very fitly it is added here to that which went before for as in the foregoing chapter to appease the peoples excessive fear chap. 17. 12. the priests and Levites were appointed to do the service of the tabernacle and to watch over the people that they might not transgresse about any of the holy things so here also the Lord appoints a water of separation to be made that so if any of the p●ople had contracted any legall uncleannesse by the sprinkling of this water upon them they might be cleansed and so might come freely again to the service of God in the tabernacle without fear of those plagues which otherwise their pollutions might have brought upon them The legall pollutions were to affect them with the filthinesse of their sinnes and this water of separation was to teach them that if they desired to be cleansed from their filthinesse they must go out of themselves and obtain it from God from his Sanctuary and sacrifice For the making of this water a red heifer was to be provid●d and that by the common care and charge of all the children of Israel because it was to be for the common good of them all even for the cleansing of any one amongst them that was by any accident legally unclean And indeed as all other sacrifices so this in speciall was a notable type and figure of Christ for first it must be a heifer that the imbecillity of the sex might shadow forth the mean and humble and despised condition wherein Christ should live in the world secondly a red heifer either to denote the truth of his humane nature that he was indeed the sonne of man who was at first called Adam which in the Hebrew signifies red because of the red earth of which he was made or rather to betoken the bloudinesse of his passion whereto the Prophet seems also as some conceive to allude Esa 63. 1 2. Who is this that cometh from Edom with dyed garments from Bozrah Wherefore art thou red in thine apparrel and thy garments like him that treadeth in the wine-presse and that by his bloud it is that we shall be cleansed from all our sinnes even those sinnes that are red as crimson or scarlet Esa 1. 18. He hath loved us and washed us from our sinnes in his own bloud saith S. John Rev. 1. 5. thirdly it must be a heifer without spot wherein is no blemish to signifie the purity of his nature without any blemish of sinne and the perfection both of his righteousnesse and suffering and fourthly a heifer upon which never came yoke for they used in those times to plow and to draw their carts with heifers and cows as well as with oxen Judg. 14. 18. and 6. 7. and that to signifie his fr●edome from the bondage of sinne as also his voluntary doing of those things that were to be done for our redemption John 10. 17 18. I lay down my life that I might take it again No man taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self and Heb. 9. 13 14. If the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh How much more shall the bloud of Christ who through the eternall spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your consciences from dead works to serve the living God Vers 3. And ye shall give her unto Eleazar the priest c. This heifer must be given to the priest to signifie that our redemption and purification was the work of Christs priesthood who was both priest and sacrifice yet not to the high priest but to Eleazar because by doing this service that was now to be done he was to be unclean ver 7. and it was fitter that he should be defiled then Aaron and secondly it must be carried without the camp as an accursed thing figuring Christs being made a curse and suffering without the citie Heb. 13. 12. Wherefore Jesus also that he might sanctifie the people with his own bloud suffered without the gate Vers 4. And sprinkle of her bloud directly before the tabernacl● of the congregation seven times Signifying that though it bore the curse yet it was accepted of God for the cleansing of the unclean and that by Christs bloud we are made clean in Gods sight and have an entrance into heaven thereby Vers 5. And one shall burn the heifer in his sight her skinne and her flesh c. This was done to signifie the grievous suffering of Christ in the whole man both soul and body as also say some the ardent love which he bore unto his people in that he did offer up himself as a sacrifice to God in their behalf Vers 6. And the priest shall take cedar-wood and hyssope and scarlet c. To signifie that these things should be used for a sprinkle in sprinkling the unclean with the water of separation Lev. 14. 4. and that was by the virtue of the sacrifice that these things should be sanctified to this end that to them might be applyed the cleansing virtue of Christs death and spirit for the purging of our sinnes Vers 7. The priest shall w●sh his clothes c. The like is said of him that burnt this heifer ver 8. and of him th●t gathered up the ashes ver 10. and of him that sprinkled an unclean person with the water of separation made of these ashes ver 21. They that were imployed in preparing this water were defiled by that which was for the cleansing of others that were defiled And this was first to discover thereby the abominablenesse of sin in that the sinnes of the people being as it were imputed to this heifer that she might die for them every one that touched her was thereby polluted secondly to signifie that Christ of whom this heifer was a type by the imputation of our sinnes should be made a curse for us and should be numbred amongst transgressours thirdly to teach them that it was not so much the signe as the thing signified thereby that had virtue in it to purifie those that were spiritually unclean and consequently to shew the imperfection of the legall priesthood because by preparing the means of the Churches sanctification themselves were polluted Vers 9. And a man that is clean shall gather up the ashes c. This branch of the Law that the ashes of the heifer must be gathered up by a man that is clean and laid up without the camp in a clean place was because they were now consecrated to a holy use however the man that gathered them was thereby made unclean as is expressed in the following verse because they were the remainder of a heifer slain as
I may say for the sinnes of the people and hereby was signified that Christ our sacrifice was pure in himself though made sinne for us yea and some Expositours adde that this laying up of these ashes in a clean place signified that Christ should be buried in a new tombe wherein never man before was laid Luke 23. 53. And it shall be kept for the congregation of the children of Israel for a water of separation Why it is called a water of separation see before in the note upon ver 2. As for the place where these ashes were kept when they came into the land of Canaan it is not expressed yet many hold that it was dispersed into all the cities that those that were unclean might have wherewith to purify themselves Vers 10. And it shall be unto the children of Israel and unto the stranger that sojourneth among them for a statute for ever To wit the making and reserving these ashes for a water of separation Whether there was a new heifer burnt at every station where the Israelites tarried any time or whether every tribe or Israelite which I should rather think fetched of the ashes from the place where they were laid without the camp and so kept them for their own use when occasion served because it is not expressed we need not curiously enquire Onely this we must know that as the burning so also the ashes of this heifer was a signe of Christs most ignominious and accursed death for to be brought to ashes upon the earth is noted for the extremity of Gods fierie judgments Ezek. 28. 18. and that the memoriall of Christs ignominious death is to be kept by us in the Sacrament of the Lords supper as a most glorious monument of our life justification and sanctification through faith in his name See 1. Cor. 11. 24 25 26. and Gal. 6. 14. Vers 11. He that toucheth the dead body of any man shall be unclean seven dayes He that touched a dead beast was unclean but one day onely Lev. 11. 24. c. Whosoever toucheth the carcase of them shall be unclean untill the even c. neither was he to be sprinkled with those ashes By these legall pollutions therefore contracted by the touch of a dead man the Lord did undoubtedly teach his people first to observe Gods curse in death secondly to take heed of being defiled by the society of dead men that is wicked men men dead in trespasses and sinnes Eph. 2. 1. and of polluting our souls by any sinne or communion with dead works See 2. Cor. 6. 17. Wherefore come out from among them and be ye separate saith the Lord and touch not the unclean thing and I will receive you and 1. Tim. 5. 22. Lay hands suddenly on no man neither be partaker of other mens sinnes Keep thy self pure and thirdly that if they had defiled themselves they should seek presently to be cleansed of their uncleannesse namely by repentance from dead works and saith towards God which purifieth the heart Acts 15. 9. Vers 12. He shall purifie himself with it on the third day and on the s●venth day he shall be clean The third day was mysticall having reference to the resurrection of Christ so was also the seventh being a perfect number and signifying how full and perfectly we are cleansed from our sinnes by the sprinkling of the bloud and spirit of Christ Vers 13. And that soul shall be cut off from Israel That is if he do it presumptuously but if he have done it ignorantly he was to bring a sacrifice Leviticus 5. 3 6. Vers 16. And whosoever toucheth one that is slain with a sword c. That is whosoever toucheth any slain man for though the text speaks onely of such as are slain with a sword yet hereby all other are implyed also or a dead body that is any other dead body of a man though not slain but dying his naturall death yea or the bone of a man or a grave he shall be unclean seven dayes and therefore it was that to avoid these pollutions they used to have their places of buriall without their cities Luke 7. 12. Now when he came nigh to the gate of the citie behold there was a dead man carried out See also John 9. 41. Vers 17. And running water shall be put theret● in a vessel Because such water is purest See Lev. 14. 5. This figured the spirit of God which they that believe in Christ do receive John 7. 38 39. Vers 18. And a clean person shall take hyssope and dip it in the water and sprinkle it about the tent and upon all the vessels For though a vessel were melted yet it was not clean till it was sprinkled with this water Numb 31. 23. Every thing that may abide the fire ye shall make it go through the fire and it shall be clean neverthelesse it shall be purified with the water of separation Vers 22. And what soever the unclean person toucheth shall be unclean c. The unclean person here spoken of must needs be meant of the unclean person mentioned in the foregoing verse as by the immediate inference of this upon that is evident to wit the person that was made unclean by touching the water of separation yet withall it may be extended to all the unclean persons mentioned before in this chapter as those that were made unclean by the burning or touching of the red heifer or her ashes or by the touching of the dead body of a man c. and the Law here given concerning those is that every thing should be unclean that such unclean persons touched and that every person should be unclean that touched any thing that was defiled by the touch of an unclean man and thus hereby was figured the contagion of sinne spreading from one to another to the infection of many CHAP. XX. Vers 1. THen came the children of Israel even the whole congregation into the desert of Zin c. Not the wildernesse of Sin mentioned Exod. 16. 1. whither they came on the fifteenth day of the second moneth after their departing out of the land of Egypt but the wildernesse of Zin which was near to the land of Edom. The last station of the Israelites mentioned in this story was Kadesh in the wildernesse of Paran Numb 12. 16. and 13. 26. which is also called Kadesh-Barnea Deut. 1. 19. and Rithmah Numb 33. 18. close upon the borders of Canaan for thence they sent twelve men to search the land But because here they murmured against God for fear of the inhabitants hence the Lord appoints them to return to the red sea from Rithmah therefore or Kadesh-Barnea they returned as we find it Numb 33. 19. to Rimmon-parez thence to Libnah thence to Rissah thence to Kehelathah where some think it was that the Israelite was stoned for gathering broken wood on the Sabbath day Exod 15. 32. thence they went to mount Shapher thence to Haradah thence to Makheloth thence to
one portion of fifty c. To wit six thousand seven hundred and fifty sheep seven hundred and ●wenty beeves six hundred and tenne asses and three hundred and twenty women-children V●rs 49. Thy servants have taken the summe of the men of warre which are under our charge and there lacketh not one man of us Hereby God shewed that it was his work rather then theirs that the enemy was now vanquished and withall the Israelites were encouraged to fight the residue of the Lords battels by this evidence of Gods power and care to protect them Vers 50. We have therefore brought an oblation to make an at onement for our soul before the Lord. That is for our lives which God hath spared and that there may ●e no plague amongst us according to that Exod. ●0 12. When thou takest the summe of the children of Israel after their number then shall they give every man a ransome for his soul unto the Lord wherein also it is likely they had respect unto their sinne in sparing the women vers 14 15 16. Vers 53. For the men of warre had taken spoil every man for himself That is besides the cattel above named which was brought to the common stock they had gotten every man for himself very rich spoils of jewels bracelets chains c. and of these they brought now an offering to the Lord. CHAP. XXXII Vers 1. WHen they saw the land of Jazer and the land of Gilead that behold the place was a place for cattel c. In these words we have the cause that moved the Reubenites and Gadites to desire that they might dwell without Jordan Jazer was a city taken awhile before from the Amorites chap. 21. 32. and Gilead was also a mountain of the Amorites which had many ●ities half whereof were given to the sonnes of Gad and the other half to the sonnes of Manasseh see vers 40. and Deut. 3. 12 13. Both were full of rich pasture-grounds and so the fitter for feeding cattel whence it is that God promising to feed his people Israel signifieth the goodnesse of their pasture by comparing it to Bashan and Gilead Mich. 7. 14. Feed thy people with thy rod the stock of thine heritage Let them seed in Bashan and Gilead as in the dayes of old and Jer. 50. 19. I will bring Israel again to his habitation and he shall feed on Carmel and Bashan and his soul shall be satisfied upon mount Epraim and Gilead and therefore these tribes desire this land for their portion because they had by farre the most cattel Vers 3. Ataroth and D●bon and Jazer and Nimrah c. There was an Ataroth within the land of Canaan Josh 16. 2 7. but this was without Jordan Nimrah here mentioned is called also Bethminrah vers 36. and Nimrim Esa 15. 6. and it was afterwards given to the sonnes of Gad Josh 13. 27. and so also Shebam is vers 28. of thi chapter call●d Shibmah and Beon is called Baal-meon and Jer. 48. 23. Bethmcon and Josh 13. 17. Beth-Baalmeon Vers 4. Even the countrey which the Lord smote before the congregation of Israel c. The chief drift of these words is to perswade Moses to allot their habitation in this countrey which they had already conquered by alledging how convenient it would be for them in regard that they had the greatest store of cattel and this was a countrey very fit for the keeping of cattel But withall another thing there seems to be implyed in these words the country which the Lord smote before the congregation of Israel namely that the Lord had destroyed the inhabitants of this countrey that they might take it for a possession and that therefore it was to be esteemed a part of the promised land though it were not within Jordan nor were they to be blamed for desiring to have their portion there the land being so fit and convenient for them And indeed even this countrey without Jordan was the possession of the Amorites for Sihon was King of the Amorites vers 33. and the land of the Amorites was promised to Abraham Gen. 15. 16 21. Vers 5. If we have found grace in thy sight let this land be given unto thy servants for a possession and bring us not over Jordan It may be that their first intention was according as these words imply and as Moses understood them to desire that they might stay there where they were though afterward upon Moses displeasure they offer more equall conditions yet I rather think that their meaning was never other then as afterward they explained themselves to wit that they desired to have the land without Jordan for their inheritance and that they might not be carried over Jordan to be seated there but that they never meant to forsake their brethren till they had also driven out the inhabitants of Canaan and that first because this conceit of staying behind was so unjust that they could not but know that it would exceedingly enrage all the other tribes against them and secondly because in their answer to Moses vers 10. they discovered so presently how farre they were from desiring to leave their brethren and to stay behind them Vers 12. Save Caleb the sonne of Jephunneh the Kenezite c. So called because he was of the posterity of one Kenaz of the tribe of Judah 1. Chronicles 4. 13 15. Vers 16. And they came near unto him and said 〈…〉 build sheepfolds here for our catel c. If in their first request made unto Moses their desire was that they might not go any further but might stay where they were it is most probable that moved with that which Moses had said and withall fearing le●t the other tribes should be enraged against them they withdrew themselves to consult about it and then returned to proponnd these more equall conditions to him But because there is no mention made here of any such advising together amongst themselves but rather the words seem to imply that they did presently addresse themselves to make this reply we may with better ground think as is noted before upon vers 5. that they never meant any such thing in their former request to Moses and therefore perceiving how farre he had mistaken their words they now presently replyed more fully to make known to him what it was they desired It is true say they we meant to leave our cattel and our children behind us and it will be no little ease to us in our marching forward that we are rid of so great an encumbrance and to that end we purpose to build sheepfolds here for our cattel and cities for our little ones that is to repair and fortifie those cities of the Amorites in this countrey which lie now ruinated but for our selves we purpose to go along with them and never had any thought to stay behind Vers 17. But we our selves will go ready armed before the children of Israel c. That is though we desire
to have this land assigned to us for our portion and intend to leave our wives children and cattel here behind us yet we our selves will go ready armed along with them yea before the children of Israel that is so farre we are from shrinking away from our brethren that being rid of our cattel and carriages we shall be ready if it be thought fit to go in the forefront and to expose our selves to the greatest danger This is the full scope of this reply which the Reubenites and Gadites made to Moses Yet withall we must note that though they tendred themselves to go along with their brethren yet their meaning was onely that so many of them should go as should be thought requisite for their aid against the inhabitants of Canaan for we cannot think but that they meant to leave garrisons behind them for the defence of their wives and children and for the guarding of the countrey in case any of the neighbouring nations should invade the land when they were gone and so we see they did for Josh 4. 13. it is expressely said that there went of these tribes along over Jordan with their brethren onely about fourty thousand armed men whereas in the tribe of Reuben alone there was above fourty thousand fighting men chap. 26. 7. Vers 18. We will not return unto our houses untill the children of Israel have inherited every man his inheritance The performance whereof see Josh 22. 3 4. Vers 19. For we will not inherit with them on yonder side Jordan c. This is another condition they propound to wit that if this may be granted them they will not look after any share in the land of Canaan but rest satisfied with the portion now allotted them here Vers 20. If ye will go armed before the Lord to warre c. Here Moses upon the conditions they had propounded as he now understood them grants them their desire and to make sure that they did rightly understand one another he repeats the conditions If saith he ye will go armed before the Lord to war that is if you will go armed before the ark the signe of Gods presence that so you may aid your brethren in their warres against the Canaanites and will go all of you armed over Jordan before the Lord untill he hath driven out his enemies from before him c. that is if all that go over Jordan will continue with your brethren untill they have subdued the land and driven out the Lords and their enemies then afterwards ye shall return and this land shall be your possession before the Lord that is ye may then safely come back again hither and shall have as ye desire this land for your lot and portion and that with the Lords good liking and approbation And indeed that Moses made them not this answer without direction from the Lord we may gather from those words of his to the Reubenites and Gadites Deut. 3. 18. The Lord your God hath given you this land to possesse it Vers 29. Then ye shall give them the land of Gilead for a possession c. Gilead here is put for the whole countrey on that side Jordan Vers 33. And Moses gave unto them even to the children of Gad and to the children of Reuben and unto half the tribe of Manasseh c. Some Expositours hold that this half of the tribe of Manasseh did at first joyn with the children of Reuben and Gad in suing for a portion in this land though they were not expressed vers 1. But because there is no mention hitherto made of them we may rather think that either the children of Reuben and Gad did not at first desire all the land which they had conquered on that side Jordan to be given to them and so their request being granted them the remainder of that land was given to half the tribe of Manasseh who are here therefore joyned with the other two tribes or else if at first the Reubenites and Gadites did desire the whole land yet when Moses came to grant their request he reserved a part of the land on that side Jordan for certain of the sons of Manasseh and that because they by a particular expedition had vanquished that part of the land and had driven thence the Amorites as is expressed vers 39. Vers 34. And the children of Gad built Dibon c. See the note upon vers 16. Vers 38. And Nebo and Baal-meon their names being changed That is amongst other cities they built and repaired Nebo and Baal-meon when they had finished them they gave them new names and it is not without probability thought that the reason why they gave these cities new names was because Baal and Nebo were names of their idol-gods Bel boweth down Nebo stoupeth saith the prophet Isa 46. 1. and happely the rather because of that branch of Gods law Exod. 23. 13. Make no mention of the names of other gods neither let it be heard out of thy mouth It is true indeed that these cities are after this in other places of Sc●ipture called still Nebo and Baal-meon but we know that this is usuall to call cities whose names are changed sometimes by the new and sometimes by their old names Vers 39. And the children of Machir the sonne of Manasseh went to Gilead and took it c. This is here inserted to shew the reason why Moses giveth part of this land to the tribe of Manasseh who made no suit for it as the Reubenites and Gadites did to wit because it did in a manner belong to them they having formerly wonne it with their swords Vers 40. And Moses gave Gilead unto Machir and he dwelt therein That is half mount Gilead for the other half was given to the sonnes of Reuben and Gad. Deut. 3. 12. 13. Half mount Gilead and the cities thereof gave I unto the Reubenites and Gadites And the rest of Gilead and all Bashan being the kingdome of Og gave I unto the half tribe of Manasseh Vers 41. And Jair the sonne of Manasseh went and took the small towns thereof and called them Havoth-Jair That this Jair was of the tribe of Judah and onely the sonne of Machir the sonne of Manasseh by his mother side s●ems evident in 1. Chron. 2. 21. 22. And afterward Hezron went into the daughter of Machir the f●ther of Gilead whom he married when he was threescore years old and she bare him Segub And Segub begat Jair who had three and twenty cities in the land of Gilead but because he joyned with those of Manasseh in taking these villages he is r●ckoned here the sonne of Manasseh as if he had been one of that tribe yet there might be also a Jair of the tribe of Manasseh CHAP. XXXIII Vers 1. THese are the journeys of the children of Israel which went forth out of the land of Egypt with their armies c. Which were about six hundred thousand men beside women and children and much
if they were nearer to them then the others yea and if the Lord enlarged their coasts and gave them all the land they were to adde three cities more Deut. 19. 8 9. Vers 16. And if he smite him with an instrument of iron so that he die he is a murderer c. That is purposely and presumptuously for otherwise if he killed a man with an instrument of iron unawares not thinking to hit him he was not to be slain vers 22 23. for this is onely added because a man may strike his neighbour purposely with his fist c. of which he may die and yet not be a murderer because he may not happely intend his death But lest therefore under this pretence wilfull murderers should think to escape the Lord gives these following Laws and this in the first place that if it were proved that he did it willingly he must not think to escape by saying that he meant not to kill him for if he struck him with an instrument of iron whatever it be or with a stone or hand-weapon wherewith in any probability a man may be killed it shall be presumed that he intended hi● death c. Vers 19. The revenger of bloud himself shall slay the murderer c. That is though the revenger of bloud be but a private person yet he shall slay the murderer that is he may slay him he shall have liberty to do it and shall not be accoun●ed guilty of murder if he doth slay him yea some think he was bound to do it when he meeteth him he shall slay him that is he shall not need to bring him before a Magistrate c. but he may slay him himself And this is added to shew how necessary cities of refuge were to wit because the avenger of bloud having this power from God might otherwise abuse it and in the heat of bloud fall upon a man that killed unawares unlesse this course were taken to have the Magistrate a judge in the cause Neither need it seem strange as to some it doth that private men should be allowed thus to meddle with the sword of justice for a man being otherwise a private man no Magistrate being thus armed with power from God is for the time to be es●eemed as a Magistrate more then a private man Vers 20. But if he thrust him of hatred c. Here is another case given wherein the Magistrate should adjudge a man a murderer yea though he struck him onely with his hand or with some little stone or some other thing which was no way likely to kill him for even in this case if it be proved that he lay in wait for him or that he did it in prepensed malice or lived before in open enmity or hostility with him by whatever means he kill him he shall be adjudged a wilfull murderer for there is a difference made here betwixt enmity and sudden displeasure Vers 21. The revenger of bloud shall slay the murderer when he m●eteth him See the note upon vers 19. Vers 24. Then the congregation shall judge between the slayer and the r●venger of bloud c. That is if a man that had killed another fly to the citie of refuge the avenger must then go and desire justice against him the Levites must bring him to the congregation where the man was slain and then if he found a murderer the congregation that is the Magistrates shall give him up into the hands of the avenger but if they found it as we call it chance-medly then they sent him back to the city of refuge Vers 25. And he shall abide in it unto the death of the high priest c. Even a man that killed another unwittingly was to live a while as a man banished from his family and friends both to shew how hatefull the shedding of mans bloud is to the Lord and withall to prevent further mischief that the avenger be not urged nor provoked with the sight of him and the period appointed for his continuance in the city of refuge was till the death of the high priest and that doubtlesse that this releasing of men exiled by the death of the high priest might be a shadow of our freedome and redemption by the death of Christ Vers 27. He shall not be guilty of bloud c. The Lord here freeth the avenger from punishment if he found the man out of the city of refuge and killed him not as allowing his fact but by this to make the slayer the more carefull to observe this law of keeping within his citie of refuge CHAP. XXXVI Vers 1. ANd the chief fathers of the families of the children of G●lead c. Because the Lord had formerly ordered that Zelophehads daughters should have that portion of the land assigned to the tribe of Manasseh which their father should have had for his share had he lived the children of Gilead who were of that tribe con●idering that if they married into any other tribe this part of their land would be quite alienated from their tribe they came now and shewed what inconvenience might follow upon this and because it was their tribe that was now likely to receive detriment by the alienation of Zelophehads portion therefore they made it their suit that some order might be taken to prevent this mischief Vers 2. The Lord commanded my lord to give the land for an inheritance by lot to the children of Israel c. As if they should have said To what purpose was this if now our lot shall be diminished and a part of it wholly alienated to another tribe yea by like accidents the portion of every tribe may in time be changed and disturbed and so all at length may come to confusion and the very end of Gods appointing every tribe to have their portion apart by themselves may be quite made void Vers 4. And when the Jubile of the children of Israel shall be then shall their inheritance be put unto the inheritance of the tribe whereunto they are received c. The drift of these words is to put Moses and the Princes in mind that whereas by the law of God at the year of Jubile which was every fiftieth year whatever land was sold away out of the tribe should return to the tribe and that law of the Jubile seemed purposely intended to prevent the confusion of the inheritance of the tribes the very end of this law by such marriages as these would be quite disannulled Vers 5. And Moses commanded the ●hildren of I●rael according to the word of the Lord c. That is having asked counsel of God he an●wered them as God had commanded him ANNOTATIONS On the fifth book of MOSES called DEUTERONOMIE CHAP. I. THese be the words which Moses spake unto all Israel on this side Jordan c. Most Expositours hold that the chief drift of this first verse is to shew the places where Moses repeated and explained the law of God to the
perswade the Israelites not to wrong their brethren the Edomites in the least thing whatsoever first because the Lord had blessed them that is he had prospered them so that they were able to pay for that which they had occasion to desire of them secondly because the Lords eye was upon them to take care of them in their travels through the wildernesse for that is the meaning of those words He knoweth thy walking through this great wildernesse so that having God to watch over them they need not seek to supply themselves in an unlawfull way and thirdly because they had found this true already for fourty years together and therefore might the more securely rest upon God These fourty years the Lord thy God hath been with thee thou hast lacked nothing Vers 9. I have given Ar unto the children of Lot for a possession Ar was a chief mountain and the city thereon the royall city in the Moabites land Numb 21. 15 28. and so it is put here for the whole countrey Vers 10. The Emims dwelt therein in times past a people great and many and tall as the Anakims By interpretation terrible ones Gods hand must needs be acknowledged in driving out such giants before the Moabites which happely is alledged here first as an evidence that God had given them that land which was not therefore to be taken from them by the Israelites and secondly as an encouragement to the Israelites for if God had done this for the Moabites much more might they expect that he would do it for them Vers 20. The Ammonites call them Zamzummims That is presumptuous wicked ones See the note on verse 10. Vers 23. And the Avims which dwelt in Hazerim even unto Azzah the Caphtorims c. The Caphtorims here mentioned are the Philistines or else some other people that joyned with the Philistines and drave out the Avims which dwelt in Hazerim that is the land of the Philistines and possessed their countrey See Amos 9. 7. and Jer. 47. 4. and Gen. 10. 13 14. Vers 26. And I sent messengers out of the wildernesse of Kedemo●h There was a city of that name in Sihons countrey Josh 13. 18. and chap. 21. 37. near to which lay this wildernesse where Israel now was when they sent this ambassage to Sihon with words of peace which was according to the Law after given Deut. 20. 10. and was done now to make the destruction of the Amorites the more just and inexcusable See the note upon Numb 21. 21 22. Vers 28. Onely I will passe through on my feet We will ask nothing of thee gratis but onely this that we may passe through thy countrey Vers 29. As the children of Esau which dwell in Seir and the Moabites which dwell in Ar did unto me For though the children of Esau denyed them a passage through their countrey which was the nearest way Numb 20. ●0 21. yet when they turned aside and went along by their coast in the outskirts of their countrey they permitted this and withall the people afforded them meat for their money as is evident by this place so it seems it was too with the Moabites Indeed some couceive that they onely allowed them a passage through their countrey but refused them provision which they ground upon that place Deut. 23. 3 4. But I rather think the meaning of that place is that they did not come forth to meet the Israelites with bread and water as those use to do that wish good successe and rejoyce in the welfare of the people to whom they bring it for this they might fail in and yet the people might sell them provision as they went along and therefore for any thing we reade elsewhere it may well be that the Moabites did also suffer the Israelites to passe through the skirts of their countrey and did sell them meat and water for their money though it is true indeed that afterwards when the Israelites had destroyed Sihon and Og and their people fearing lest they should do the same to them because the land of the Moabites bordered upon these countreys they together with the Midianites assayed both by open violence and secret treachery to do them all the mischief they were able Numb 22. 1 c. Vers 34. And utterly destroyed the men and the women c. This doubtlesse they did by the speciall command of God and it was much according to the Law afterwards given them Deut. 20. 16. Vers 36. And from the citie that is by the river To wit Ar Numb 21. 15. Vers 37. Onely unto the land of the children of Ammon thou camest not nor to any place of the river Jabbock c. To wit on the outside of Jabbok which was the border of the Ammonites Josh 12. 2. with whom God had charged them not to meddle verse 19. so likewise by the cities of the mountains here are meant those cities of the Ammonites which were in that mountanous countrey which lay beyond Jabbok of which Moses had said before that the bord●r of the children of Ammon was strong Numb 21. 24. It is i●deed said Josh 13. 24 25. that Moses gave unto the tribe of Gad half the land of the children of Ammon but that is meant of the land which was now in the possession of Sihon King of the Amorites though it had formerly belonged to the children of Ammon till Sihon took it from them for with the land which was in the possession of the Ammonites at this time the Israelites did not meddle as is here fully expressed CHAP. III. Vers 2. ANd the Lord said unto me Fear him not c. Because this King was a giant of such a formidable stature vers 11. therefore the Lord doth particularly encourage his people not to be afraid of him Vers 4. Threescore cities all the region of Argob the kingdome of Og in Bashan As if it had been said There were amongst others 60. cities which we took in the region of Argob a province or shire in Bashan and therefore it is called the region of Argob which is in Bashan 1. Kings 4. 13. Vers 5. All these cities were fenced with high walls gates and barres c. The strength of this countrey is here thus described both thereby the better to set forth the mighty power of God who had subdued so strong a countrey before them and withall to put them in mind how safely they might rely upon God still for the time to come against their strongest enemies Vers 9. Which Hermon the Sidomans call Sirion c. Some Expositours conceive that the mount here spoken of is the same that is elsewhere called mount Gilead and o●hers that which is elsewhere called L●banus however evident it is that in the Scripture it is called by five severall names to wit Hermon Sirion and Shenir here and then Sion Deut. 4. 48. and Hor Numb 34. 7. and that partly because by divers people it was diversly named and partly with
and childrens children and shalt have remained long in the land and shall corrupt your selves and make a graven Image or the likenesse of any thing and shall do evil in the sight of the Lord thy God to provoke him to anger I call heaven and earth to witnesse against you this day that ye shall soon utterly perish from off the land whereunto ye go over Jordan to possesse it and then 3. that it is implyed here though not expressed I will give it saith the Lord to thy seed for ever implying that if once they began to degenerate and proved not a right faithfull seed John 8. 39. then he vvould be no longer tied to this promise CHAP. XIV ANd it came to passe in the dayes of Amraphel king of Shinar c. It is not possible certainly to determine vvho these kings vvere and vvhat their tecritories vvere but most probable it is that they vvere but onely governours of cities And Tidal king of Nations In the Hebrevv it is King of Gojim vvhich may be kept unchanged but the Greek and Chaldee translate it Nations It seemeth they vvere of sundry families or populous as Galilee in that regard is called Galilee of the Nations Isa 9. 1. Vers 3. All these were joyned together in the vale of Siddim which is the salt sea That is in the dayes of Moses vvhen he vvrote this history this vale of Siddim vvhere this battel vvas fought by the kings before named vvas become a lakeo● sea and called the Salt sea For after the destruction of Sodome and Gomorrah and those other cities that stood in this vale either by the confluence of many vvaters and brimstone into it being before full of slime pits or salt pits as some reade it vers 10. or by some other speciall and extraordinary vvork of God that it might remain a continuall monument of Gods fierce indignation against the vvicked inhabitants of that place it became a standing pool of putrid and unsavory vvaters and vvas therefore called the Salt sea Josh 3. 16. as likevvise the lake Asphaltites and the Dead sea because in those corrupt and stinking vvaters not so much as a fish could live yea as Histories report the birds that flevv over it vvere usually stif●ed vvith the noisome exhalations that did thence arise Vers 5. And smote the Rephaims A people in the land of Canaan Gen. 15. 20. And doubtlesse the chief reason vvhy Moses relateth hovv those foure confederate Kings did subdue and destroy both these and the other nations here mentioned is the more to magnifie the goodnesse of God to Abram in making him victorious over an army that had so easily before subdued and overrun so many strong and potent nations And the Emims A people inhabiting formerly the countrey vvhich after the Moabites possessed Deut. 2. 9 10. And the Lord said distresse not the Moabites c. For I will not give thee of their land for a possession c. The Emims dwelt there in times past Vers 6. And the Horites A people that dwelt in mount Seir untill the children of Esau drove them thence Deut. 2. 22. As he did to the children of Esau that dwelt in Seir when he destroyed the Horims from before them Vers 7. And smote all the countrey of the Amalekites That is all that countrey which in after-times was inhabited by the Amalekites Amalek of whom the Amalekites descended was the grand-child of Esau Gen. 36. 12. who was not yet born It was not therefore the Amalekites that were now subdued by these Kings but some other people that did now inhabit that countrey wherein afterward the Amalekites dwelt Vers 10. And the vale of Siddim was full of slime pits This is mentioned as that which was an hinderance in their slight and so a means of their greater losse And the kings of Sodom and Gomorrah fled and fell there That is were vanquished and overthrown there many of their souldiers slain many falling into those pits as we may well conceive they needs must being once routed and in that disorder chased by the enemie But the king of Sodom escaped we see vers 17. And the king of Sodom we●t out to meet him Vers 14. He armed his trained men This word trained may be meant both of civil military and religious discipline But however since these men that Abram now carried forth with him were armed for warre it is likely that he chose such of his men as were fittest for that service that had been trained up in the use of their arms and are in this sense therefore called his trained men Concerning the justice of this enterprise of Abrams some question may be made But for that we must consider that though Chederlaomer had a just quarrell against the king of Sodom and the other neighbouring kings whom he had now vanquished which cannot be certainly assirmed because it is not expressed upon what grounds they had now cast off his yoke having 12 years before been his vassals and tributaries yet Abrain undertaking this expedition onely for the rescuing of his kinsman Lot and that doubtlesse by the speciall instinct of the spirit of God this is abundantly enough to justifie what Abram now did in pursuing and vanquishing these kings that had taken Lot prisoner and were carrying away both him and his and all that they had And pursued them unto Dan. One of the springs of Jordan where was also a town afterward called by that name of Dan. Vers 18. And Melchisedek king of Salem brought forth bread and wine That is He brought forth provision vvherewith to refresh both Abram and those that were with him for so the like phrase is used Deut. 23. 3 4. An Ammonite or a Moabite shall not enter into the congregation of the Lord because the● met you not with bread and with water in the way when you came forth out of Egypt Being one of the neighbouring kings of Canaan king of Salem which seems to be the same that was afterwards called Jerusalem Psal 76. 3. In Salem also is his tabernacle by way of congratulating Abrams victory over these kings whose prevailing power might otherwise have proved very prejudiciall to them all he brought forth provision of severall sorts wherewith to feast Abram and his confederates and their souldiers M●ichisedek signifieth king of righteousnesse and king of Salem is by interpretation king of Peace In both which respects S. Paul makes this Melchisedek Heb. 7. 2. a type of Christ who is the King of his Church the king of Israel John 1. 49. and not onely perfectly righteous in his own person and therefore called Jesus Christ the righteous 1. John 2. 1. but also Rom. 10. 4. The end of the Law for r●ghteousnesse to every one that believeth as was of old prophesied Jer. 23. 6. This is his name whereby he shall be called The Lord our righteousnesse and so likewise The Prince of peace Isa 9. 6. who hath by his death reconciled us unto God
he revealeth his secrets unto his servants the prophets Vers 21. I will go down now and see c. This is a figurative speech usuall in the Scriptures wherein God stooping to our capacity speaks of himself after the manner of men He being every where present cannot move from one place to another and knowing and seeing all things needs not make any search or inquisition to inform himself yet thus is he pleased here to speak of himself 1. To shevv that there vvas manifest and just cause for the Lords severitie in punishing the Sodomites as aftervvards he did 2. To intimate hovv patient and long-suffering the Lord vvas tovvards them and hovv unvvilling to destroy them had they not been so extremely and desperately bad as they vvere and 3. To teach Judges by his example not to punish rashly but alvvayes to try and examine causes before they passe sentence Vers 22. But Abraham was yet before the Lord. In the beginning of the chapter vers 2. mention is made of three men that appeared to Abraham as he sate in his tent doore to vvit the Lord Christ vvho is often in this chapter called Jehovah and tvvo angels that attended him and vers 16. that they vvent avvay from Abrahams tent and that Abraham accompanied them But novv the Lord having as they vvent along imparted to Abraham vvhat he meant to do to Sodom tvvo of the three vvent avvay tovvards Sodom to vvit the tvvo angels as they are expressely called chap. 19. 1. And there came two angels to Sodom and the third vvho is here called the Lord Jehovah stayed still vvith Abraham and that as these vvords seem to imply because Abraham though they had as it vvere dismissed him and taken their leave of him yet stood still before the Lord as men use to do that being to part yet stirre not because they have somevvhat to say and so the Lord abode still vvith him and condescended to heare the requests vvhich he made for that sinfull citie Vers 25. That be farre from thee to do after this manner to slay the righteous with the wicked c. The righteous are sometime taken away in the same publick calamitie together with the wicked but the end is diverse the one are taken away by the hand of justice the other in mercy as the chaff and wheat are beaten by the same flail Now God had spoken of the Sodomites as men to be destroyed by his hand of justice and in a way of vengeance and in this sense does Abraham reply assured that God would not so cut off the righteous with the wicked CHAP. XIX Vers 2. ANd they said Nay but we will abide in the street c. Thus by this civill refusing at first the courtesie prosfered they make the better tryall of the affection of this holy man and besides it is likely their purpose was indeed to abide in the streets that so they might observe the manners of the people had not Lot been so importunate with them Vers 3. And they did eat See chap. 18. vers 8. Vers 4. But before they lay down the men of the city even the men of Sodom compassed the house round c. Doubtlesse the outward appearance of the two angels that were come to Lot was as of young men of rare and extraordinary beauty and comlinesse of person whereof there being notice taken by some of the profane inhabitants of the city the report thereof was soon spread abroad in the city and so presently they flocked together from all places and joyned together in this horrible and abominable attempt which is here related Vers 8. I have two daughters which have not known man let me I pray you bring them out unto you c. Questionlesse this prosfer of Lots was unwarrantable and sinfull for though in evils of punishment we may chuse a lesse to avoid a greater yet in the evils of sinne all choice is unlawfull if we may not do evil that good may come of it Rom. 3. 8. much lesse may we do any evil to prevent others from doing some greater evil It would not have been lawfull for Lots daughters to have yielded themselves to have been defiled by these varlets thereby to have taken them off from that fouler sinne of Sodomy which they had resolved upon much lesse was it lawfull for him to resolve that he would bring them forth and deliver them up to the lust of this rabble that they might do what they list to them for he had no such power over his daughters especially if he had already espoused them to husbands though they were not married as many Expositours think he had But yet it was no wonder at all that Lot though a righteous man 2. Pet. 2. 7. and highly beloved of God should thus forget himself considering 1. that in such a sudden disturbance caused by the fear of such a horrid villany so violently pursued he could scarce have so much liberty as to ponder any thing that came into his mind 2. that his zealous care for preserving his guests against such a horrid wickednesse might so farre transport him as to make him on a sudden judge it better to yield to any thing then to give way to their detestable desires and 3. that he might deceive himself with a vain hope that in this strange proffer made by a father they would reade so much of the grievous distraction of his mind as would make them relent and neither desire what he had proffered nor prosecute what they had at first desired Vers 9. This one fellow came in to sojourn and he will needs be a judge By this it may appear that Lot had not onely grieved inwardly and vexed his righteous soul with the unclean conversation of these wicked men but had also as occasion was offered reproved them for their wickednesse and done what he could to teach them better and to disswade them from those lewd courses which were otherwise likely to bring Gods judgement upon them and hence it is that they now twit him with taking upon him to be a judge amongst them and with thinking a stranger though he were to govern them and to order them in every thing as he pleased Vers 11. And they smote the men that were at the doore of the house with blindnesse Their continuing to seek for the doore and departing home when they had wearied themselves in vain argues that they were not utterly deprived of sight onely their eyes were dazled in such a manner that they were as men blind in regard of that object they looked after though they saw other things they could not see his doore or happely though they saw the doore before them they knew not where it sto●● nor how to come at it Vers 14. And spake unto his sonnes in law Some understand this of certain men in the city that were contracted to his two virgin daughters of whom mention was before made vers 8 and that they were
yet therefore in their fathers house but others understand it of the husbands of other daughters of his that were already married into the city which seems best to agree with the text But if so then we must farther consider though his sonnes in law are here onely mentioned as the heads of the families yet their wives if living were also spoken to And hence it may seem was Lots lingring that he should leave his children to be destroyed and the Angels command vers 15. Take thy two daughters that are here intimating that he might not wait for the other that were not there Vers 17. And it came to passe c. that he said c. To wit one of the Angels to whom Lot therefore afterward directs his speech in the singular number because it was he that had given him the charge of flying to the mountain Look not behind thee This was enjoyned Lot 1. thereby to expresse how detestable the inhabitants of Sodom were a people hated of God and unworthy of the commiseration of good men for whom it was not fit he should take the least thought or care 2. To teach him hereby that he was so to be affected with Gods me●cy in delivering him from that wicked cursed place and the judgement that was now to fall upon them that he was not to mind nor regard his house cattel or whatever other riches he was to leave behind or in the least degree to repent of his coming away and accordingly is the very same phrase used Luke 9. 62. No man having put his hand to the plow and looking back is fit for the kingdome of God 3. To intimate with what speed they were to haste away not to hinder their flight so much as by looking back upon the city Vers 19. And I cannot escape to the mountain c. Because the mountain was so farre off he fears lest ere he could get thither the destruction should be poured forth and he should be overtaken in it and therefore desires that Zoar might be the place of refuge for him which was nearer at hand Vers 21. And he said unto him See I have accepted thee concerning this thing The Angel not without Gods direction undoubtedly yields to the weaknesse of his faith and grants his request but as God doth usually grant his servants those requests which he doth not approve of that they may by their own experience see their folly and that it is still better for them to follow his direction for thus it was with Lot who afterwards vers 30. feared to dwell in Zoar and then therefore found that he had done best it at first he had followed the angels counsel in flying to the mountain Vers 22. Therefore the name of the city was called Zoar. Which signifies little before it was called Bela chap. 14. 2. And the king of Bela which is Zoar. Vers 23. The sunne was risen upon the eart● c. This I conceive is thus expressed 1. To shew how narrowly Lot escaped the destruction that fell upon the Sodomites It was break of day when the Angels hastened him and his to get them out of Sodom vers 15. And when the morning arose then the Angels hastened Lot saying Arise c. and by that time the sunne was risen the judgement threatned fell upon Sodom whereby no doubt Lot was brought to see and acknowledge both his own folly in lingring so long and the goodnesse of God in forcing him away and not suffering him to stay there any longer and 2. to make it the more manifest that this judgement was extraordinary and supernaturall and how suddenly the inhabitants of these wicked cities were overwhelmed with the storm of Gods fiery indignation without any warning given them when doubtlesse they had not the least fear of any such mischief that was coming upon them The sunne rose as fairly that day as upon other dayes and yet presently a showr of fire and brimstone fell upon them and consumed them all Vers 24. Then the Lord rained upon Sodom and upon Gomorrah c. Sodom and Gomorrah are here mentioned as the chief but withall Admah and Zeboiim were also destroyed Deut. 29. 23. Like the overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrah Admah and Zeboiim which the Lord overthrew in his anger c. Now from the Lord is here added in the end of this clause Then the Lord rained upon Sodom and upon Gomorrah brimstone and fire from the Lord the more emphatically to expresse that it was not by any ordinary course of nature but by the immediate almighty power of God And doubtlesse it was the supernaturall and miraculous work of the Lord and not from any naturall cause that such showers not of water as when the old world was drowned but of fire and brimstone should fall from heaven upon these cities who did therein fit the punishment to the sinnes of those that were destroyed thereby They burned vvith vild and unnaturall lusts and therefore against the ordinary course of nature fire falls down from heaven and devours them and their stinking abominable filthinesse is punished with the stench of brimstone mingled vvith fire yea this fire and brimstone vvas but a forerunner of their everlasting punishment in that lake which burneth with fire and brimstone for evermore Rev. 21. 8. for so the Apostle S. Jude saith that Sodom and Gomorrah suffered the vengeance of eternall fire Jude 7. Vers 26. But his wife looked back from behind him c. That is Lot going before and his wife follovving behind him she looked back from behind him tovvards Sodom to vvit as doubting vvhether any such judgement vvould fall upon Sodom as vvas threatned or lingring in her desires after those friends that vvealth and estate vvhich they had left behind them and thus she did rebell against the expresse commandment of the Lord given before to Lot vers 17. and in him unto all that vvere with him and that vvhen God had afforded her such an extraordinary mercy to fetch her avvay by his angels from Sodom vvhen it vvas to be destroyed and so vvas turned into a Pillar or statue of salt not such salt as vve ordinarily use vvhich being vvet vvill melt and turn into vvater for it vvas to stand as a monument of her infidelity and disobedience but a kind of rockie minerall salt vvhich vvill endure all vveathers and not vvaste avvay Vers 29. God remembred Abraham and sent Lot out of the midst of the overthrow That is God remembred his promise vvhereby he had ingaged himself to Abraham not onely to blesse him in his own person but those also for his sake that were dear unto him chap. 12. 2. And thou shalt be a blessing I will blesse them that blesse thee and he remembred the requests vvhich Abraham had made to him for Sodom and that in the behalf of those fevv righteous ones that might be in that citie pressing him particularly vvith this that the righteous might not be destroyed
vvith the vvicked and so he saved Lot for Abrahams sake It is true indeed that God had respect to the piety and righteousnesse of Lot in delivering him for so the Apostle faith 2. Pet. 2. 7 8. That he delivered just Lot and that because the righteous soul of this good man was vexed from day to day in seeing and hearing the filthy conversation of those vvicked vvretches but this doth not exclude that vvhich is here said concerning Abraham There may be divers causes of one and the same effect the main cause of all vvas Gods free grace both to Abraham and Lot and not any merit in them but subordinate hereunto there vvere also other inducements to vvit the joynt respect that the Lord had to the righteousnesse of Lot his faithfull servant and to the intercession of Abraham as here is expressed Vers 30. For he feared to dwell in Zoar c. The cause of this fear is not expressed but may probably be thought to have been either that seeing the abominable sinnes of that citie he feared lest God vvould also destroy that or else that he doubted lest because of his escape the people vvould fall upon him as the cause of the overthrovv of those neighbouring cities and indeed his hiding himself in the cave makes this most probable Vers 31. And there is not a man on the earth to come in unto us c. Some conceive that they did verily think that all nations of the earth vvere destroyed by fire but many things make this improbable 1. Their knovvledge that Zoar vvas not destroyed and that the Angels had promised that it should not be destroyed 2. Their seeing that the shower of fire which had burnt up those cities of the plain reached not so farre as the mountains wherein at present they were 3. The remembrance of Abraham their uncle a righteous man not like to be destroyed and 4. That last clause after the manner of all the earth which seems to be spoken of the time present that they were deprived of that society with man which every-where else they did enjoy Others conceive that she meant onely this that there was not a godly man with whom onely they durst marry They take the perishing of their sisters in Sodom to be a punishment of God upon them for their marrying with the wicked Sodomites not daring to do so therefore and grieving by this means to be deprived of the common blessing of mankind they resolve upon a more wicked course But I rather conceive thus of the place Lot and his daughters flying in some great fear into the mountain and being there in a manner mured up in a cave his eldest daughter utters these words as a complaint that by this solitary life they were deprived of all hope of marriage the common blessing of all the earth There is not a man in the earth to come in unto us That is here we live in a cave without society of any but our selves and it is to us all one as if there were not a man upon the earth Come let us make our father drink wine c. But indeed any of these expositions may be imbraced for whatever absurdity there is in their resolutions must be ascribed to their fear that passion blinding men and driving them upon any absurd thoughts or courses Vers 32. Let us make our father drink wine To wit the wine which they had brought from Zoar. Vers 37. And called his name Moab c. Moab is by interpretation of the father and Benammi is sonne of my people or sonne of my kindred In both names ●here was a memoriall of their incestuous procreation That which these daughters of Lot it seemed boasted of was their having children of their own kinne not of the f●ithlesse and cursed nations CHAP. XX. Vers 1. ANd Abraham journeyed from thence c. The cause of this remove is not expressed but in likelyhood it was because of some inconveniency arising from the late fearfull destruction of Sodom Vers 2. And Abimelech king of Gerar c. Abimelech was the common title of the kings of Palestina as Pharaoh was of the kings of Egypt Psal 34. the title A Psalme of David when he changed his behaviour before Abimelech Vers 3. But God came to Abimelech in a dream by night By that which we reade verse 17. So Abraham prayed unto God and God healed Abimelech and his wife and his maid-servants c. it appears that presently upon the taking of Sarah the Lord struck Abimelech with a dangerous sicknesse and plagued his Court with a strange disease Now in his sicknesse the Lord by a dream the extraordinary glory whereof was undoubtedly such that Abimelech might easily perceive it came from heaven informs him of the cause and tells him he was a dead man which must be understood conditionally unlesse he restored Abrahams wife vers 7. Now therefore restore the man his wife for he is a Prophet and he shall pray for thee and thou shalt live and if thou restore her not know thou that thou shalt surely die c. Vers 4. Wilt thou slay also a righteous nation That is him and his people vers 18. For the Lord had fast closed up all the wombes of the house of Abimelech Vers 7. For he is a Prophet They are called Prophets in the Scripture to whom the Lord did more familiarly reveal his will then to other men and by whom he did teach and instruct others Such was Abraham Gen. 18. 17 18 19. And the Lord said Shall I hide from Abraham that thing which I do seeing that Abraham shall surely become a great nation c. For I know that he will command his children and his houshold after him c. And of this the Lord gives notice to Abimelech 1. That he might not dare to detain Sarah because her husband was not an ordinary man but a Prophet one in speciall favour with God whose wrongs God would surely avenge Psal 105. 15. Touch not mine Anoynted and do my Prophets no harm 2. That he might hope by his prayers being a man so prevalent with God to have the plague removed that was laid upon them Vers 12. And yet indeed she is my sister c. He addes to excuse himself that it was not altogether false which he had faid because it was true in a sense that she was his sister as in the same sense Lot and he are called brethren Gen. 13. 8. For we be brethren namely because she was the daughter of his father though not of his mother And for the clearing this the Hebrews hold that Sarah was that Iscah the daughter of Haran Abrahams brother as being the sonne of Terah though by another woman for this being yielded she was indeed the grandchild of Terah Abrahams father and so might be called the daughter of his father as Jethroes daughters are called Revels who was their grandfather Exod. 2. 18. and yet withall not be the daughter
were to use in the sacrifice for happely they all went on foot and onely used the asse for the carrying of the wood or perhaps onely Abraham by reason of his age did ride and the rest went on foot And I and the lad will go yonder and worship and come again to you Thus by the all-ruling Providence of God he prophesieth of that whereof he knew nothing It cannot be that he distinctly knew that he should bring back his sonne again for then what great matter was there in this that he did rather surely he spake this as a man astonished and amazed neither need we be so carefull to clear Abraham from seeking by this dissembling to keep his servants from suspecting that vvhich he vvent about rather let us admire the wisdome and goodnesse of God that he suffered Abraham in this greatest of all humane actions to shew a little frailty that we might not look for perfection here Vers 6. And Abraham took the wood of the burnt offering and laid it upon Isaac his sonne But how vvas he able to carry so much wood as vvould serve for the burning up of the sacrifice I answer 1. it appears by this that he was novv a youth well grown 2. it may well be that Abraham carried with him some lesser quantity of dry choice wood to begin the fire resolving to furnish himself with the rest upon the mountain 3. happely Isaac carried it at severall times though that be not here expressed but onely so much as would serve to shew how even in this he vvas a Type of Christ John 19. 17. And he bearing his crosse went forth c. Vers 9. And bound Isaac his sonne It is not likely that all particulars are here expressed no doubt Abraham before he bound him acquainted him with the commandment of God and urged the necessitie of obedience the promises and power of God and vvhatever might prepare him to yield himself to be sacrificed as God had commanded but these Moses relates not but onely that Abraham bound him c. that so vve might know that in not resisting but meekly suffering his father to proceed Isaac was also a Type of Christ Mark 15. 1. The chief Priests held a consultation c. and bound Jesus Acts 8. 32. He was led as a sheep to the slaughter and like a lamb dumb before the shearer so opened he not his mouth Vers 11. And the Angel of the Lord called unto him That is Christ the ●ternall word of his father who speaketh of himself as God vers 12. For now I know thou fearest God seeing thou hast not withheld thy sonne thine onely sonne from me and is called Jehovah vers ●6 And the Angel of the Lord called unto him out of heaven the second time and said By my self have I sworn saith the Lord c. Vers 13 And Abraham lifted up his eyes Hearing this voice from heaven he looked about and behind him he espies this ram which he took as sent of God to supply Isaacs room or it may be he lifted up his eyes purposely to look for a sacrifice Vers 14. As it is said to this day In the mount of the Lord it shall be seen In the mount that is in d●e time and place or in like manner as once to Abraham in the mount it shall be seen that is it shall be provided for God will help and that his children shall see for both these were implyed in this Proverb which upon this occasion grew so ordinary in following times to wit both that God vvould provide for his servants in their extremities and that it should be done in such a manner that they should plainly see it came from God Vers 16. By my self have I sworn saith the Lord. This doth not prove that it was not Christ the eternall word of the father vvho novv spake to Abraham the like we have Psal 2. 7. The Lord hath said unto me Thou art my sonne c. Vers 17. And thy seed shall possesse the gate of his enemies That is thou shalt subject them and bring both their strength and government under command for by the gate of the enemie is here meant their strength and government their strength because there they had their strongest fortifications their government because there the Magistrates sate in judgement Deut. 22. 15. Then shall the father of the damsell and her mother take and bring forth the tokens of the damsells virginitie unto the Elders of the City in the gate Vers 24. And his Concubine whose name was Reumah c. The Hebrew vvord translated Concubine signifieth a half wife or divided and secondary wife vvhich vvas a vvife for the bed and therein differing from a vvhore but not for honour and government of the family 1. Kings 11. 3. And he had seven hundred wives Princesses and three hundred Con●ubines CHAP. XXIII Vers 2. ANd Abraham came to mourn for Sarah c. The most of Expositours hold that both Abraham and Sarah had novv removed their dwelling from Beersheba to Hebron and that this therefore vvhich is here said that Abraham came to mourn for Sarah is onely to be understood of his coming to Sarahs tent for Abraham and she had severall tents Gen. 24. 67. And Isaac brought her into his mother Sarahs tent Yet many also hold that Abraham dwelt still at Beersheba that Sarah upon some occasion not expressed being at Hebron fell sick and dyed and so Abraham hearing of it came thither to lament and bury her which is the more probable because vers 4. as a stranger he s●es for a burying place which he would not in that manner have done if he had been a dweller among them as it is expresly noted of Ephron that he was and also because Isaac dwelt afterward near Lahai-roi which was not farre from Beersheba Vers 3. And spake unto the sonnes of Heth. That is the Governours and Elders of the Hittites the inhabitants of Hebron Vers 4. Give me a possession of a burying place with you c. That is give m● liberty to purchase though a stranger a possession of a burying place Vers 10. And Ephron d●velt amongst the children of Heth. Others reade And Ephron sat amongst the children of Heth not unfitly Abraham not knovving the man had spoken of him as of one absent ere Ephrons ansvver therefore be inserted Moses shevvs that he sat there amongst the other Elders and so immediately replied to Abrahams demand Hovvever if vve reade it as our translations render it And Ephron dwelt amongst the children of Heth it comes all to one For his dvvelling among them is expressed onely to imply that he being himself one of the chief inhabitants of that city sat at that time amongst the other Governours and Elders and so presently ansvvered for himself to that request vvhich Abraham had made Vers 13. But if thou wilt give it c. Other translations supply this imperfect speech thus if thou be that Ephron
vvhich he had vvith him CHAP. XXXIII Vers 3. ANd he passed over before them This proceeded not onely from his fatherlike affection but also from his faith exposing himself to danger rather then his children in whom he expected the promises should be accomplished And bowed himself to the ground seven times That is many times 1. Sam 〈◊〉 5 so that the barren hath born seven c. Vers 8. What meanest thou by all this drove which I met The servants had told Esau the reason of this before but yet he asks now the reason of Jacob that he may take an occasion courteously to refuse them Vers 10. For therefore I have seen thy face c. That is for because I have seen thy face and a like speech we have Gen. 18. 5. For therefore are you come to your servant c. for as there Lot gives that as a reason why he desired them to eat something to wit because they were come to him being there he would not have them go away till they refreshed themselves so here Jacob gives this as a reason why he desired that Esau would accept his presents to wit because he had seen his face as the face of God c. implying that since Esau had been so kind and loving to him it was fit he should shevv his thankfulnesse in those presents he had sent As for that expression vvhich Jacob here useth I have seen thy face as though I had seen the face of God either it is spoken hyperbolically to expresse hovv vvonderfully comfortable that kind meeting of Esau had been to him or else in this phrase he acknovvledgeth that this reconciliation of his brother vvas Gods vvork and so saies that the light of Gods countenance vvas evident in the cheerfull countenance of his brother Vers 11. Take I pray thee my blessing That is the gift vvhich by the blessing of God I am enabled to give and do give vvith a vvilling heart 1. Sam. 25. 27. And now this blessing which thy handmaid hath brought unto my Lord let it even be given unto the young men c. Vers 17. And Jacob journyed to Succoth and built him an house c. To vvit after he had according to his promise vers 14. visited his brother in Seir and stayed there avvhile Some conceive that hovvever he intended at first to have follovved his brother to Seir yet aftervvards through fear of the vvorst or by speciall direction from God he changed his mind and vvent another vvay and so came to Succoth But indeed it is no vvay probable that being nevvly reconciled to his brother he vvould again provoke him anevv to displeasure by such a manifest contempt and disregard of him and by such a palpable breach of his promise to him but that he did indeed go to Seir as he had told Esau he vvould Besides though by his building a house and making booths in this place which vvas thence aftervvard called Succoth that is Booths it is clear that Jacob resolved to dvvell there yet questionlesse hovvever he might leave his carriages there he vvent presently to his fathers house and perhaps his brother Esau vvith him and then aftervvard returned to Succoth again There is indeed no mention made of his coming to his father till chap. 35. 27. And Jacob came unto Mamre unto his father c. But the story of the slaughter of the Shechemites related in the 34. chap. vvas so long after Jacobs coming into the Land of Canaan to vvit vvhen his sonnes vvere grovvn lusty and strong men vvho vvere very young at their coming into Canaan that it cannot be thought that Jacob in all that time vvent not home to his fathers house Vers 19. And he bought a parcell of a field c. This vvas that portion of land vvhich Jacob vvhen he lay upon his deathbed in Egypt gave unto his sonne Joseph Gen. 48. 22. Moreover I have given thee one portion above thy brethren for that was near unto Shechem Josh 24. 32. And the bones of Joseph which the children of Israel brought up out of Egypt buried they in Shechem in a parcel of ground which Jacob bought of the sonnes of Hamor the father of Shechem c. and consequently it was here that Christ had a conference with the woman of Samaria and converted her and her neighbours for Shechem it is that is there called Sychar a city of Samaria John 4. 5. CHAP. XXXIV Vers 1. ANd Dinah the daughter of Leah c. This must needs be ten years at least since their coming from Laban else Dinah could not be sixteen years old Vers 5. And Jacob held his peace untill they were come Not having any into whose bosome he might so fitly poure out his complaint for the ravishing of his daughter or whose counsel he might seek Vers 7. And the sonnes of Jacob came out of the field c. By the computation of most Expositours Reuben was now about two and twenty years old Simeon one and twenty Levi twenty and Judah nineteen And they were wroth because he had wrought folly in Israel The disgrace of the Church was the chief ground of their anger Vers 13. And the sonnes of Jacob answered Shechem c. Though there be mention made of Jacob the father of Dinah in Hamors treaty with Jacobs sonnes concerning Shechems marriage with Dinah vers 11. And Shechem said unto her father c. yet it is altogether improbable that Jacob knew any thing of this proposition which his sonnes made that if the Shechemites would be all circumcised then they would consent to this match for is it likely that he would consent to such an horrible profanation of the Sacrament of Circumcision the seal of Gods covenant this they propounded apart by themselves not intending what they said but plotting their destruction which to do they thought they had good reason and therefore it is said that they answered them deceitfully because he had defiled Dinah their sister Vers 19. And he was more honourable then all the house of his father The great esteem he had amongst the people is here mentioned as one ground of his prevailing so farre with them in so strange a request Vers 23. Shall not their cattell c. be ours That is by having commerce with them by making marriages with them by receiving them in to be as one people with us Vers 25. And it came to passe on the third day when they were sore The third day is counted the criticall day by Physicians when wounds are oft at the worst most painfull c. and therefore then they chose to make this massacre in the city as it is here said that then two of the sonnes of Jacob Simeon and Levi Dinahs br●thr●n took each man his sword c. whether any of their servants joyned with them as some think we need not enquire since it is probable enough that Simeon and Levi might do it alone there not being a man able
father and with his brother Benjamin concerning whom he had cause enough to suspect them because of that they had done to him and because he was not now with them To prevent therefore these inconveniences and that he might first bring them to make a full relation of the present state of their family secondly humble them the better with the remembrance of their former sinnes thirdly make their joy the greater when the truth of things should be discovered to them fourthly clear the more fully the accomplishment of his dreams when being under his jurisdiction and power they should in such an humble manner prostrate themselves before him and make supplication to him for their peace and libertie he made shew of his displeasure accused them to be spyes and prosecuted the accusation as is related in this and the following chapters Vers 9. And Joseph remembred the dreams which he dreamed of them That is he called to mind how now in their bowing down before him his dreams were accomplished for we must not understand these words as if he had never thought upon his dreams before Vers 11. Wee are all one mans sonnes They apprehend the ground of Josephs charge to be because they came in that company like conspiratours and therefore in this answer they imply that they came thus together because brethren and the more unlike spies who use to disperse themselves as also because one man would hardly expose almost all his sonnes at once in so dangerous an imployment Vers 14. That is it that I spake unto you That is this discovers that to be true that I charged you vvith Is it possible that one man should have twelve such sonnes or why should not one have served to fetch corn or if you vvould come together vvhy should one onely stay at home Vers 20. But bring your youngest brother unto me Though Joseph could not but fear that his father vvould be very loth to send his Benjamin vvith them into Egypt yet not knovving hovv to trust his brethren concerning his life and safety except he might see him and hoping vvithall that his father vvould by his present bountifull dealing vvith them conceive that no vvrong should be done him he commands this straitly that they must be sure to bring their youngest brother vvith them Vers 21. We are verily guilty concerning our brother c. That is it is our sinne long since committed against our brother Joseph that hath brought this misery upon us vvhereof they are the more assured by comparing together their former sin and present misery they had sold their brother into bondage and they were now deprived of their libertie Joseph in the anguish of his soul besought them and they would not hear him they therefore had now done what they could to perswade the Governour concerning their fidelitie and he would not be perswaded by them they had deluded their father with a lie and now when they spake the truth they could not be believed Vers 24. And he turned himself about from them and wept Moved with their acknowledgement of their fault and especially with Reubens sharp upbraiding them And took from them Simeon and bound him before their eyes Though Reuben that had no hand in selling Joseph was for three dayes imprisoned with the rest of his brethren because Joseph had no colour to shew him more favour then the rest yet now when Joseph was to take one of them to stay behind in bonds till the rest went home and fetched Benjamin he passeth by Reuben the eldest remembring how he had pleaded for him and took Simeon Jacobs second sonne the rather perhaps because he was the forwardest in Josephs troubles which may be the more probably conceived because he was by nature bold and fierce as is evident by that fact of his upon the Shechemites Gen. 34. 25. Two of the sonnes of Jacob Simeon and Levi Dinahs brethren took each man his sword and came upon the citie boldly c. and to humble them the more and to make them the more carefull speedily to return with Benjamin he bound him before their eyes though happely when they were gone he might ease him of his bonds and onely keep him in prison till their return Vers 25. Then Joseph commanded to fill their sacks with corn and to restore every mans money into his sack To wit lest his father should be in want and yet this he doth secretly because as yet he would not be known Vers 28. And their hearts failed them Finding their money in one of their sacks as men perplexed in conscience are wont to fear every thing they suspect some plot laid for their ruine or at least that some danger hereby would befall Simeon and therefore this their fear was encreased when at their coming home they found it so in all their sacks vers 36. And when both they and their father saw the bundles of money they were afraid And Jacob their father said unto them Me have you bereaved of my children Joseph is not and Simeon is not Vers 36. All these things are against me As if he should have said Though they be not very grievous to you they are like to fall heavily upon me CHAP. XLIII Vers 3. THe man did solemnly protest unto us saying Ye shall not see my face c. Both these words of Joseph here repeated by Judah and other passages mentioned vers 7. were no where before expressed whereby is manifest that many things passed particularly betwixt Joseph and his brethren which are not so expresly related in the story Vers 8. Send the lad with me c. That is Benjamin it is manifest that Benjamin was not above seven years younger then Joseph for Joseph was born in the end of Jacobs foureteen years service with his uncle Laban Gen. 30. 25. 26. And it came to passe when Rachel had born Joseph that Jacob said unto Laban Send me away c. and when Jacob had served six years longer for his cattle the next year as they were returning into Canaan Benjamin was born Gen. 35. 16 17 18. So that Joseph being now nine and thirty years old the seven plenteous years and two years of famine being passed since his exaltation when it is expressed that he was thirty years old Gen. 41. 46. Joseph was thirty years old when he stood before Pharaoh it must needs follow that Benjamin was now above thirty years old yet Judah here calles him the lad according to the phrase of the Scripture to vvit comparatively because he was the youngest of all his brethren See also the former note upon Gen. 21. 15. Vers 12. And take double money in your hand c. Not treble money as some hold that is thrice as much as they carried before namely the money which was brought back in their sacks and twice as much to buy new provision for fear the price was raised but double money that is that which they should have paid for their former
menservants are as is made evident by some particular exceptions which are added in the following verses This course of parents selling their children is by many reckoned amongst those things which God did not approve but tolerate in this people because of the hardnesse of their hearts However Lord did here provide that in case parents constrained perhaps by extreme necessity should sell their children if it were a daughter which they sold she should not go out as the menservants do and the meaning I say is onely this that the Law concerning the setting free of such a maidservant should not be in all respects alike with that of menservants as namely because though ordinarily maidservants were to be set free also at six years end Deut. 15. 12 c. yet sometimes they were to be freed before their six years service was ended which menservants never were as appears by those cases propounded in the following verses Vers 8. If she please not her Master who hath betrothed her to himself c. That is if her Master after he hath bought he● betroth her to himself and afterwards dislike her and so repenting of what he hath done will not take her to be his wife which was likewise one of those things which God did tolerate in this people but not approve he must let her be redeemed that is he must not think to keep her still to be a servant or sell her to be a servant to others at least he must procure her to be redeemed either by her self or by her kindred or by some other that would take her to be his wife In which case doubtlesse order was taken by the Judges that it should be done at a very reasonable price for though the next clause may seem to imply that he was onely restrained from selling her to one that was not an Israelite To sell her unto a strange nation he shall have no power yet since they might not do that to any Israelite servant whatsoever therefore by a strange nation here is meant as Calvin takes it any of another family though an Hebrew or else his selling her to a strange nation is onely expressely forbidden because the Hebrews would not buy her knowing it to be contrary to Gods law And indeed the like favour is granted to a servant whom her Master had marryed though she were not an Israelite for concerning such a one the law was Deut. 21. 14. that her Master should let her go whither she would but should not sell her and make merchandise of her because he had humbled her Vers 9. And if he have betrothed her unto his sonne he shall deal with her after the manner of daughters That is both in the matter of dowry and in all other things he shall deal with her as if she had been a freewoman Vers 10. If he take him another wife her food her rayment and her duty of marriage shall he not diminish Now another case is propounded What shall be done if a man having betrothed his servant to himself or to his sonne for both may be here understood do not in dislike cast her off but take him another wife This we must not think God approves of onely he tolerates it for the hardnesse of their hearts but in this case he provides that the true wife be not wronged Her food her raiment and her duty of marriage shall he not diminish which last clause may be meant of dowry and all other things due by marriage covenant but doubtlesse that which S t Paul calls due benevolence 1. Cor. 7. 3. is included and indeed principally if not onely intended Vers 13. If a man lie not in wait but God deliver him into his hand then I will appoint thee a place whither he shall fly To wit the altar whilest they were in the desert in Canaan both the altar and the cities of refuge also Vers 16. And he that stealeth a man and selleth him or if he be found in his hand c. This law is again repeated by Moses though in tearms somewhat different Deut. 24. 7. If a man be found stealing any of his brethren the children of Israel and maketh merchandise of him or selleth him then that thief shall d●e so that by comparing them together we may see first That though this place speaks generally of stealing a man yet it is meant onely of stealing those that were their brethren of Israel There was doubtlesse some punishment inflicted on those that stole servants that were strangers of another nation to wit according to the punishment of other thefts for their servants were their money but it was onely the stealing of Israelites whether men or women that was punished with death secondly That whereas it is said here He that stealeth a man and selleth him or if he be found in his hand he shall surely be put to death the meaning is not that though the manstealer had not yet sold his brother whom he had stollen but had him still in his own possession he should notwithstanding be put to death no lesse then if he had sold him for the law in Deuteronomi● doth plainly enough intimate that the man-stealer was onely to be put to death in case that he had sold and made merchandise of his brother whom he had stollen and indeed when the party stollen might be restored and had not yet endured the misery of being sold for a slave it is not probable that the thief was in this case to be put to death but the meaning is this that though it could not be proved against the manstealer that he had sold him yet if it could be proved that he had been in his ●and it should be taken for granted that he had sold him and he should be put to death and thirdly That the reason why this theft alone was punished with death amongst the Isra●lites we may well conceive to have been this to wit because it was such a debasing of man made after Gods image and much more of Gods people redeemed from bondage by his outstretched arm to be sold as beasts and because the miseries which such poore wretches endured in bondage were indeed worse then death especially when they were sold to heathens of which this law was meant for they could not hope to conceal their theft if they sold them in the land of Israel where no mercy could be expected and where besides their souls were exposed to manifest peril By all which we may likewise gather what a grievous sinne it is to bring men into the worse bondage of sinne and Satan or of subjecting the conscience of Gods people to be in thraldome to men of which the Apostle speaks 1. Cor. 7. 23. Ye are bought with a price be not ye the servants of men Vers 17. And he that curseth his father or his mother shall surely be put to death By cursing here is not meant onely expresse imprecations when a child should wish any mischief might
burning upon the altar all night unto the morning c. Not onely all day but all night also for as the morning burnt-offering burnt till the evening so the evening burnt-offering burnt all night untill the morning And the fire of the altar shall be burning in it That is shall be nourisht continually Vers 10. And the priest shall put on his linen garment c. That is not onely the linen breeches but also the linen coat And take up the ashes which the fire hath consumed with the burnt-offering c. Ashes are said to be consumed when the wood and sacrifices are consumed and turned to ashes as meal is said to be ground when the corn by grinding is turned to meal Esai 47. 2. Take the milst●ne and grind meal And he shall put them besides the altar See the Notes upon Levit. 1. 16. Vers 11. And carry forth the ashes without the camp unto a clean place The contrary is said to●ching the stones and dust of a leprous house Levit. 14. 40 41. Then the priest shall command that they ●ake the stones in which the plague is and they shall cast them into an unclean place without the city c. Becau●e these came from the Lords holy house therefore they were to be laid in a clean place where no dead carkases dung or other filth was laid Vers 12. And the fire upon the altar shall be burning in it c. That so the ●ire which first came from heaven might in a m●nner by the continuall supply of wood be still preserved upon the altar which might signifie 1. the excluding of all humane devices in Gods worship wherein nothing is allowed but is given by direction from heaven And secondly that no sacrifice is accepted with God but what is offered by the spirit that fire from heaven Matth. 3. 11. He shall baptize you with the holy Ghost and with fire And withall the continuing of this fire which at first came from heaven to testifie Gods favourable acceptance of that sacrifice was to teach them that as at first so still he did continually accept of their sacrifices and service as long as they did it according to the direction of his law And the priest shall burn the wood on it every morning Questionlesse they laid on wood upon the altar to maintain the fire thereon not onely in the morning but all the day long especially at even when the evening burnt-offering was to be burnt upon the altar onely there is a particular direction here for laying on wood in the morning because then having cleansed the altar and taken away the ashes they made the fire anew Vers 16. And the remainer thereof shall Aaron and his sonnes eat The males onely because these things being most holy might not be touched but by consecrated persons With unleavened bread shall it be eaten in the holy place That is in the co●rt of the Sanctuary for so it is explained concerning the sinne-offering verse 26. In the holy place shall it be eaten in the court of the tabernacle of the congregation Other holy things as the tithes and first-fr●its and the shoulder and breast of the peoples peace-offerings c. might be eaten elsewhere and the priests daughters were to have a share therein Numb 18. 11. The heave-offering of their gift with all the wave-offerings of the children of Israel I have given them unto thee and to thy sonnes and to thy daughters with thee by a statute for ever every one that is clean in thy house shall eat of it But those things that were most holy to wit the priests portion of all sacrifices whereof part was burnt upon the altar were onely to be eaten by Aaron and his sonnes and that in the holy place 1. That by their eating in Gods presence they might be put in mind to use these holy things with all sobriety 2. To put them in mind of that singular purity and holinesse which God required in them that were honoured above the people and 3. To signifie perhaps that none but those within Gods holy Church shall have any benefit by Christ As for this charge not to eat it with leavened bread see the note upon chap. 2. 11. Vers 20. This is the offering of Aaron and his ●onnes c. That is this is the offering that Aaron shall offer unto God in the d●y 〈◊〉 he is an●inted and which his sonnes successively that shall come to be high prie●●s shall offer unto the Lord in the day that they are anointed for it is evident that this meat-offering i● appointed for the high priest onely for he onely was anointed in succeeding 〈◊〉 as is shown before upon Exod. 29. 7. to wit Aaron for the present and that son of his successively that should be anointed high priest in his stead as it is expressed ve●se 22. The tenth part of an Ephah of fine flowre for a meat-offering perpetuall c. That is ever to be offered when any of them came to be high priests Vers 23. For every meat-offering for the priest shall be wholly burnt The priests eating of the sinne-offering sigured the bearing of the sinners iniquity Levit. 10. 17. but because no priest being a sinner could make atonement for himself therefore his meat-offering might not be eaten but is all burnt on the altar to teach him to expect salvation not by himself but onely by Christ Vers 26. The priest that offereth it for sinne shall eat it Except in the case mentioned verse 30. when the bloud thereof was carried into the tabernacle Vers 27. And when there is sprinkled of the bloud thereof upon any garment thou shalt wash c. viz. casually Now these ordinances peculiar onely to the sinne-offering because that in speciall sort figured Christ who was made sinne for us shadowed the contagion of sinne and our care to cleanse our selves by repentance and faith Vers 28. But the earthen vessell wherein it is sodden shall be broken and if it be sodden in a brasen pot c. Because the liquour wherein the sin-offering was sodden might soak into an earthen pot therefore that must be broken the rather because the losse of breaking it was not great but if it were sod in an iron or brasse pot that was onely to be scoured and rinsed all which was still to shadow forth the contagion of sinne Vers 30. And no sin-offering whereof any of the bloud is brought into the tabernacle c. Namely the sin-offering for the priest and the congregation See Levit. 4. 16. which were burnt without the camp and this might signifie that men cleaving to the legall priesthood and not seeking for the better priesthood of Christ could not be saved CHAP. VII Vers 1. LIkewise this is the law of the trespasse-offering c. For what transgressions the sinne-offering was appointed and for what the trespasse-offering it is hard to determine Some think the trespasse-offering was for smaller sinnes but I rather conceive
of oyl is commonly thought to be half a pint the three tenth deals of fine flowre were for accessory meat-offerings for the three sacrifices afore mentioned Indeed in the fifteenth of Numbers meat-offerings are appointed onely for burnt-offerings and peace-offerings nor do we any where reade of a meat-offering that was to be joyned either with sinne-offering or trespasse-offering And besides where an offering of fine flowre is injoyned for a sinne-offering Levit. 5. 11. to wit to be offered apart by it self not as accessory to any other sacrifice they were forbidden to put any oyl upon it whereas these are appointed to be mingled with oyl And therefore it seems these sacrifices for the cleansing of the leper had peculiar rites and were not in all things performed according to the ordinary way of other sacrifices Vers 12. And wave them for a wave-offering See the notes upon Exodus 29. 24. Vers 1● And he shall slay the lamb in the place c. See the note upon Levit 1. 11. and upon Levit. 7. 7. Vers 14. And the priest shall put it upon the tip of the right ear c. Hereby was signified that by virtue of Christs bloud the leper was now restored to his former freedome of entercourse and commerce with others as also that the whole man was to be renewed and consecrated to Gods service See the note upon Exod. 29. 20. Vers 15. And the pr●est shall take some of the log of oyl The oyl in the hand of the priest fignified the spirit by Christ conveyed unto us Vers 16. And sprinkle of the oyl with his finger c. Figuring our consecra●ion to Gods service by the same spirit Vers 17. And the rest of the oyl that is in his hand shall the priest put upon the tip of the right ear c. This signified the sanctification of the whole man by the same spirit Vpon the bloud of the trespasse-offering That is upon the very same place where the bloud was sprinkled Vers 20. And the priest shall offer the burnt-offering To wit that other he-lamb mentioned vers 10. Now by these rites the lepers were to professe their thankfulnesse to God in and through Christ as for the cure of their leprosie so also for the remission of their sinnes which had brought that judgement upon them and for their sanctification by his spirit Vers 31. And the other for a burnt-offering with the meat-offering That is the meat-offering that was to accompany the turtle dove or young pigeon offered for the burnt-offering whereby it appears that even the smaller burnt-offerings of turtle doves had also their meat-o●ferings as well as the greater of lambs c. Vers 36. Then the priest shall command that they all empty the house c. The priest must before he goeth into the house to view the place in the house suspected of leprosie command all that are in the house to come forth and the reason is given that all that are in the house be not made unclean Whereby it is evident that though the house had indeed the plague of leprosie yet the inhabitants that were in the house were not rendred unclean thereby till the priest had pronounced it to be a leprosie but then all that came i●to the house were thereby unclean And so it seems therefore it was with men too that were infected with leprosie No man was unclean by being in the company of a leprous person till the priest had pronounced him to be a leper Vers 40. And they shall cast them into an unclean place without the citie That by the uncleannesse of the place they may be known to be unclean things that so ●o●emay be defiled thereby Vers 41. And he shall cause the house to be scraped c. To wit lest the plague of leprosie should be in any other part of the walls of the house and being hidden under the plaister should not be discovered CHAP. XV. Vers 3. WHether his flesh runne with his issue or his flesh be stopped from his issue it is his uncleannesse That is he shall for it be counted unclean The issue here spoken of which rendred men unclean is that which we call the running of the reins Now because this disease men have in a different manner for sometime their seed being of a thinne substance runs continually from them and sometimes again being of a thicker substance it slows not so freely forth bu● stops in the passage and so putrifies the place through which it should passe in both these cases they are declared to be unclean Now though by this legall pollution they were taught the filthinesse of all sinne whatsoever yet more especially I conceive it was to signifie that originall corruption and filthinesse of our nature which is conveyed unto us in our first conception by that very seed and substance whereof we are made Vers 4. Every bed whereon he lyeth that hath the issue is unclean These laws following shew the contagion of si●ne which defileth not onely men themselves but every thing besides which a wicked man hath to do with for unto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure Tit. 1. 15. Vers 12. And every vess●ll of wood shall be rinsed in water That is of wood or any other such strong matter as silver copper brasse c. Vers 16. And if any mans seed of copulation go out c. This is not meant of the issue forespoken of nor when a man lyeth with a woman whereof vers 18. but of the seed of the healthfull issuing by reason of nightly dreams or any such accident whereof see Deut. 23. 10. Vers 19. And wh●soever toucheth her shall be unclean c. To wit every one that is of years of discretion and so fit to be ordered by this law For it is not likely that infants that lay in the arms and sucked on the breasts of their mothers when they were in this condition were rendred unclean thereby Vers 24. And if any man lie with her at all c. To wit ignorantly for if he did it presumptuously not pollution but cutting off was his punishment Levit. 20. 18. And if a man shall lie with a woman having her sicknesse and shall uncover her nakednesse he hath discovered her fountain and he hath uncovered the fountain of her bloud aud both of them shall b● cut off from among the people Yet some conceive that this place is onely meant of lying in the same bed with a woman and not of carnall copulation CHAP. XVI Vers 1. ANd the Lord spake unto Moses after the death of the two sonnes of Aaron c. That is upon that occasion lest they should again endanger themselves by entring into the most holy place as before by offering strange fire and so also within a short time after that happened for it doth not follow that because the Lord upon that occasion gave this ensuing charge therefore the laws set down in the former chapters are transposed and
where they were forbidden to kindle a fire or to dresse that which they should eat on the Sabbath day yet did not the Jews understand this law so as to restrain them from those works which were necessarily to be done and therefore they used to water their catel as our Saviour faith Luke 13. 15. on the Sabbath day and if need were would pull out of a pit either ox or asse that were fallen into it Luke 14. 5. It is the Sabbath of the Lord in all your dwellings That is to be observed in all your dwellings The other feasts were especially to be kept before the Sanctuary whither all the men of Israel were to assemble Exod. 23. 14. Three times thou shalt keep a feast unto me in the year and vers 17. Three times in the year all thy males are to appear before the Lord God Deut. 16. 5 6. Thou mayest not sacrifice the Passeover within any of the gates which the Lord thy God hath given thee But at the place which the Lord thy God shall chuse to place his name in there shalt thou sacrifice the Passeover and vers 16. Three times in a year shall all thy males appear before the Lord thy God in the place which he shall chuse But the Sabbaths were to be sanctified in all places where they dwelt to which purpose their Synagogues were built Acts 15. 21. Moses of old time hath in every city them that preach him being read in the Synagogues every Sabbath day Vers 7. In the first day ye shall have an holy convocation ye shall do no servile work therein See the first note upon vers 3. Vers 8. But ye shall offer an offering made by fire unto the Lord seven dayes What the sacrifices were that were to be offered on each of these seven dayes of unleavened bread we may see Numb 28. 18 24. Vers 10. When ye be come into the land which I give unto you and shall reap the harvest thereof c. That is and shalt addresse thy self to reap the harvest thereof for the sheaf of the first-fruits of this harvest which they were here enjoyned to bring unto the priest was to be the first corn they cut down when they began to put the sicle to the corn as it is expressed Deut. 16. 9. Nor might they reap their harvest till this sheaf of first-fruits was brought unto the Lord. Vers 11. On the morrow after the priest shall wave it That is on the sixteenth day of the first moneth called Nisan the second of the seven dayes of unleavened bread Upon the fourteenth day of that moneth the Passeover was kept the fifteenth day was the first day of the feast of unleavened bread which day was a Sabbath of rest vers 7. and is called the feast Numb 28. 17. and this is the Sabbath here meant for on the morrow after being the sixteenth day of that moneth the sheaf of the first-fruits was by the care of the Magistrate in the name of all the people brought unto the priest and this sheaf was of barley for that was first ripe in the land of Canaan Ruth 2. 23. She kept fast by the maydens of Boaz to glean unto the end of barley-harvest and of wheat-harvest and Exod. 9. 31 32. The barley was in the ear and the flax was bolled but the wheat and the rie were not smitten for they were not grown up to wit at the feast of the Passeover but wheat-harvest was after at Pentecost or the feast of weeks as we may see Exod. 34. 22. where the feast of Pentecost or the feast of weeks is also called the feast of the first-fruits of wheat-harvest Vers 12. And ye shall offer the day when ye wave the sheaf an he lamb without blemish c. To wit besides the dayly morning and evening sacrifice which upon no occasion were intermitted and besides the sacrifices appointed for every of the seven dayes of this solemn feast of unleavened bread Numb 28. 23 24. For this was appointed peculiarly to accompany this sheaf of the first-fruits and it figured Christ by whom those first-fruits were sanctifyed Vers 13. And the meat-offering thereof shall be two tenth deals of fine flowre c. To wit two tenth deals of an Ephah that is two Omers and this was double to the usuall proportion in all other sacrifices of lambs which was but one tenth deal Numb 15. 4. He that offereth his offering unto the Lord shall bring a meat-offering of a tenth deal of flowre the reason whereof may be because this was a gratulatory sacrifice for the fruits of the earth Vers 15. And ye shall count unto you from the morrow after the Sabbath c. Here direction is given how they should know on what day they were to keep the next great feast after that of unleavened bread to wit the feast of weeks or Pentecost namely that they were to number from the morrow after the Sabbath that is from the sixteenth day of the moneth Nisan as is before said in the note upon vers 11. which was the very day that they brought the sheaf of the wave-offering seven compleat Sabbaths that is seven compleat weeks which was nine and fourty dayes and that then on the morrow after the seventh Sabbath that is after the seventh week which was the fiftieth day they were to keep the feast of weeks or Pentecost and to offer a new meat-offering unto the Lord which shows the reason why this feast was called the feast of weeks namely because it was seven weeks after the Passeover or the beginning of the feast of unleavened bread as also why it was afterward called in the New Testament Pentecost Acts 2. 1. to wit from the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth fifty because it was fifty dayes after the first and great day of unleavened bread for they began to number these fifty dayes from the morrow after that Sabbath inclusively which was the second day of unleavened bread the day whereon the sheaf of first-fruits was offered Vers 17. Ye shall bring out of your habitations two wave-loaves of two tenth deals c. That is on the feast of Pentecost you shall bring this offering which was to be offered as the first-fruits of their wheat-harvest as the sheaf offered at the Passeover mentioned vers 10. was brought as the first-fruits of their barley-harvest now it is expressed that these two wave-loaves were to be brought out of their habitations either to signifie that these two loaves were to be made of the new wheat of their own land not of forein corn or bought of strangers or else to signifie that though there were but one sheaf of first-fruits offered at the Passeover in the name of all the people yet now every family was to bring two wave-loaves of first-fruits out of their severall habitations But indeed because the sacrifices mentioned in the following verse that were offered together with these loaves were not brought severally
when the Sabbaticall year began secondly for all the Sabbaticall year thirdly for the eighth year till both barly and wheat harvest of that they had sown that year was fully gathered and made ready for use which was not till the ninth year was wellnigh come and thus the increase of the sixth year served for three years Now for the year of Jubile concerning which they had more reason to doubt because then they did neither sow nor reap for two years toge●her to wit the fourtyninth year which was the seventh Sabbaticall year and the fiftieth which was the year of Jubile by what is said concerning the seventh year ●●e like must be conceived concerning that too namely that then God would give such a blessing to the sixth year that the increase thereof should serve for foure years that is for part of foure years Vers 23. The land shall not ●e s●●d for ever c. See the note upon vers 10. Vers 25. If any of hi● kin come to redeem it then shall he redeem that which his brother sold This kinsman that was allowed to redeem the possession which his poore brother had sold was a figure of Christ who being near to us and allyed in the flesh is called our God that is our redeemer or deliverer Esai 59. 20. and our brother Heb. 2. 11. He is not ashamed to call them brethrew and he it is that hath redeemed us and our heavenly inheritance unto us in our low depressed and poore estate Hos 13. 14. I will ransome them from the power of the gr●ve and will redeem them from death 2. Cor. 8. 9. Though he was rich yet for your sakes he became poore that ye through his poverty might be rich Vers 29. And if a man sell a dwelling-house in a walled city c. In two particulars the Law here given for the sale of houses in walled towns differs from that before given for the sale of their land first whereas they might redeem their land at all times their houses in walled towns they might not redeem unlesse they did it within a year secondly whereas their lands did alwayes return to the first owners at the year of Jubile their houses in walled towns did not return to those that sold them at the year of Jubile but if the owners redeemed them not within a year they were alie●ated from them for ever Of which differences these reasons are probably given First because ●pon these houses if not redeemed within so short a time much cost might be bestowed by him that had bought them for the altering repairing or enlarging of them and therefore it was not fit they should be redeemed as lands were and on the otherside in many years they might be much decayed and so not be restored in the same condition they were in when they were sold as lands might Secondly because the perpetuall alienating of these houses in walled cities did not make such confusion in the tribes as the alienating of their lands since it cannot be thought that in populous cities onely men of one and the same tribe inhabited Thirdly because men might better part with their houses then their ground that should yield them food and sustenance yea these houses might be burthensome to the owners becoming poore rather then usefull Vers 31. They may be redeemed and they shall go out in the Jubile That is the houses in villages to wit because the lands could not be without farmhouses stables c. Vers 33. For the houses of the cities of the Levites are their possession c. Therefore as the Israelites had liberty to redeem their possessions of lands and enjoyed the priviledge of receiving them back again at the year of Jubile so it was fit the Levites should have the same priviledges concerning their houses in the cities allotted them because they had no other possession in the land Vers 34. But the field of the suburbs of their cities may not be sold c. The field of the suburbs of which see Numb 35. 4 5. appointed for the keeping of their cattel might not be sold at all left wanting that necessary help they should be forced to leave their dwellings to the great damage of the whole people God having thus dispersed them in severall cities in every tribe that they might watch over the souls of the people This continued during the politie of the Jews what was after done see Acts 4. 36 37. Joses a Levite having land sold it and brought the money and laid it at the Apostles feet Vers 36. Take thou no usury of him nor increase That is of thy poore decayed brother whether he be an Israelite born or a stranger that is become a proselyte for to both these they are commanded to lend in the foregoing verse and therefore from both these they are here forbidden to take usury or increase Vers 39. Thou shalt not compell him to serve as a bond-servant That is thou shalt not compell him to serve for ever nor use him basely and hardly but as a brother Vers 40. And shall serve thee unto the year of Jubile The ordinary time of their service was but for six years Exod. 21. 2. but in some cases their ears were bored and they were to serve for ever Exod. 21. 6. But in the first if not in both these cases the Jubile was to put an end unto their service and they were to be set free And as their serving for ever had an end at the year of Jubile so also all their other legall ordinances which were ordained to continue for ever had their period at the evangelicall Jubile of which this was a type Vers 41. And then shall he depart from thee both he and his children with him c. And so also his wife Exod. 21. 3. If he came in by himself he shall go out by himself if he were married then his wife shall go out with him Vers 46. They shall be your bond-men for ever That is those servants which you buy that are of other nations for these yea though they were proselytes were not set at liberty at the year of Jubile But over your brethren the children of Israel ye shall not rule one over another with rigour Namely first they must not be put to such vile works and base imployments as their bondmen of the Gentiles secondly they must not be held in perpetuall bondage but must go out free they their wives and children at the year of Jubile thirdly they must not be sold to others for bondmen as the Gentiles were these things are meant here by ruling over them with rigour for cruelly they might not deal with their bondmen that were of the Gentiles CHAP. XXVI Vers 5. ANd your threshing shall reach unto the vintage c. That is you shall have such plentifull harvests that before you can have threshed out your corn the vintage shall come and such rich vintages that before they be ended it shall be
Moses and Aaron fell on their faces before all the assembly c. Either to pray unto God for them as in Numb 6. 22. or to testifie their great sorrow and astonishment of mind or to intreat the people not to proceed in their rebellion for now happely Moses spake that Deut. 1. 29 30 31. Then I said unto you Dread not neither be affraid of th●m the Lord your God which goeth before you he shall fight for you c. Vers 6. And Joshua the sonne of Nun and Caleb the sonne of Jephunneh which were of them that searched the land rent their clothes In signe of sorrow and detestation of those blasphemous speeches which the people had uttered against God Vers 8. If the Lord delight in us then he will bring us into this land c. That i● unlesse by this rebellion we provoke God so farre that he take no more delight in us Vers 9. For they are bread for us That is we shall easily consume and devour them to wit with the sword according to that expression Deut. 32. 42. I will make mine arrows drunk with bloud and my sword shall devour flesh and this I conceive is opposed to that speech of the other incredulous searchers of the land chap. 13. ver 32. The land through which we have gone to search it is ● land that eateth up the inhabitants thereof Their defence is departed from them c. In the Hebrew it is their shadow is departed from them but thereby is meant their desence covert and protection that whereby men are preserved from dangers as the shadow g●ards a man from the scorching heat of the sunne as Psal 91. 1. He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most high shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty and Psal 121. 5. 6. The Lord is thy keeper the Lord is thy shade upon thy right hand The s●nne shall not smite thee by day nor the moon by night and the meaning is that God had now forsaken them as appears by the following clause whic● is opposed against this and the Lord is with us so that the aim of Joshua and Caleb in these words was to assure the people that however God had hitherto preserved them from being destroyed because their iniquity was not then full yet now he had withdrawn his help from them and would certainly give them up to destruction and that they had no cause therefore to fear them but might go boldly against them as against a naked people left destitute of ●ll means to preserve and shelter them for what are strong cities and high walls to defend a people whom God hath forsaken Vers 10. And the glory of the Lord appeared in the tabernacle c. The Lord seeing the danger his faithfull witnesses were in did suddenly cause the cloud the usuall signe when God meant to speak to Moses concerning his people to descend upon the tabernacle and that no doubt in a more glorious appearance then ordinarily thereby to astonish the people and to stop them in that furious attempt they were going about Vers 17. And now I beseech thee let the power of my Lord be great according as thou hast spoken saying c. Two severall wayes these words may be understood first of the power of God in carrying the Israelites into Canaan and because this would be an act of wonderfull mercy in God to do this for a people that had now so horribly rebelled against him therefore the next words are added according as thou hast spoken saying The Lord is long-suffering c. or secondly of the power of God in pardoning their sinne let the power of my Lord be great that is by pardoning this people now let it be seen how great thy power is in this regard how able thou art to forgive a people that by so many sinnes and so exceeding great do still provoke thee Nor need it seem strange that Moses speaking of God after the manner of men should make it an act of power to forgive since the power of man is in nothing more seen then in overcoming his anger and pardoning those whom he may destroy according to that of Solomon Prov. 16. 32. He that is slow to anger is better then the mighty and he that ruleth his spirit then he that taketh a citie Vers 18. The Lord is long-suffering and of great mercy forgiving iniquity and transgression and by no means clearing the guilty c. The drift of Moses prayer and so also of his alledging these words which the Lord had spoken concerning himself being to procure of God that he would shew mercy to the Israelites and not to poure out his wrath upon them as their sinne had deserved it may seem strange that he should adde the last clause that God would by no means clear the guilty but would visit the iniquity of the fathers upon the children c. But for the resolving of this doubt we must know that these words being taken joyntly with those which went before do no way crosse the aim of Moses prayer and that because he did not sue to God that he should not punish the sinne of this people but onely that he would not utterly destroy them as he had before threatened vers 12. and accordingly the drift of Moses plea in these words is this That since God had said of himself that he was a long-suffering God and that though he would by no means clear the guilty c. yet withall he was a God of great mercy and ready to forgive the iniquities of his people that he would now according to this which he had said deal with this people namely that he would in wrath remember mercy and not sweep them quite away as dung from the face of the earth Vers 20. And the Lord said I have pardoned according to thy word That is I will not destroy them all as one man I will not cut off the whole nation as at first I threatned but will onely punish these rebells and leave their posterity to inherit the land Vers 21. But as truly as I live all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord. This some understand of the glory which the Lord would get to himself by the just punishment that he would inflict upon this unbelieving and rebellious people for their refusing to enter into that good land whereunto he had brought them others ag●in understand it of the glory he would get by the miraculous and glorious thing● that he would do for his people in carrying them into the land of Canaan but I conceive that both may be best included Moses had pleaded with God that if he utterly destroyed this people the nations would say that he was not able to bring them into the lan● To this therefore the Lord answers that he would not destroy them but would carry their posterity into the land which he had promised them and that with working so many strange wonders
down and the Canaanites which dwelt in that hill and smote them and discomfited them even unto Hormah That is the Amorites the posterity of Canaan Deut. 1. 44. And the Amorites which dwelt in that mountain came out against you and chased you as bees do After this discomfiture the Israelites returned and wept before the Lord but he would not hear their voice nor give ear unto them So they abode in Kadesh many dayes Deut 1. 45. Now for Hormah whither the Israelites were chased it was a place afterwards so called upon occasion of the Israelites destroying the Canaanites there chap. 21. 3. CHAP. XV. Vers 1. ANd the Lord spake unto Moses saying Speak unto the children of Israel c. In this chapter the Lord enlargeth and explaineth some laws formerly delivered And it is most likely that this was delivered in the order as here it is set down within some short time after their departure back from Kadesh toward the red sea and that purpo●ely to chear up the people with hope of Gods reconciliation that he had not utterly cast them off but would again smell the sweet savour of a sacrifice from them and perform the promises made to them to which end also there is a particul●r mention made that they should observe these directions given them when they c●me into the land of Canaan Vers 2. When ye be come into the land of your habitations which I give unto you c. This law is to shew what meat-offerings and drink-offerings were alwayes to be offered together with their sacrifices whereof part was burnt upon the altar as accessories and appurtenances thereto belonging for the understanding whereof we must note that whereas there are two sorts of these offerings by fire mentioned vers 3. that were to have these accessory meat-offerings and drink-offerings to wit a burnt-offering or a sacrifice by sacrifice there is meant onely the sacrifice of peace-offerings as in many other places besides And indeed unlesse it be i● the sinn●-offering that was offered at the cleansing of the Leper Levit. 14. 10. we do not any where reade that there was any meat-offerings appointed for sinne-offerings b●t onely for burnt-offerings and peace-offerings whence we see that these two onely are mentioned i● this place the reason whereof I conceive was this because the end of the sinne-offering which was to make atonement for the humbled sinner and the end of the meat-offering which was to testifie the joy and gladnesse of their thankfull hearts did not so well agree and it would not therefore be so proper to joyn them together and secondly that there are severall quantities of meat and drink-offerings here appointed as first for a lamb or kid vers 4 5. or secondly for a ramme ver 6 7. or for a bullock ver 8 9 10. for according as the sacrifice was greater o● lesse so must also the meat and drink-offering be more or lesse so there might be a proportion betwixt them Now concerning the measure of an hin and other things observable concerning these meat-offerings see what is noted before upon Exod. ●9 41 c. Vers 15. As ye are so shall the stranger be before the Lord. That is God will make no difference betwixt you and the strangers that have embraced the same religion with you his sacrifices and yours shall be alike acceptable to God and therefore as there is no difference in the Lords acceptation so neither in the manner of their offering them In civil things there was not one Law both for Israelite and stranger but before the Lord that is when they came into Gods presence to perform the duties of Gods worship as the Israelites were so were the strangers that is there was one Law for them both Vers 20. As ye do the heave-offering of the threshing-floore so shall ye heave it That is about the same quantity that ye offer of your first corn shall ye offer of you● dough and both shall be offered with the same ceremonies Vers 21. Of the first of your dough ye shall give unto the Lord an heave-offering in your generations That is to the priests as the Lords receivers for the first-fruits were their portion Ezek. 44. 30. And the first of all the fruits of all things and ev●ry oblation of all of every sort of your oblations shall be the priests c. Vers 22. And if ye have erred and not observed all th●se commandments c. There is a Law given concerning the expiation of a sinne ignorantly committed by the whole congregation Levit. 4. 13. But there is a manifest difference betwixt this and that There the Law speaks of doing that which should not be done here of not doing all which should be done there the sacrifice which the congregation should bring is onely a bullock for a sinne-offering here they are willed to bring a bullock for a burnt-offering and a kid of the goats for a sinne-offering And the ground of this difference I conceive is this because that Law concerned sinnes of doing evil forbidden this onely concerns the sinne of neglecting those ceremoniall duties commanded by the Law which may be the more readily yielded if we consider the occasion of inserting this Law in this place Having spoken of the first-fruits of the first of their dough he immediately added this Law to shew what should be done in case any of those things concerning the externall worship of God either first-fruits or any other thing that ought to be brought to the priests and to the tabernacle were om●tted either by the congregation or particular persons Vers 25. And the priests shall make an atonement for all the congregation of the children of Israel c. Or for every congregation whereby may be implyed the severall tribes cities towns and synagogues Vers 30. But the soul that doth ought presumptuously c. This Law for the cutting off that is the putting to death of those that do ought presumptuously must be understood onely of the same offences for which the foregoing sacrifi●cs were appointed when they were ignorantly committed to wit of offences committed against the worship enjoyned by the ceremoniall Law as it is noted before upon vers 22. In these things the soul that is the man that did ought presumptuously that is not of ignorance inadvertencie or infirmity but willfully and boldly purposely and openly as in an advised contempt of Gods Law and of those duties of his publick worship in the Law of God enjoyned he was to be cut off and that because he did thereby reproch the Lord this being all one as if he should fay that God was not to be regarded or that his judgements were not worthy his fear Vers 32. And while the children of Israel were in the wildernesse they found a man that gathered sticks upon the Sabbath day c. At what time in their wandring through the wildernesse this happened which is here related it is not expressed But I conceive it
sure they were herein guilty and that happely upon this ground Heretofore when the people murmured the Lord for the most part shewed great indignation against them and was ready to destroy them but that Moses by his prayer prevailed with God to spare them Moses therefore and Aaron wondring that now the Lord should shew no such displeasure but should presently send them to fetch water for them out of the rock they doubted whether God did seriously intend this supply or did onely command it by way of upbraiding the people for forgetting what he had formerly done for them when they wanted water and so though they came to the rock ready to do what God had commanded yet they were perplexed and in suspence betwixt hope and doubtings questioning still within themselves what God would do and that it seems not so much out of any doubt of Gods power as out of a distrust that such a rebellious people were not capable of such a mercie from God and that it was this which Moses stuck at his words seem to testifie vers 10. Hear now ye rebels must we fetch you water out of this rock But if the infidelity of their hearts were all their sinne why is it said also vers 12. that they did not sanctifi● him in the eyes of the children of Israel I answer that they showed their distrust outwardly also first by Moses his stricking the rock to which he should onely have spoken vers 11. this tended to the obscuring of Gods glory since his almighty power would have been more manifest if by mere speaking to the rock the water had gushed forth s●condly by striking it twice which might well proceed from heat of anger and distrust thirdly by the doubtfulnesse of his words must we fetch you water out of this rock and fourthly by the bitternesse of his rage against the people Hear now ye rebels which happely he expressed also in many other words of discontent and anger which are not here set down for the psalmist saith that they angered him at the waters of strife and provoked his spirit so that he spake unadvisedly with his lips Psal 10● 32. 33. which as in part no doubt it proceeded from infidelity so it must needs much obscure the riches of Gods mercie who was ready to shew such wonderfull favour to such a rebellious people and argued a kind of unwillingnesse that God should be honoured by this miracle which he had determined to work in the eyes of all the people Vers 11. And the water came out abundantly and the congregation drank This was also spirituall drink flowing from the rock Christ 1. Cor. 10. 4. And did all drink the same spirituall drink for they drank of that spirituall rock that followed them and that rock was Christ being smitten for our transgressions Esa 5. 3 4. by the rod of the law from him proceedeth that living water wherewith Gods Israel may quench their thirst for ever But whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst but the water that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water springing up into everlasting life John 4. 14. Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters and he that hath no money come ye buy and eat yea come and buy wine and milk without money and without price And their beasts also Thus those elements which are signes and seals of Gods grace unto those to whom they are sanctified of God for that purpose out of that use are no other but common and have no inherent holinesse in them Vers 12. Because ye believed me not to sanctifie me in the eyes of the children of Israel That is to glorifie me by discovering that you did not question mine almighty power my faithfulnesse and free grace even to those that do not deserve it for as the believer doth greatly honour God by resting upon his mercie and power and faithfulnesse so he that questions the accomplishment of any mercie which God hath promised his people doth exceedingly dishonour him and therefore it is said chap. 27. 14. that Moses and Aaron did herein ●ebell against Gods commandments See the former note upon vers 10. Therefore ye shall not bring this congregation into the land which I have given them How grievous this chastisement was unto Moses we see Deut. 3. 23 24 25 26. But withall herein a mystery was implyed Neither Moses the minister of the law nor Aaron the priest could bring them into Canaan but this must be the work of Jesus or Joshua his successour so neither the law nor the legall priesthood can bring us into heaven but onely faith in Jesus Christ Gal. 2. 16. Vers 13. This is the water of Meribah c. So was the former place also called in Rephidim Exod. 17. 7. To distinguish them the Scripture calleth this Meribah of Kadesh Deut. 2. 1 2 3. And he was sanctified in them That is amongst the Israelites by giving them water and thereby manifesting his power truth and compassion or in them that is Moses and Aaron by punishing their rebellion for hereby God is sanctified Ezek. 38. 16. I will bring thee against my land that the heathen may know me when I shall be sanctified in thee O God before their eyes Vers 14. And Moses sent messengers from Kadesh unto the King of Edom c. To wit by Gods direction Deut. 2. 1 2 3. Thou knowest all the travell that hath befallen us That is our grievous and wearisome afflictions and troubles have been so famous that they cannot be unknown to thee Vers 16. And when we cried unto the Lord he heard our voice and sent an angel c. This was Christ who appeared to Moses in the burning bush and sent Moses to fetch the Israelites out of Egypt and afterwards led them in their way in a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night See the note upon Exod. 3. 2. And behold we are in Kadesh a city in the uttermost of thy border Or by Kadesh to wit in the wildernesse lying near and having the name of Kadesh the citi● Numb 33. 36. Vers 17. Let us passe I pray thee through thy countrey That being now their nearest way and most convenient for their passage in to Canaan We will not passe through the fields or through the vineyards neither will we drink of the water of the wels Meaning that they would not turn aside into their fields or vineyards to do them any damage and that either they would not drink without paying for it as vers 19. or else that they would onely drink of the rivers which were common not meddling with their wells digged for their private uses which were very precious in those hot and dry countreys Vers 18. And Edom said unto him Thou shalt not passe by me c. Fearing questionlesse that an army of six hundred thousand would not be so easily gotten out of his countrey
taken prisoners in this battel for hereby he taught them at first how unable they were in themselves to conquer those nations that so they might learn to trust in God and not in themselves If one king thus prevailed over them how should they be able to destroy all the inhabitans of the land combining themselves together if the Lord should not assist them Vers 2. And Israel vowed a vow unto the Lord c. That is the Israelites intending to renew the battel and again once more to set upon Arad and his army called upon God for help and vowed to devote unto him their enemies and all their cities that is utterly to destroy them If thou wilt indeed deliver this people into my hand then I will utterly destroy their cities for when things were thus devoted the persons were killed the cities burnt and the goods confiscate to the Lord so that nothing was reserved for their own private use as is noted upon Levit. 27. 28. and this was a vow agreeable to Gods law Exod. 23. 32. Thou shalt make no covenant with them nor with their gods Vers 3. And the Lord hearkened to the voice of Israel and delivered up the Canaanites That is this army of Arad whom in a second battel after this vow they vanquished and destroyed And they utterly destroyed them and their cities and he called the name of that place Hormah But how could they being so farre off in the wildernesse destroy their cities lying within Canaan surely had Moses at this time entred Canaan in the pursuit of Arad he would not have fallen back again into the deserts It seemeth therefore that the accomplishment of this vow was performed long after to wit by the men of Judah and Simeon when they were come into the land of Canaan as is expressed Judg. 1. 17. And Judah went with Simeon his brother and they slew the Canaanites that inhabited Zephath and utterly destroyed it and the name of the citie was called Hormah so that this clause was here inserted either by Mosesprophetically or by some other holy man afterwards Vers 4. And they journeyed from mount Hor by the way of the red sea c. That is they went from Hor Eastward a way that led to the red sea which lay North and South the common rode from Gilead and Moab to Eziongaber c. and so crossing that way they passed on to Zalmonah and so turning then Northward to Punon as is expressed Numb 33. 41 42. and here it seems it was that the Israelites were punished with fiery serpents And the soul of the people was much discourag●d because of the way That is because they were led a great way about through a desert full of wants and difficulties and that the rather because now they began to think puffed up with their late victory that it had been easie for them to have forced a passage the nearest way Vers 5. And the people spake against God and against Moses c. And so tempted Christ 1. Cor. 10. 9. Neither let us tempt Christ as some of them also tempted and were destroyed of serpents Vers 6. And the Lord sent fiery ser●ents among the people c. So called because their venemous biting did cause a grievous burning in the bodies of the Israelites It may seem that they were a kind of serpents with wings that so flying amongst them did here and there seise upon them and bite them such as the prophet speaks of Esa 14. 29. Out of the serpents root shall come forth a cockatrice and his fruit shall be a fiery flying serpent The word in the originall is Seraphin that is Burners the very same name whereby the Angels are called Esa 6. 2. because of their burning zeal for Gods glory The wildernesse through which the Israelites now went did abound with many sorts of these serpents and therefore it is called that great and terrible wildernesse wherein were fiery serpents and scorpions Deut. 8. 15. onely God had hitherto kept them from hurting his people till now for their sinne he gave them power to bite and kill them and indeed the punishment was just according to their sinne for now God gave them just cause to complain of thirst and with the venemous biting of fiery serpents he punished their virulent tongues to whom that might well be applyed which the Psalmist speaks Psal 140. 3. They have sharpened their tongues as a serpent adders poison is under their lips Vers 8. Make thee a fiery serpent and set it upon a pole c. This was the way which the Lord prescribed for the curing of the Israelites that were bitten with fiery serpents namely that Moses should make a fiery serpent that is a figure or representation of those fiery serpents wherewith they were stung and that of brasse as we may see in the following verse the better to represent their fiery quality because brasse is of a fiery colour and therefore it is said of the Cherubims that Ezekiel saw in a vision Ezek. 1. 7. that they sparkled like the colour of burnished brasse and then set it upon a pole to the end that it might be seen from every quarter of the camp so that every man that was stung with the fiery serpents might look upon this brasen serpent and thereby might be healed Now this way of cure the Lord prescribed for two reasons first because this being no naturall way of cure did the better discover that it was of Gods mercy and secondly that it might be a type of Christ and our redemption by him John 3. 14 15. As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wildernesse even so must the sonne of man be lifted up That whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have eternall life For first as the Israelites were bitten with fiery serpents and that biting was mortall and deadly so was all mankind in our parents mortally stung and bitten by Satan that old serpent Rev. 12. 9. so that their whole nature is envenomed with sinne as a deadly poison and as it were set on fire of hell as S. James speaks of the tongue in particular James ● 6 8. and that so that without some way of recovery they must needs perish everlastingly By one man sinne entred into the world and death by sinne Rom. 5. 12. and the sting of death is sinne saith the same Apostle 1. Cor. 15. 56. Secondly as the brazen serpent which Moses made for the cure of the Israelites had the outward form of those fiery serpents yet had not the poyson of those serpents in it so Christ came in the likenesse of sinnefull flesh Rom. 8. 3. and yet was without sinne Thirdly as the brazen serpent was lifted upon a pole that when any man was stung with the fiery serpents he might lift up his eyes and look upon it so Christ was lifted upon the crosse to the end he might save death-stung sinners or rather so was Christ lifted up and held forth
up in that dry and barren place which was accordingly done and so thereupon the people sung that ensuing gratulatory song ver 17 18. wher●in with much joy and praise to God they acknowledged the miraculous manner of that wells springing up Spring up O well Sing ye unto it The Princes digged the well the nobles of the people digged it by the direction of the Lawgiver with their staves And this it seems was that renowned well called Beer-elim Esa 15. 8. that is the well of the mighty ones and might have a like spirituall signification as had before those waters that came out of the rock for as that rock was Christ 1. Cor. 10. 4. so this well might be a figure of him who is the fountain of the gardens a well of living waters Cant. 4. 15. secondly the waters springing from thence might signifie that saving doctrine and graces of Gods spirit which from Christ are derived unto the faithfull and are in them alwayes as a well of water springing up unto life everlasting John 4. 14. thirdly the Princes digging of this well with their staves might be a figure of the labour of governours to open and bring forth to the people the ordinances of God the word and the ministry thereof and fourthly the Israelites singing about this well might he a signe of that Christian joy whereof the Prophet speaks Esa 12. 3 4. With joy shall ye draw water out of the wells of salvation and in that day shall ye say Praise the Lord c. Vers 21. And Israel sent messengers to Sihon king of the Amorites c. When they were to passe over the river Arnon mentioned vers 13. God had told them that they should destroy Sihon and possesse his countrey Deut. 2. 24 Rise ye up and passe over the river Arnon Behold I have given into thy hand Sihon the Amorite king of Heshbon and his land c. yet now out of the wildernesse of Kedemo●h Deut. 2. 26. they sent messengers to him doubtlesse not without Gods allowance to desire a peaceable passage through his countrey thereby to render him afterwards the more inexcusable when he was destroyed both in his own conscience and in the judgement of others that should hear of it Vers 22. We will not drink of the waters of the well See the note upon ●hap 20. 17. Vers 24. For the border of the children of Ammon was strong And therefore Sihon had not encroched upon their countrey as he had upon the Moabites at least not beyond the river Jabbok see Josh 13. 25. for this is not added as a reason why the Israelites made not warre upon them Gods command was a restraint sufficient for them Deut. 2. 19. And when thou comest nigh over against the children of Ammon distresse th●m not nor meddle with them c. Vers 25. And Israel took all these cities c. Destroying all the inhabitants Deut. 2. 34. And we took all his cities at that time and utterly destroyed all the men and the women and the little ones c. Vers 26. For Heshbon was the citie of Sihon the king of the Amorites c. Because Heshbon and the countrey adjoyning had been the possession of the Moabites and God had charged the Israelites not to meddle with their countrey Deut. 2. 9. therefore Moses doth largely prove from this place to the end of the 30. verse that both Heshbon and the countrey adjoyning was the possession of Sihon when the Israelites took it Sihon having taken it from the former king of the Moabites that is from him that was king before Balak that was at present their king chap. 22. 4. Concerning which see also what is noted before upon vers 13. Vers 27. Wherefore they that speak in proverbs say c. By proverbs in the Scripture are generally meant all wise and pithie sayings especially when they are grown to be in common use amongst men 1. Sam. 24. 13. As saith the proverb of the antients Wickednesse proceedeth from the wicked and secondly more particularly those are called proverbs first that are expressed with figurative words or by way of similitude as Ezek. 18. 2. What mean ye that ye use this proverb concerning the land of Israel The fathers have ●aten sowre grapes and the childrens teeth are set on edge secondly that are taken up as by-words by way of scorning and d●riding men as Deut. 28. 17. Thou shalt become an astonishment a proverb and a by-word among all nations and Hab. 2. 6. Shall not all these take up a parable and a taunting proverb against him and so consequently by those that speak in proverbs are meant here such as did compose or utter songs or ballads made by way of triumphing over some vanquished enemie and that because in such songs they used to scoff at those that were so vanquished and the severall passages of such songs were usually taken up afterwards as a proverb and by-word Now Moses to prove that Heshbon and the countrey adjoyning now taken by the Israelites had formerly been taken from the Moabites by Sihon alledgeth this proverbiall song which no doubt was first made and used by the Amorites by way of triumphing over the vanquished Moabltes and that the rather because the Israelites now might more justly and so happely did insult over the Amorites with the same proverbiall taunt wherewith they had before derided the Moabites Let the city of Sihon be built and prepared Implying that though Heshbon perished vers 30. being in Moabs hand yet now it should be more fairly and more strongly fort●fied being in Sihons hand and so also being applyed to the Israelites victory that though it were much defaced in Sihons hands yet now the Israelites would build it more fairly Vers 28. For there is a fire gone out of Heshbon a flame from the city of Sihon c. That is the fury of warre which was kindled and began in the subversion and laying waste of Heshbon brake out from thence and consumed the countrey of the Moabites as farre as Ar a chief city of theirs and the Lords of the high places of Arnon that is the princes priests and gods of the Moabites for all these may be comprehended under this word Lords even as farre as Arnon And hence it is that the prophet speaking of the vain confidence of the Moabites in the strength of Heshbon for the Moabites had then recovered this countrey again the Israelites being carryed captives into Assyria he threatens that those cities wherein they trusted should by the Chaldeans be first destroyed and in the words he useth doth manifestly allude to this taunting song of the Amorites when they conquered the Moabites here cited by Moses Jer. 48. 45. A fire shall come forth out of Heshbon and a flame from the middest of Sihon and shall devour the corner of Moab and the crown of the head of the tumultuous ones c. Vers 29. Wo unto thee O Moab thou art undone O people of
Shemosh c. In this clause of their song the Amorites scoff at Shemosh who was the god of the Moabites 1. King 11. 7. the Amorites had another god to wit Milcom 1. King 11. 5. they therefore now derided the Moabites because their God though they had been so long his people and had served him so carefully was not able to help them but had delivered them into captivity to Sihon as it follows in the next words He that is their God Shemosh hath given his sonnes that escaped and his daughters into captivity unto Sihonking of the Amorites But how much more properly might the Israelites take up this proverb now against the Amorites Vers 30. We have shot at them To wit first the Amorites then the Israelites Vers 32. And Moses sent to spie out Jaazer c. A city also that ha● been Moabs Jer. 48. 31 32. but now was the Amorites a fruitfull pasture-countrey it stood in and was given to Gad Numb 32. 1. Vers 33. And they turned and went up by the way of Bashan c. A rich countrey this Bashan was famous for its huge oaks Ezek. 27. 6. Of the oaks of Bashan have they made thine oars also the pastures nourished strong and fat cattel whereto the Scripture often alludeth Deut. 32. 14. Butter of kine and milk of sheep with fat of lambs and rammes of the breed of Bashan and Amos 4. 1. Hear this word ye kine of Bashan and there were in it threescore cities with high walled gates and barres Deut. 3. 4 5. and indeed this which is said of their high walled cities makes it manifest that the Israelites spyes were here amongst other places when they searched the land of Canaan Vers 34. And the Lord said unto Moses Fear him not c. Og the king of Bashan was a huge gyant Deut. 3. 11. his bedsted was a bedsted of iron nine cubits was the length thereof and foure cubits the breadth of it and the rather doubtlesse did the Lord encourage Moses not to fear him because they were like enough to be scared with the very sight of him to which end also he assures him that he should do to him as he did unto Sihon King of the Amorites making the experience he had of Gods help against Sihon a ground of encouragement for the present against Og and his armie too CHAP. XXII Vers 1. ANd the children of Israel set f●rward and pitched in the plains of Moab on this side Jordan by Jericho In the third chapter vers 48. it is said that they d●parted from the mountains of Abarim and pitched in the plains of Moab by Jordan near Jericho and that is the last removall of the camp of Israel there mentioned Now they came to the mountains of Abarim at their first passing over the river Arnon as is noted before upon vers 13. And therefore it seems that all those things related from the 13. verse of the former chapter to the end of the chapter as concerning their going to Beer vers 16. where a well sprung up so miraculously and concerning the conquests of Sihon and Og were done the camp and the tabernacle still abiding at the mountains of Abarim and then after that the camp of Israel set forward from thence and pitched in the plains of Moab so called because they had been sometime Moabs and did border upon the land of Moab though they were afterwards the Amorites and now the Israelites by conquest These plains reached unto Jordan right over against Jericho And here the Israelites remained till after Moses death they passed over Jordan into the land of Canaan in which time many notable things fell out even all recorded from this place to the end of Deuteronomy and in the beginning of Joshua till their entrance into Canaan Vers 3. And Moab was sore afraid of the people because they were many c. The Moabites had no cause at all to be afraid of the Israelites though they were many for the Israelites had made known to them their resolution not to meddle with them and accordingly had peaceably passed by their countrey yea they had to their own trouble fetched a great compasse about purposely that they might not annoy them by passing through their land and besides in destroying the Amorites they had done them a pleasure having thereby freed them from ill neighbours who had lately by the sword taken away a great part of their countrey from them chap. 21. 26. But yet being stricken with terrours from God all this could not qui●t their minds They saw they were a numerous mighty people and that they had now already vanquished two great kings and that they were still upon the borders of their countrey and hereupon they were ready to conclude that as the Amorites had lately taken away part of their countrey so this people that had now destroyed the Amorites would take away the rest and so were mightily perplexed and distressed The Lord herein making good his promise to his people Exod. 15. 15. The mighty men of Moab trembling shall take hold upon them all the inhabitants of Canaan shall melt away and again Deut. 2. 25. This day will I begin to put the dread of thee and the fear of thee upon the nations that are under the whole heaven who shall hear report of thee and shall tremble and be in anguish because of thee Vers 4. And Moab said unto the Elders of Midian c. That is the Moabites being in this distresse and considering that the onely way to secure themselves against the evil fea●ed was so strengthen themselves against the Israelites and that hereby also they might happely regain what the Amorites had formerly taken from them they sent to the elders of Midian to desire them to joyn with them against the Israelites and that because the Midianites were subject to the same king or at least were neighbours confederate wi●h them and so it is evident they did though they had no cause for it for first they were in a manner allyed to the Israelites being the posterity of Midian who was the sonne of Abraham by his wife Keturah Gen. 25. 1 2. and secondly the Israelites had not meddled with them and thirdly the Israelites conquest of the Amorites was an advantage to the Midianites who were by this means freed from Sihons tyrannous yoke for that they were before in bondage to him appears because the five kings of Midian that combined with Moab and perished for the same chap. 31. 8. are called the Dukes of Sihon Josh 13. 21. Some conceive that the Ammonites did also joyn with the Moabites and Midianites at this time which they ground upon that place Deut. 23. 3 4. An Ammonite or a Moabite●shall not enter into the congregation of the Lord Because they met you not with bread and with water in the way when you came forth out of Egypt a●d because they hired against thee Balaam the sonne of Beor of
Moabites the Edomites the Amalekites c. ●t is no way likely that a clause should be here inserted concerning the destruction of all mankind So that I make no question but as in the following verse the subduing of the Edomites is foretold under two severall expressions Edom shall be a possession and Seir also shall be a possession for his enemies so here also the conquest of the Moabites is likewise expressed first by smiting the corners of Moab and then by destroying all the children of Sheth the Moabites being called the children of Sheth either because some one of their progenitours the sonnes of Moab famous in his time was called Sheth and thence they were called the children of Sheth or else because this people did mightily boast of the antiquity of their nation and so did vainly style themselves the children of Sheth and so are called by Balaam ironically by way of deriding them for that their vain boasting that ancient people the children of Sheth How this prophecy was literally accomplished in David is evident 2. Sam. 8. 2. where it is said that he smote Moab and measured them with a line casting them down to the ground even with two lines measured he to put to death and with one full line to keep alive and so the Moabites became Davids servants But withall it is spiritually meant of Christs vanquishing them and all other his enemies either by his word converting them or by his power subduing them and so agreeth with that of the Prophet Esa 11. 4. He shall smite the earth with the rod of his mouth and with the breath of his lips shall he slay the wicked Vers 18. And Edom shall be a possession Seir also shall be a possession c. That is the Edomites that inhabit mount Seir shall also be subdued by the Israelites This was likewise literally fulfilled in David of whom it is said 1. Chron. 18. 13. that he put garisons in Edom and all the Edomites became Davids servants and thereupon he sung that triumphant song Psal 60. 8. Moab is my washpot over Edom will I cast out my shooe but especially it was fulfilled in Christ whose conquest over these and other his enemies the Prophet sets forth most gloriously Esa 6● 1 2. c. Who is this that cometh from Edom with dyed garments from Bozrah c. Vers 19. Out of Jacob shall come he that shall have dominion and shall destroy him that remaineth of the citie That is of the cities of the Edomites of whom he had spoken in the foregoing verse The meaning is that he should destroy them all not suffering any to escape that even those few that shall shut up themselves in the most fortified places and remain a while safe when others are destroyed sha●l at length partake with the reft But in Christ shall this be most eminently fulfilled who having destroyed his enemies here with a great destruction shall at his second coming destroy all that remain Vers 20. Amalek was the first of the nations but his latter end shall be that he perish for ever That is thou hast been reputed the first and chief of the nations and wert indeed the first that made warre against Israel but as glorious as thou art now thy end shall be utter destruction as thou wert the first-fruits of the nations vanquished by the Israelites so art thou appointed still to be destroyed till thou be rooted f●om the face of the earth This was fulfilled in part by Sanl 1. Sam. 15. but principally by Christ Vers 21. And he looked on the Kenites and took up his parable c. Not the people of Canaan so called G●n 15. 19. for we reade not that they continued undestroyed till the Assyrians carryed them away to Babylon as it is said of these Kenites vers 22. But by the Kenites are here meant the Midianites one principall family or people amongst them being put for the whole nation for such a people there was amongst the Midianites whence Jethro Moses father in law priest of Midian is called the Kenite Judg. 1. 16. and his posterity also Judg. 4. 11. Now Heber the Kenite which was of the children of H●bab the father in law of Moses had severed himself from the Kenites and they are next named because they bordered upon Amalek and dwelt many of them amongst the Amalekites 1. Sam. 15. 6. And Saul said unto the K●nites Go depart get you down from among the Amalekites c. Strong is thy dwelling place and thou puttest thy nest in a rock This he speaks as alluding to their name for Ken signifieth a nest Vers 22. Neverthelesse the Kenite shall be wasted untill Asher shall carry thee away captive That is they shall endure much at the hand of severall enemies which was in part accomplished when the Midianites were vanquished by Gedeon Judg. 7. 2. and shall at length be carryed away captive by the Assyrians who together with the Jews carried all the nations away round about them Jer. 25. 9. and particularly we reade of Kenites mentioned after the return of the people out of Babylon 1. Chron. 2. 55. Vers 23. And he took up his parable and said Alas who shall live when God doth this In these words are implyed how grievous calamities would in a manner befall all nations when the Assyrians should make that havock of which he had made mention in the foregoing verse and when those troubles should happen whereof he prophecyeth in the following words Vers 24. And ships shall come from the coast of Chittim c. Kittim or Chi●tim was one of Japhets posterity who seated themselves in Macedonia Cilicia Cyprus and other the Grecian Islands By Chittim here Expositours therefore do commonly understand Macedonia and other parts of Greece and thereto agreeth that in 1. Maccab. 1. 1. when it is said that Alexander sonne of Philip the Macedonian came out of the land of Chittim But yet because in Dan. 11. 30. it is generally almost held that by the ships of Chittim are meant ships that came out of Italy therefore here also they hold that by Chittim is meant Italy and indeed it is pro●●ble enough that though the Greek Islands were ordinarily called Chittim yet the Greeks passing over from thence into Italy and planting themselves there even Italy was af●erwards also called Chittim and so both may be here comprehended under this word Chittim to wit both the Greek Islands and Italy Now concerning these ships that should come from the coast of Chittim Balaam pr●phecieth here first that he should afflict Ashur secondly that he should afflict Eber thirdly that he also that is the people of Chittim should perish for ever for the first that these ships that came from the coast of Chittim should afflict Ashur if we understand by Chittim the Grecians the accomplishment hereof is clear for Alexander the great Grecian Monarch did utterly vanquish the Persian Empire to whom the Assyrians that came of Ashur
formerly vassals to Sihon and therefore called Dukes of Sihon Josh 13. 21. but Sihon himself being now slain they became it seems absolute kings amongst whom was Zur the father of Cozbi whom Phinehas slew chap. 25. 15. Balaam also the sonne of Beor they slew with the sword See the note upon chap. 24. 25. Vers 10. And they burnt all their cities wherein they dwelt c. To wit lest sloath or covetousnesse should draw any of the Israelites to hide themselves in these nests and to take up their rest in this countrey which God had not allotted them and neglect the land of Canaan which he had given them Vers 13. And Moses and Eleazar the priest and all the princes of the congregation went forth to meet them without the camp To wit to congratulate their victory and withall to put them in mind of cleansing themselves before they came into the camp Vers 〈◊〉 And Moses was wroth with the offic●rs of the host c. Phinehas may be here comprehended though not expressed yet I rather think that Moses directs his speech to the captains because Phinehas did chiefly attend upon the holy instruments vers 6. and meddled not with the ordering of the souldiers as concerning the saving or not saving those they took captives Vers 15. And Moses said unto them Have ye saved all the women alive As if he had said Whereas ye ought to have saved none have you saved them all these are they that insnared the people and therefore these above all should have been slain Vers 17. Now therefore kill every male among the little ones The generall rule and law given to the Israelites was that they should spare all the little ones the Canaanites onely excepted See Deut. 20. 14. But here because they were to execute Gods vengeance upon a people that had brought a great sinne and so conse●uently a great plague upon the Israel of God Moses no doubt by the speciall di●ection of Gods spirit gives charge that all the male-children should be slain and so the more lively thereby to expresse how detestable that fact of the Midianites was by slaying the males h● doth as it were seek to root out the very memory of them not indeed of the whole nation of the Midianites for in the dayes of Gedeon we reade again of this nation Judg. 6. 1. but of these neighbouring Midianites that had done this mischief to the Israel of God And kill every woman that hath known man by lying with him The words in the following verse where onely the women-children are appointed to be saved shew the meaning of these words namely that all who were of years fit for the knowledge of men were slain and onely the women-children that were undoubtedly pure virgins were saved alive Vers 18. But all the women-children that have not known a man by lying with him keep alive for your selves To wit to make them servants or to take them for wives as they should see cause for being children they might bring them up in the knowledge of the true God Vers 19. And do ye abide without the camp seven dayes c. See chap. 19. 11 12. c. Purifie both your selves and your captives c. When the heathens were taken captives in the warres by the Israelites and so became their lawfull possession even they also became unclean by touching the dead and were to be purified Vers 20. And purifie all your raiment and all that is made of skinnes c. To wit of the spoils which ye have taken Because all the garments and other spoils which they had taken had either touched dead bodies or had been in the houses of the slain or at least had been touched by those that were unclean by the dead therefore t●ey were all to be esteemed legally unclean and were to be pu●ified according to the law See chap. 19. 14 16 and 22. Vers 21. This is the ordinanc● of the Law which the Lord commanded Moses c. We do not find all the particulars formerly expressed in those laws that were given chap. 19. concerning the purifying of those that were unclean by the dead and therefore the meaning of these words of Eleazar I conceive to be onely this that God had given Moses an expresse commandment concerning these thing● which he therefore as the Lords high priest was to make known to them and to see they were observed Vers 27. And divide the prey in two parts c. This law concerning the dividing of the prey into two equall parts the one for those that went out to the warre and brought away the spoil the other for the rest that stayed at home was most just and equall first because they that stayed at home were as willing to have gone forth as those that went and therefore it was not fit that those which were culled out for that service should therefore carry away all the prey and secondly because they that went forth to the warre were but twelve thousand and so one half of the prey being divided among them they had farre greater shares as it was fit they should then the other could have who were about six hundred thousand men and had the other half divided amongst them Vers 30. And of the children of Israels half thou shalt take one portion of fiftie c. As there was respect had to the men that hazarded themselves in the warre in dividing the prey their twelve thousand having full as much allotted them as the six hundred thousand had that stayed at home so also in leavying a tribute for the Lord for wh●reas those that went forth to warre paid but one in five hundred as is noted before vers 28. the children of Is●ael that stayed behind paid one in fifty as is here expr●ssed and so accordingly the smaller leavy out of their hal● that w●nt to the warre was given to Eleazar vers 29. that is to him and the ●est of the priests who because they were so few had therein a liberall share and the greatest leavy out of the peoples half was given to the Levites b●cause they were many the Levites had one in fifty the priests one in ●ive hundred and so the same proportion was observed here that was observed in their tithes to wit that the priests had but the tenth of their tithes Vers 32. And the booty being the rest of the prey which the men of warre had caught c. The booty which was now to be divided is here called the rest of the prey which the men of warre had caught either because some of the persons they had taken were slain since their coming home to wit all the male-children and the women vers 17. or el●e because some of the cattel had been slain for the souldiers to eat in their return home or else in respect of the gold and silver and other spoils whereof there was no tribute leavied Vers 47. Even of all the children of Israels half Moses took
mixed people with them Exod. 12. 37 38. and they journey●d in severall troops and armies Vers 2. And Moses wrote their goings out according to their journeys by the commandment of the Lord. That is Moses by the commandment of the Lord wrote this following journall of the Israelites travels from Egypt to the land of Canaan wherein are set down not all the severall places the Israelites came to or all their severall removes from one place to another but all the severall stations of their journeys that is the severall places where they pitched their tents and abode for some time And this was done first the better thereby to assure posterity of this miraculous deliverance of their fathers out of Egypt and of the Lords leading them through the wildernesse to the land of promise this expresse description of the names of their severall stations being a strong evidence of the certainty of this story and s●condly that here in a short compasse as in a little map by the mention of the severall places where such things were done they might be put in mind of the rebellion of their fathers of Gods severity in chastising them for their rebellion but especially his goodnesse and faithfulnesse to the seed of Abraha● notwithstanding the many provocations wherewith they had provoked him to displeasure agains● them Vers 3. And they departed from Rameses in the first moneth c. Whither they assembled by direction of Moses from all parts of the land of Go●hen Vers 4. For the Egyptians buried all their first-born which the Lord had smitten amongst them This intimates the cause why the Egyptians did not at present oppose their going thence to wit because God had pulled down their pride by slaying their first-born Vpon their gods also the Lord executed judgement See the note upon Exod 12. 12. Vers 6. And they departed from Succ●th and pitched in Etham Here the Lord began first to go before them by day in a pillar of cloud and by night in a pillar of fire Vers 7. And they removed from Etham and turned again unto Pi-hahiroth c. A narrow passage between two ledges of mountains into which being entred Pharaoh overtook them with a mighty army and thought they could not now have escaped him but God divided the red sea which the Israelites passing the Egyptians assayed to follow them and were drowned Vers 8. And pitched in Marah Having travelled three dayes journey from the red sea through the wildernesse without any water and finding the waters here very bitter they began to mutiny against Moses but God sweetned the water with a tree Exod. 15. 23. Vers 11. And they removed from the red sea and encamped in the wildernesse of Sin So called from Sin a city in Egypt over against which this wildernesse lay Hither they came a just moneth after their departure from Rameses In this wildernesse they murmured grievously for want of food and God gave them quails and rained manna from heaven which was still continued till they came into Canaan Vers 14. And they removed from Alush and encamped at Rephidim c. A place famous first for the mutiny of the Israelites for want of water wherein they had almost stoned Moses secondly for the water fetched miraculously out of the rock in Horeb thirdly for the victory they had over the Amalekites who there set upon them fourthly for Moses his meeting with Jethro his wife and sonues and the counsel he had of Jethro for the government of the people Vers 15. And they departed from Rephidim and pitched in the wildernesse of Sinai Hither they came the beginning of the third moneth Exod. 19. 1. and stayed there till the twentieth day of the second moneth of the second year Numb 10. 11 12. Here was the Law given and the tabernacle built and the people punished for making and worshipping a golden calf and Nadab and Abihu take● suddenly away for offering strange fire and the people first numbred and then ordered in their severall camps both for their encamping about the tabernacle and their journeying with it to the land of Canaan Vers 16. And they removed from the desert of Sinai and pitched at Kibroth-hattaavah Here the people fell a lusting for ●lesh God again sent them quails yea for a moneth together in great abundance whereon they surfeted and dyed miserably with the flesh between their teeth Vers 17. And they departed from Kibroth-hattaavah and encamped at Hazeroth Here Miriam and Aaron murmured against Moses and she was smitten with leprosie Numb 12. Vers 18. And they departed from Hazeroth and pitched in Rithmah Which was i● the wildernesse of Paran Numb 13. 1. near Kadesh-barnea whence spies were sent to search the land upon whose report the people murmuring God was wroth and appointed Moses to return again to the red sea as having vowed that not one of that generation should enter Canaan save Joshua and Caleb Vers 20. And they departed from Rimmon-parez and pitched in Libnah This some think is the same which is called Laban Deut. 1. 1. Vers 25. And they removed from Haradah and pitched in Makheloth It is interpreted assemblies so called as some think of the mutinous assemblies of Korah Dathan and Abiram there Vers 31. And they departed from Moseroth and pitched in Bene-jaakan c. Thir Moseroth is called Moserah and Bene-jaakan Beroth-bene-jaakan as likewise in the next verses Hor-hagidgad is called Gudgodah and Jotbathah Jotbath Deut. 10. 6 7. See the note there Vers 35. And they departed from Ebronah and encamped at Ezion-gaber A place by the red sea where was a hatbour for shipping in Edoms land 1. Kings 9. 26. See also 1. Kings 22. 48. Vers 36. And they removed from Ezion-gaber and pitched in the wildernesse of Zin which is Kadesh That is at Kadesh in the wildernesse of Zin Here Miriam dyed the people again murmured for water and had water out of a rock but God was displeased with Moses and Aaron for their unbelief Hither they came in the beginning of the fourtieth year and hence they sent to crave a passage through Edoms land but it was denied them Vers 41. And they departed from mount Her and pitched in Zalmonah Which may be so called of Zelem an image it is thought to be the place where the Israelites for their murmuring were ●tung with fiery serpents and the brazen serpent was by Gods appointment erected for their help Vers 45. And they departed from Iim and pitched in Dibon-gad So called because it was repaired and possessed by the tribe of Gad chap. 32. 34. and to distinguish it from another Dibon which was given to the Reubenites See Josh 13. 15 17. Vers 52. Then ye shall drive out all the inhabitants of the land To wit by destroying them Deut. 7. 12. Vers 54. And ye shall divide the land by lot c. See the note upon chap. 26. 55. Vers 55. Those which ye let remain of them shall be pricks in your eyes
and thorns in your sides c. That is they shall be continuall snares seducing you out of the right way and withall will be vexing and troubling you and so will mischief you both in soul and body Vers 56. Moreover it shall come to passe that I shall do unto you as I thought to do unto them That is destroy you and root you out of the land CHAP. XXXIV Vers 3. THen your South quarter shall be from the wildernesse of Zin c. God within Jordan and sheweth the bounds of it on every side first that his people might see his bounty providence who had given them so large 〈◊〉 good a land secondly that they might know punctually how far they were to proceed in their conquests and where to stay thirdly to strengthen their faith and to assure them that God had marked out that their dwelling for them fourthly that according to these bounds and limits they might now make a division of the land In these words of the third verse the description of Canaans bounds begins with the South quarter and he draws along the South border from the East to the West for the wildernesse of Zin lay at the very East end of this South border in the corner where it joyned with the East border and so from thence it is said that though the South border went on by the coast of Edom yet th● beginning of it Eastward was in the wildernesse of Zin right against the South end of the salt sea that is the lake of Sodome called also the dead sea because it had no fish or living thing in it of which see the note upon Gen. 14. 3. and going by the coast of Edom it turned from the South vers 4. that is inward towards Canaan to the ascent of Akrabbim or Maalchakrabbim Josh 15. 3. and so passed on to Zin that is toward the city Zin whence the adjacent wildernesse had its name and there turned inward again from the South to Kadesh-barnea and so went forward again to Hazaraddar which Josh 15. 3. is reckoned as two places Hezron and Addar and so it passed unto Azmon yet Josh 15. 13. there is added that it fetched a compasse to Karkaa and so passed on to Azmon and from thence it fetched a compasse again and went on to the river of Egypt that is the river called Sihor Josh 13. 3. and so went out at the sea that is the Mediterranean or Midland sea called in the next verse the great sea to wit with respect to those lakes of Sodome and Genezareth in the land of Canaan which were also called seas And this was the West end of the South border Vers 6. And as for the Western border you shall even have the great sea for a border Thus the borders of the land are carried about from South to North this midland sea from the South to the North being the West border and so again it turneth about afterwards from the West to the East which was the North border Vers 7. From the great sea you shall point out for you mount Hor. That is it went along from the midland sea to mount Hor. Now this was not the mount Hor where Aaron dyed which was Southward in the edge of Edoms land chap. 33. 37 38. but another mountain on the North side of Canaan and it is thought by some to be the same that is elsewhere called Lebanus and by others that which in by Josh 13. 5. is called mount Hermon Vers 8. From mount Hor ye shall point out your border unto the entrance of Hamath That is from Hor this your North border of the land shall strike right forward to the entrance of Hamath a city called A mos 6. 2. Hemath the great and so forth on to Zedad and thence to Ziphron and so it shall end at Hazar-enan Vers 10. And ye shall point out your East border from Hazarenan to Shepham c. That is your East border which turns again from the North to the South where at first it began shall go straight on from Hazar-enan to Shepham called 1. Sam 30. 28. Siphmoth and so to Riblah on the East side of Ain and so thence it shall go along by that land that lies Eastward of the sea of Chinnereth which is called the lake of Gennesareth Luk. 5. 1. and the sea of Galile● or Tiberias John 6. 1. and so thence to Jordan and so shall end at the salt or dead sea vers 12. Vers 17. These are the names of the men which shall d●v●de the land unto you Eleazar the priest c. Eleazar amongst the rest is appointed to have a hand in this work of dividing the land first as a type of Christ to shew that by him they enjoyed that promised land but especially that by him we come to have entrance into the heavenly Canaan he being therefore gone before that he might prepare a place for us secondly that if any difficulty did arise he might ask counsel for Joshua after the judgement of Urim according to that Numb 27. 21. thirdly because the priests and the Levites though they had no inheritance as the other tribes yet were they to have cities and suburbs fourthly because that this whole businesse might be san●tified to them it was to be begun with prayer and ended with thanksgiving Col. 3. 17. Thus also was that prophecy fulfilled concerning the Israelites coming to Canaan in the fourth generation Gen. 15. 16. Eleazar being indeed the fourth from Levi who went with Jacob into Egypt Vers 19. Of the tribe of Judah Caleb the sonne of Jephunneh c. The tribes are no where else named in the order here observed and therefore it is most probable that God did purposely thus name them here in the very same order as they should inherit the land their inheritance abutting one upon another as their names are here joyned together to make it the more evident that they were allotted their portions by the wisdome and providence of God CHAP. XXXV Vers 2. COmmand the children of Israel that they give unto the Levites of the inheritance of their possession cities to dwell in c. Thus that which Jacob did at first threaten as a curse against Levi Gen. 49. 7. I will divide them in Jacob and scatter them in Israel is turned into a blessing and their reproch changed into a matter of honour and dignity for they are now dispersed into severall cities through the whole kingdome where they dwelt unl●sse it were when they went in their courses to serve in the tabernacle that they might be as Gods watchmen standing in so many watch-towers to look to the people to instruct them continually in the law of God and to keep them from being corrupted either in doctrine or manners But this and other places do almost fully satisfie that the whole cities and their suburbs afterward set apart for their dwelling were entirely the Levites possession and divided amongst them and
that no man else could challenge any propriety in them whence is that Levit. 25. 32 33 34. Notwithstanding the cities of the Levites and the houses of the cities of their possession may the Levites redeem at any time And if a man purchase of the Levites then the house that was sold and the citie of his possession shall go out in the year of Jubile for the houses of the cities of the Levites are their possession among the children of Israel yet withall I think it most probable that others dwelt with them in houses hired or bought of them for how else could they live without the help of men of other professions at least such as were their servants and that these might live as the townsmen do in our Universities under a civil government amongst themselves to which some apply that Ezra 2. 70. So the priests and the Levites and some of the people and the singers and the porters and the Nethini●s dwelt in their cities and all Israel in their cities However clear it is that the fields and villages belonging to these cities which were without the suburbs belonged to others as is manifest in Hebron which was given to the priests and yet the land without the suburbs to wit the houses without the walls and the fields belonging thereto were given to Caleb Josh 21. 11 12. And they gave them the citie of Arbah the father of Anak which citie is Hebron in the hill countrey of Judah with the suburbs thereof round about it But the fields of the citie and the villages thereof gave they to Caleb the sonne of Jephunneh for his possession Vers 4. And the suburbs of the cities which ye shall give unto the Levites c. There seems to be a manifest contradiction betwixt that which is said in t●is fourth verse concerning the measure of the suburbs of the Levites cities and that which is said in the following verse for here it is plainly said that the suburbs of the cities should reach from the wall of the citie and outward a thousand cubits round about and then in the next verse it is said that they should measure from without the city on each side two thousand cubits the citie being in the midst and that this should be to them the suburbs of the cities To reconcile this seeming contradiction there are severall answers given by Expositours some holding that the suburbs were but a thousand cubits on each side of th● citie but then from the outermost part of the suburbs on one side as one the East side to the outermost part of the suburbs on the other side to wit on the West the citie in the midst not being measured there were two thousand cubits Others again holding that the fourth verse speaks of the length of the suburbs from the wall to the outmost part of them which was a thousand cubits and that the fifth verse speaks of the circumference of the suburbs in the foure quarters on each side the citle which was in each quarter two thousand cubits But first because it is plainly said vers 5. that they should measure two thousand cubi●s on each side East West North and South and secondly because the fifth verse speaks of cubits to be measured from without the citie and the fourth verse speaks of cubits to be measured from the wall of the citie therefore I conceive the truest answer is that each citie of the Levites had without the walls three thousand cubits the first thousand were for houses barns garners stalls for cattel gardens c. which is that which we usually call the suburbs of a citie of which Moses speaks in the fourth verse and then the other two thousand cubits which were without these were for pasture for their cattel and these are meant in the fifth verse and are reckoned as a part of their suburbs Vers 6. And among the cities which ye shall give unto the Levites there shall be six cities for refuge c. These cities of refuge are assigned out of the Levites cities rather then out of any other first because the honourable esteem and respect of the Levites would cause the places to be the more inviolably observed secondly because it was presumed that the priests and Levites above others would be carefull not to protect wilfull offenders in places appointed to be Sanctuaries onely for the innocent thirdly that this might be a figure of the sufficient shelter which Christs priesthood should yield unto poore sinners that in faith should fly to him as their Sanctuary In Deut. 4. and Josh 20. we may see what cities of the Levites were set apart for this purpose to wit first Bezer of the Reubenites secondly Ramoth in Gilead of the Gadites thirdly Golan in Basan of the Manassites the●e three Moses separated Deut. 4. 41 43. fourthly Kadesh in Galilee in mount Naphtali fifthly Shechem in mount Ephraim and sixthly Kiriath-arba which is in Hebron in the mount of Judah and these Joshua separated Josh 20. 7. Before these cities of refuge were appointed it seems the altar onely was a kind of Sanctuary to those that fled to it whence is that Exod 21. 14. But if a man come presumptuously upon his neighbour to slay him with guile thou shalt take him from mine altar that he may die But afterward these cities were the chief Sanctuaries and yet they were onely to be Sanctuaries to those that killed any man unwittingly and therefore they were not to receive any man till he professed his innocency in this regard Josh 20. 4. And when he that doth flee unto one of those cities shall stand at the entring of the gate of the citie and shall declare his cause in the ears of the Elders of that citie they shall take him into the citie unto them and give him a place that he may dwell among them and purposely they chose such cities as lay at an equall distance in the severall parts of the land that no man driven to use them might have too farre to go lest so happely he should be overtaken by the revenger of bloud before he could recover the Sanctuary Vers 12. And they shall be unto you cities for refuge from the avenger c. That is the next kinsman to the man flain who was by the law allowed to put the murderer to death vers 19. but not him that killeth a man unawares yet lest he should in his rage kill such a one let there be cities saith the Lord of refuge for such Vers 14. Ye shall give three cities on this side Jordan and three cities shall ye give in the land of Canaan c. There was no inequality in this because the portion of the two tribes and a half without Jordan reached as farre in length as theirs in the land of Canaan though it were nothing so broad And besides it is most probable that those in the land of Canaan near Jordan might fly to the cities of refuge without Jordan
Israelites which is indeed the main subject of this last book of Moses therefore it is called Deuteronomie or the second declaration of the Law The main objection against this is that it is here said that Moses spake these words In the plain over against the red sea between Paran c. for the plain over against the red sea was farre from the plains of Moab where Moses repeated the law and so also Paran and Hazeroth which are both here mentioned were places farre Southward from the place where Moses now was through which the Israelites had long since passed Numb 12. 16. And indeed they that thus understand this place have no other way to avoid this objection but by saying either that the word Zuph which our Translatours under●●and to be the red sea is not meant of the red sea but of a flaggy place by the sides of Jordan towards the wildernesse the Hebrew word Zuph signifying flagges such as grew by the sea or rivers sides Exod. 2. 3. or else that the plains of Moab are here called the plain over against the red sea because they lay opposite to the red sea though a great way off from it Others again and methinks very probablic do otherwise conceive of the drift of these words namely that the time when and place where Moses repeated the law is set down afterwards vers 3 4 5 and that the drift of these two first verses is to shew that the laws which Moses did now repeat and explain to the Israelites in the plains of Moab were no other but the very same for substance which he had formerly given them at Sinai or in severall places as they travelled through the wildernesse from the red sea to the land of Canaan onely now they were collected into one body and repeated together in the plains of Moab because all that were of age and judgement when the law was first given were now dead and a new generation that was now to enter Canaan was sprung up in their room and so the plain over against the red sea Paran and other places are here named either as pointing out the severall places whe●e in their peregrination these following Statutes had been first given them or at least as the bounds of that huge tract of ground through which they had passed wherein ●od had spoken to the Israelites that came out of Egypt these things which are now repeated together to their posterity Vers 2. There are eleven dayes journey from Horeb by the way of mount Seir unto Kadesh-barnea If the aim of the foregoing verse were to shew the place where Moses repeated the Laws of God to the Israelites which many Expositours conceive as is before noted then we may well think that the aim of these words may be to shew that it was no wonder though the plains of Moab where the Law was repeated by Moses be there called the plain over against the red sea to wit because however the Israelites through Gods judgement upon them were fourtie years in going from the red sea to those parts yet the way of it self was not so long for it was but eleven dayes journey from Horeb to Kadesh-barnea But if the foregoing verse be meant of the places where the Laws were first given that were now repeated by Moses then I conceive this clause is added as a topographicall description of the extent of that wildernesse where these Laws were at first given and withall to imply that it was not the length of the way but their rebellion against God that made them wander so long in the wildernesse that there was now none left alive but that younger brood that had not heard these Laws when they were first given Vers 3. And it came to passe in the fourtieth year in the eleventh moneth on the first day of the moneth that Moses spake unto the children of Israel c. To wit a little before his death for he died in the twelveth moneth Vers 4. And Og the King of Bashan which dwelt at Astaroth in Edrei That is after he had in Edrei slain Og which dwelt at Astaroth for in Edrei he was slain Numb 21. 33. and they were both cities in Ogs land Josh 13. 31. Vers 6. Ye have dwelt long enough in this mount For there they had continued well nigh a full year See the note upon Numb 10. 11 12. Here the Law was given but now they were called thence to journey towa●ds Canaan the figure of their heavenly inheritance by faith in Christ which may put us in mind that the Law is not for men to continue under but for a time till they be fitted for Christ Gal. 3. 16 17 18. Now this readinesse in God to have presently given them the possession of the land Moses doth tell them of as a motive to make them believe the more con●idently that God would now give it them and to make them the more carefull to observe these Laws of God which now he meant to rehearse unto them Vers 7. Turn you and take your ●ourney and go to the mount of the Amorites c. In these following words the Lord did then set forth the bounds of the promised land which he perswaded them to enter beginning with the mount of the Amorites in the South side or border where they were then to enter the land and then adding the sea side which was their West border Numb ●4 6. and then Lebanon was a mount on the North part of the land and then last of all the great river Euphrates which was their Eastern bound in the utmost extent without Jordan and so ●arre Solomon reigned See 1. Kings 4. 21. Vers 9. And I spake unto you at that time saying I am not able to bear you my self alone c. That is about that time for this motion he made by the coun●el of Jethro and commandment of the Lord before they came to Horeb Exod 18 14 c and here he repeats it to let them see how tenderly carefull he alwayes was of the welfare of this people which must needs make his present counsel and exhortations the more prevalent with them Vers 11. The Lord God of your fathers make you a thousand times so many mo● as ye are c. Having professed that he was not able to bear the burthen of the government alone because they were so many lest they should suspect that he envied their number or did in the least degree grudge as it he interposeth these words The Lord God of your fathers make you a thousand times so many moe as ye are c. Vers 13. Take ye wise men and understanding c. See Exod. 18. 25. Vers 15. And officers among your tribes That is under-o●●icers of severall sorts such as executed the magistrates Laws Vers 17. For the judgement is Gods This is added as a reason why the Judges ought not to be respecters of persons nor fear the face of any man whatsoever because
the judgement is Gods that is the judges represent Gods person and sit in his seat and God speaks and judges by them and therefore they should judge no otherwise then God would do and when they judge unj●stly they dishonour God and forget how able God is to defend them who●e work they do Vers 18. And I commanded you at that time all the things which ye should do He gave them all the Laws delivered here in Horeb and taught the Judges their duty in more full manner then is here expr●ssed Vers 19. We went through all that great and terrible wildernesse which you saw by the way of the mountain of the Amorites That is the way which leadeth to the mount of the Amorites Vers 23. And the saying pleased me well c. That is their desire that spies might be sent before them yet it seems he enquired whether God would have it so who approved or at least permitted it Numb 13. 1. for prudent policy so it be not mixed with unbelief doth well beseem Gods people Yet it may be this request of theirs proceeded from distrustfull fears and if so then God gave way to them herein to harden and punish them for their unbelief Vers 25. And they took of the fruit of the land in their hands c. As grapes pomegranates figs Numb 13. 23. And said It is a good land which the Lord our God doth give us Moses expresseth not here at first the discouraging words of the timerous spies but onely that wherein they agreed with Caleb and Joshua concerning the goodnesse of the land because this which was confessed should have been more prevalent with the people to have heartned them to go on then their tales of the strength of the people and their cities to beat them off Vers 31. The Lord thy God bare thee as a man doth bear his sonne c. This word implyes first Gods assistance in carrying them through unpassable difficulties the way they could not in their own strength have overmastered but God by his almighty power bare them as when a father takes up and carries his child in his arms secondly it implyes his bearing with their perversnesse and rebellions and this concerning Gods fatherly love to them and care over them he opposeth to that desperate speech of ●heirs vers 27. Because the Lord hated us he hath brought us forth out of the land of Egypt c. Vers 35. Surely there shall not one of these men of this evil generation see that good land c. Though Moses prayed for them Num. 14. 13. 19. and the Lord pardoned them that they were not then destroyed Numb 14. 20. yet he sware that they should not come into the promised land Vers 36. Save Caleb the sonne of Jephunneh he shall see it and to him will I give the land that he hath trodden upon c. See Josh 14. 9. Vers 37. Also the Lord was angry with me for your sakes c. For the people provoked his spirit whereupon he spake unadvisedly with his lippes Psal 106. 32 33. So then these words are not added to justifie himself and to cast all the blame upon them but onely to shew how by their rebellion he also was involved in sinne and brought to do that which was so displeasing to God Yet there is another exposition which may seem most probable the Lord was angry with me for your sakes that is because I did that in my unbelief and impatience which was likely to be prejudiciall unto you as those words which God there used imply Numb 20. 12. because ye believed me not to sanctifie me in the eyes of the children of Israel And so this passage seems here inserted onely by the way having spoken how God had sworn that they should not set foot in Canaan he addes as in a parenthesis this sentence of the like nat●re pronounced against himself for their sakes Vers 39. Moreover your little ones which ye said should be a prey c. In these words thus repeated there is couched an encouragement for the Israelites to whom Moses at present spake Vers 44. And the Amorites which dwelt in that mountain came out against you and chased you as bees do Which being angred use to come out in great swarms and to pursue them with strange eagernesse and fury whence is that also of the Psalmist They compassed me about like bees Psal 118. 12. Vers 46. So ye abode in Kadesh many dayes according unto the dayes that ye abode there To wit a long time as appears by the number of the dayes that ye abode there Thus many Expositours conceive that this clause is to be taken as spoken indefinitely that according to the number of the dayes they abode there it is manifest they abode there many dayes But others very probable understand it thus that as they stayed there a long time before the return of the spies so they stayed there again a long time after yea some ●ake it more particularly that as they stayed there fourtie dayes whilest the spies searched the land so accordingly they stayed as many dayes more after the return of the spies and others again conceive it is meant of the whole time of their wandring after this in the wildernesse to wit that in the fourtieth year they were gotten no farther then Kadesh and so wandred up and down fourty years according to the number of fourtie dayes wherein they searched the land and so that this alludes to that Numb 14. 34. CHAP. II. Vers 3. YE have compassed this mountain long enough turn you Northward Hitherto they had travelled Southward from Kadesh-barnea to the red sea now they were commanded to turn again Northward toward Canaan not the way they went before by Kadesh-barnea but between the coasts of Edom on the one hand of Moab and Ammon on the other so to enter into Canaan through Sihon the Amorites land Vers 4. Ye are to passe through the coast of your brethren the children of Esau which dwell in Seir and they shall be afraid of you c. This clause and they shall be afraid of you is prefixed before the following charge that they should not meddle with the Edomites as a hint to give them warning not to encourage themselves by their fear to set upon them and withall the charge given them that they should not meddle with the children of Esau is limited to those children of Esau which dwell in Seir purposely to exclude the Amalekites whom God had commanded them to destroy Exod. 17. 14. and yet the Amalekites were also the children of Esau Gen. 36. 12. Vers 6. Ye shall buy meat of them for money c. Hereby it is evident that the Israelites did not eat manna onely in the wildernesse but other meat likewise when they were where other meat could be gotten Vers 7. For the Lord thy God hath blessed thee c. Three arguments there are couched in these words whereby Moses is to
respect to divers parts of this mountain which had severall names and hence it is that Cant. 4. 8. Shenir and Hermon are mentioned together as distinct mountains Vers 11. For onely Og the King of Bashan remained of the remnant of giants That is there was none left of that gig●ntine race in the kingdome of Bashan but Og onely That there were many other giants at this time in other places is most evident for immediately after the Israelites en●●ed Canaan Caleb drove out of Hebron Sheshai and Ahiman and Tal●ai the children of Anak Josh 15. 14. Yea in Davids time there were many giants as Goliah whom David slew Ishbi-benob and divers others 2. Sam. 21. 16. c. But this is spoken onely of the countrey of Bashan Behold his bedstead was a bedstead of iron is it not in Rabbath of the chil-of Ammon How this bedstead which was made of iron that it might be strong enough to bear his huge mass●e body should come to be in Rabbath the chief citie of the Ammonites being not expressed we cannot say sufficient it is that thither it might be conveyed by many severall means as it might be taken in some war between the Ammoni●es and this King and so kept as a glorious Trophic of their victory or it might be given as a present to the Ammonites and so kept as a strange memoriall of the huge stature of thi● King of Bashan Nine cubits was the length thereof and foure cubits the breadth of it after the cubit of a man That is the common cubit of an ordinary man Now the cubit of a man being usually a foot and half according to this measure his bed was foure yards and a half long and two yards broad Vers 13. And the rest of Gilead and all Bashan being the kingdome of Og gave I unto the half tribe of Manass●h c. See Numb 32. 39 40. Vers 14. Jair the sonne of Manasseh took all the countrey of Argob c. See Numb 32. 41. Vers 17. Chinnereth even unto the sea of the plain even the salt sea under Ashdoth Pisgah Eastward What the sea of Chinnereth was which is mentioned here as a part of the bound of that land which was given to the Reubenites and Gadites you may see in the note upon Numb 34. 11 12. As for Ashdoth Pisgah we see vers 27. that Pisgah was a hill and so Ashdoth Pisgah was after the name of a citie there adjoyning in Reubens land Josh 13. 20. at the foot of this hill Vers 23. And I besought the Lord at that time c. To wit after all these things before related when the Lord bad him go up into a mountain and see the land Numb 27. 12. then did Moses intreat the Lord earnestly that he might go into the land of Canaan as knowing that his threatnings are many times conditionall and therefore it might be the Lord would be intreated by him Vers 24. O Lord God thou hast begun to shew thy servant thy greatnesse c. There is here an argument drawn from former mercies to move God to go on and to perfect the mercy begun Vers 25. I pray thee let me go over and see the good land that is beyond Jordan that goodly mountain and Lebanon There is much arguing amongst Expositours to find out what that goodly mountain is whereof Moses here speaks some understanding it of one mountain some of another but I conceive that it is the land that lay next beyond Jordan which they might see from the place where the Israelites now were that is here called that goodly mountain that is that goodly mountanous countrey and that then he adjoyns Lebanon which was in the farther part of the land of Canaan to imply that he desired to see the land quite through Vers 26. But the Lord was wroth with me for your sakes See the note upon chap. 1. 37. Vers 27. Get thee up into the top of Pisgah c. See the note upon Numb 27. 12. CHAP. IV. Vers 1. NOw therefore hearken O Israel unto the statutes c. They that will have a difference put betwixt the two words here used statutes and judgements say that by statutes or ordinances are meant those laws which taught the service of God called by the Apostle ordinances of divine service and by judgements those laws that concerned their duties towards men and the punishment of transgressours As for the promise of life made here to those that kept these laws see the note upon Levit. 18. 5. Vers 6. Keep therefore and do them for this is your wisdome and your understanding in the sight of the nations c. Seeing other Nations did alwayes deride and despise the Jews way of worshipping God and made a mock of their whole religion it may seem strange why Moses should here say that their keeping of Gods laws should be counted their wisdome and understanding in the sight of the nations But for this we must theref ore know that the drift of these words is onely to shew that the laws which God had given them were so just and righteous that all men unlesse they should wilfully close their eyes must needs acknowledge them to be such and that even the very heathen if ever they came to hear and know their laws must needs in their consciences think so of them and would if ever their eyes were truly opened to judge of things admire the wisdome and understanding of this people above that which was in other nations Vers 7. For what nation is there so great who hath God so nigh unto them c. That is in that which onely makes a nation truly great and honourable namely the speciall interest they have in God there is no nation under heaven to be compared unto ours who have God alwayes dwelling amongst us as is evident by the miraculous signes of his presence with us alwayes ready at hand to hear our prayers and so to protect and defend us from all evils as the strange miracles and wonders he hath wrought for us these many years do evidently prove Vers 11. And ye came near and stood under the mountain and the mountain burnt with fire c. All these things are here repeated to convince and assure the people that the laws he now speaks of were given of God and not of his devising and therefore the more carefully to be regarded Vers 12. And the Lord spake unto you out of the midst of the fire c. Moses here addressing his exhortation to disswade the people from idolatry he puts them in mind how that when the Lord at Sinai gave them his law they saw no similitude onely they heard a voice and that God spake unto them out of the midst of the fire which was indeed purposely done thereby to signifie unto the people that the glory of God was incomprehensible and that there was no drawing nigh unto God to behold him with bodily eyes Vers 14. And the
it is well known to you that he punished the Egyptians for your sakes such as were those boyls mentioned Exod. 9. 10. and the pestilence vers 15 or wherewith you know the inhabitants of that countrey were usually troubled such as that called the botch of Egypt Deut. 28. 27. See also the note upon Exod. 15. 26. Vers 16. Neither shalt thou serve their Gods for that will be a snare unto thee c. That is a cause of thy-ruine it will bring judgements upon thee from which thou wilt no way be able to free ●hy self Vers 20. Moreover the Lord thy God will send the hornet among them c. Against whom the strength and multitude of these nations shall be no defence See the note upon Exod. 23. 28. Vers 24 There shall no man be able to stand before thee untill thou have destroyed them All this is promised upon condition of their obedience to God for when they obeyed not Gods command we reade afterwards of many of these nations that were too strong for them S●e Josh 15. 63. and 17. 12. and Judg. 1. 34. Vers 25. Thou shalt not desire the silver or gold that is on them c. This may be meant either of the plates of silver and gold wherewith their idols of wood and brasse were usually covered over or else of the chains bracelet● jewels garments of silver or gold wherewith they were wont to deck and trimme up their idols Esa ●0 32. yea and under this all other ornaments of their idols though not of gold and silver are comprehended Because the Israelites might out of covetousnesse think that so they destroyed the idols themselves they might reserve the gold and silver that was about them and yet be blamelesse the Lord the better to shew how he detests idolatry forbids them here the reserving of any of the gold and silver that was upon the idols of the land and to that end chargeth them not to meddle with it no not to desire it but utterly to consume that together with the idols themselves lest saith ●e thou be snared therein that is les● by doing otherwise thou becomest guilty before God and so shouldst draw down judgement upon thy self Vers 26. Neither shalt thou bring an abomination into thy house lest thou be a cursed thing like it c. That is devoted to destruction as that was to wit for reserving a polluted and accursed thing which should have been destroyed For it is a cursed thing That is a thing separated from mens use and devoted either to destruction as the idols and ornaments thereof here mentioned or at the Lords appointment to be carried into his treasurie as some conceive the gods of Jericho were because it is said Josh 6. 19 24. that the silver and gold which was in that city was brought into the Lords treasury CHAP. VIII Vers 2. ANd thou shalt remember all the ●ay which the Lord thy God led thee c. To make the Israelites the more carefull to obey the commandments of God Moses wills them here to remember all the way which the Lord their God had led them these fourty years in the wildernesse that is all that befell them in that way to wit both their affliction wants and troubles on the one side and their comforts blessings and deliverances on the other adding withall that thus the Lord had carried them through many troubles though not intending to cast them off that he might thereby humble them and prove them whether they would keep his commandments or no and so to know what was in their heart that is by this trying of them to discover what was in their hearts to wit the infidelity and inco●stancy and stubbornnesse of their hearts for indeed as the fire will try gold from brasse so will afflictions discover whose hearts are upright towards God and who are false-hearted and not such as in prosperity they seemed to be and much vild corruption will shew it self in troubles which before did never appear Vers 3. That he might make thee know that man doth not live by bread onely c. The meaning of this is that God brought them to want bread and then supplyed that want with manna from heaven that he might thereby teach them that though God had appointed bread and such like food to be the ordinary means of sustaining mans life yet it was not that alone that did sustain men but the word that is the decree and command of God in so much that as bread cannot nourish us except God commands a blessing on it so on the other side he can command any thing else to nourish us as well as bread as they had seen in the manna wherewith God had sed them many years yea he can keep men alive without food a long time together as he did Moses Elijah and our Saviour Christ whereupon he retorted this place of Scrip●ure upon the devil when he tempted him to turn stones into bread Mat. 4. 4. Vers 4. Thy raiment waxed not old upon thee neither did thy foot swell these fourty years These are two other miraculous effects of Gods provident care over them by the mention whereof Moses stirres them up to the obeying of Gods Laws The first is that their garments were not the worse for wearing at least they grew not threadbare or torn in fourty years wearing concerning which this is also particularly added Deut. 29. 5. that their shoes which were most likely to wear out with their continuall travelling did not wax old upon their feet To make this good there are some Expositours do adde concerning those that were young when they came out of Egypt that their garments did miraculously grow as ●●●ir bodies grew But there is no necessity of forging thus more miracles then are expressed and that because those that out-grew their garments might be supplyed with the garments of such as died in the wildernesse and then the garments they left off might serve those that grew to their stature The second is that their feet did not swell notwithstanding their continuall travels that because their sho es waxt not old under which also some think is included the health of their bodies in generall unlesse in case when they were extraordinarily stricken with sicknesse because of some rebellion against God to which they apply that of the Psalmist there was not one feeble person among their tribes Psal 105. 37. Vers 5. Thou shalt also consider in thine heart that as a man chasteneth his sonne so the Lord thy God chasteneth thee That is out of love with a gentle hand and with a purpose to do thee good thereby and this Moses adviseth the Israelites to consider in their hearts first because unlesse this be well thought upon afflictions would overwhelm the heart with sorrow and secondly because the serious consideration both of Gods severity in correcting his own dear children and his compassion in doing it in a fatherly manner might well
in ●he former verse he had appointed Vers 13. Thou shalt observe the feast of tabernacles seven dayes after tha● thou ha●t gathered in thy corn and thy wine S●e the note upon Exod. ●3 16. Vers 18. Judges and officers ●halt thou make thee in all thy gates c. To wit judges to give judge●ent and of●icers to ex●cute the sentence of the judges and because the places of ●●di●●tur● were usually in the gates of their towns and cities therefore it is said Judges and officers shalt thou make th●e in all thy gates Vers 19. For a gift d●th blind the eyes of the wise and pervert the words of the righteous That is it will make a wise man that is able to judge between right and wrong think and perswade himself that he doth right when he doth manifest wrong and it will make a good man pervert justic● even against his conscience though in other things he makes conscience of his wayes Vers 21. Thou sh●●t not plant thee a grove of any trees near unto the altar of the Lord c. This Law the Isra●lites did afterwards many times break as we may s●e Judg. 3. 7. 1. Kings 14. 23. 16. 33. 18. 19. which was in them grosse idolatry and yet the Patriarchs did formerly worship God in groves and that without sinne S●e the note on Gen. 21. 33. CHAP. XVII Vers 1. THou shalt not sacrifice unto the Lord thy God any bull●ck or sheep wherein is blemish c. See the notes upon Levit. 22. 20 21. Vers 2. If there be found among you within any of thy gates c. The summe of the law here delivered is this That if any amongst them were sound guilty of idolatry in that they had worshipped either the sunne or the moon or any of the host of heaven or consequently any other creature for these the most glorious of Gods creatures are onely mentioned to imply that much lesse might they worship stocks and stones or any other creatures they must certainly be stoned to death whether it were man or woman no pity must be shown to them for the weaknesse of their sex and the reason is implyed in this verse because they had wrought wickednesse in the sigh● of the Lord in transgressing his covenant where we must note that idolatry is termed a transgressing of Gods covenant not onely because it was as all other sinnes are contrary to Gods law which they had covenanted to obse●ve and keep but also because therein men did openly as it were renounce God and th● true religion and chuse themselves other gods whom they would serve and therefore this was in a more speciall and ●minent manner a transgressing of the covenant Vers 4. And it be told thee and thou hast heard of it and enquired d●ligently and behold it be true c. This is added both lest in favour of any man th●y should slight a report brought unto them and not carefully enquire of it and als● lest they should be too hasty to punish men upon uncertain reports Vers 7. The hands of the witnesses shall be first upon him to put him to death and afterward the hands of all the people The witnesses were to throw the first stones at them that were condemned to be stoned which was t● make men the more afraid to bear false witnesse and that because it was supposed that men would be afraid after good deliberation to have a hand in killing an innocent man though in their wrath and fury they might speak that which might tend to the losse of his lise But then afterwards all the people assembled were to have a hand in the ex●cution of him thereby to inure them to be servent and zealous in Gods cause against all those that should despise and disr●gard his laws Vers 8. If there arise a matter too hard for thee in judgement between bloud and blo●d c. Her●●he I●ra●lites were taught what they were to do 〈…〉 question did ari●e concerning any cause that was brought before their Ju●ges and Magis●rates in their severall towns and cities which the magistr●tes ●●●re so●nd so hard that they made a doubt or were of different j●dgement amongst t●●mselves what to determine in it as between bloud and bloud that is in ca●e of bloudshed whether it were to be judged wilfull murder or as we call i● chance medley and so in any other questionable cause either concerning any plea about their est●●es or concerning any stroke given or any other thing of the like n●ture ●o wit that in this case they were to go up to the place which God should c●●se which was Jerusalem in after-ages and there resort to the pri●s●s as expounders of the law and to the judge that is the j●●ge● the civil Magi●trates who were judicially to give sent●nce according to the ●●i●sts ●●po●ition of the law that so by them the matter in question might be d●c●d●● and o● this I conceive that is meant 2. Chron. 19. 8 9 10. Moreover in J●rusalem di● Jehoshaphat set of the Levites and of the priests and of the chief of the fathers of Israel for the ju●gement of the Lord and for controversies when they returned to Jerusalem c. and that they were appointed to go up unto Jerusalem with all such caus●● of great di●●icultie not becaus● the supreme Magistrate the Judge or King of Ista●l did alway●● reside there but either because this is meant of the Sanhedrim which was their supreme Senate or Councel consisting partly of pri●sts and partly o● civil Magis●rates to whom all appeals were made and did therefore alwayes abide at Jer●s●lem or else becau●e if need so required the high pri●st was to enquire of the Lord and to answer them after the judgemen● of ●rim before the Lord Numb 27. 21. and therefore it is said here vers 9. that they should go un●o the priests c. and enquire which may be m●ant of the high ●●i●sts enquiring for them of the Lord a priviledge which the Bishop of Rome cannot challenge for the bringing of all appe●l● to be sinally determined by him Vers 10. And thou shalt do according to the sentence which they of that plac● which the Lord shall choose sh●●●●●ew thee c. Namely bec●use their sentence was to be according to the La● o● God● vers 11. and in c●●e of great difficulty to be proved so to be by ●●quiring of the Lord for we must not think the people were bound to rest in their sen●●●ce if it were clearly contrary to the law of God Vers 11. Ac●or●ing to the senten●e of the Law which they shall teach thee c. Here is methinks a manise●t di●●e●ence betwixt that which the pri●st was to do and that which the Judge was to do the priests office being m●an● by t●aching the sentence of the Law that is giving the interpretation of it and the J●dg●● by telling them the judgement that is giving judgem●nt accordi●g to that which the priest had delivered to be
hear his Prophets But principally this was fulfilled upon the Jews who would not hearken to the words of Christ when God destroyed the city and the Sanctuary as was prophecyed Dan. 9. 26. and poured upon the people his uttermost wrath 1. Thess 2. 16. Vers 22. When a Prophet speaketh in the name of the Lord if the thing follow not nor come to passe that is the thing which the Lord hath not spoken That we may rightly understand the rule here given for the discovery o● false p●ophets we must note two things first that it must be understood onely of such ●redictions of prophets wherein they foretold some strange and miraculous thing tha● should come to passe as a proof that they were truly sent from God for if these indeed cam● not accordingly to passe the people might be sure that they were false prophets and that God had no● sent them But now in other predictions as in foretelling some judgement or blessing that should befall men that which they foretold mig●t not come to passe and yet they that foretold these thi●gs might be the true Prophets of God for ●ll that for thus we know it was with the Prophet Isaiah when he told Hezekiah that he should die of his sick●●sse 2. Kings 20. 1. and with Jonah when he prophecyed that after fourty dayes Niniveh should be destroyed Jonah 3. 4. and the reason of this is because in all such predictions the people migh● know judging thereof by the known rule of Gods word that these were conditionally foretold though the condition were not expressed and therefore that in case they repented God would not inflict the evil denounced against them and in case they were not obedient unto God he would hold back the blessings promised and secondly that though the not accomplishing of signes foretold be made here a sure mark of false prophets yet we must not hence in●erre that on the contrary when signes foretold did accordingly come to passe that was an infallible proof of true prophets for if they taught any thing contrary to the written word touching matters of faith and of the worship of God the people were to hold to the written word and not to believe them but to punish them as false prophets though they did confirm their sayings that did indeed come to passe as they were before taught Deut. 13. 1 2. c. But the prophet hath spoken it presumptuously To wit because he did so boldly foretell that such a thing should come to passe having no warrant for it from God withall because it was indeed a high degree of arrogancie to father his fancies lies upon the God of truth saying that God had said that which he had not spoken Thou shalt not be afraid of him That is though he boast never so much of the certainty of that which he saith and that indeed God hath sent him and though he threaten in never so horrible a manner all the curses he can devise if you do not believe him yet thou shalt not be afraid of his brags and threatnings nor fear to put him to death as God hath appointed CHAP. XIX Vers 2. THou shalt separate three cities for thee in the midst of thy land c. That is in the heart of the land for the land being divided into three parts in the middest of each of these partitions was a citie of refuge chosen Moses had himself already assigned them three cities of refuge in the land without Jordan which they had already vanquished Deut. 4. 21. and now he gives order that when they had possessed themselves of the land of Canaan within Jordan they should there also set apart three cities of refuge more Vers 3. Thou shalt prepare thee a way c. That is thou shalt so order it that from all parts of the countrey round about these cities of refuge there be a direct plain fair high-way or causey leading to those cities and such as either by the breadth and fairnesse of the way or by marks set up purposely to distinguish it from others may be known to be the wayes leading to those cities of refuge to the end the man-slayer may not be hindered or incumbered by the uncertainty or foulnesse of the way but may speedily flie thither and so be safe Vers 4. Who so killeth his neighbour ignorantly c. The persons here mentioned that were to enjoy the priviledge of the cities ofrefuge are onely such as killed a man unwittingly by chance-medly as we usually call it but by the rule of proportion we may probably conceive that the like priviledge was afforded to him that killed a man merely in his own defence when he had no quarrell with him but onely sought to secure his own life Vers 5. As when a man goeth into the wood with his neighbour to hew wood and his hand fetcheth a stroke c. And so strikes with all his might not fearing nor suspecting any evil that should be done thereby Vers 6. Lest the avenger of the bloud pursue the slayer while his heart is hot and overtake him because the way is long c. This last clause because the way is long sheweth that this verse follows as depending on the third verse the other two being inserted as it were by way of parenthesis and is added to shew thereason why they were appointed thus to chuse the cities of refuge in three severall divisions of the land namely left if the man tha● killed one ignorantly had too farre to flie ere he could come to a city of refuge the avenger because of the length of the way should overtake him before he could get thither Vers 8. And if the Lord thy God inlarge thy coast c. It is questioned by Expositours of what inlarging their coasts this is meant and because it is said chap. 7. 22. that they should not drive out the inhabitants of the land of Canaan at once but by little and little therefore some understand this of their full possessing of the land of Canaan to wit that however they did at first onely set apart three cities of refuge in the land within Jordan yet if afterwards they came to possesse the whole land of Canaan they should then separate three cities of refuge more therein But first because they never did separate six cities of refuge more within Jordan no not when they had the fullest possession of the land and secondly because those three cities that were separated within the land to wit Kedesh and Shechem and Hebron were situated in equall divisions proportionably according to the full extent of the land of Canaan therefore it is no way probable that God ever enjoyned them to have six cities of refuge in the land of Canaan within Jordan Others again think that in these words Moses speaks onely of three cities more that were to be added besides those three without Jordan to wit those three above mentioned which Joshua separated Josh 20. 7.
dislikes a timerous and cowardly spirit in those that serve him that so they might strive to have faith in him and in all straits to be secure and confident in his protection Vers 9. They shall make captains of the armies to lead the people That is they shall order the battel and appoint every captain in his place to lead the severall companies of souldiers for we must not think that captains were now first chosen when they were come nigh unto the battel as it is said above vers 2. and that they had marched so farre already without leaders Vers 10. When thou comest nigh unto a citie to fight against it then proclaim peace unto it To wit any citie out of the land of Canaan Indeed the Hebrews say that they were to proffer peace even to the inhabitants of Canaan B●t because first they were expressely charged utterly to destroy the inhabitants of Canaan to the end they might dwell in their room might not be ensnared by their dwelling amongst them and secondly we do not reade that ever Joshua tendered peace to ●ny of the cities though it be mentioned as a strange thing and a s●gne of Gods hardning their hearts that never any of those people did of their own accord crave peace save the Gibeonites onely Josh 11. 19. There was not a citie ●hat made peace with the children of Israel save the Hivites the inhabitants of Gibeon all other they took in battel yet we never find that there was peace proffered them and it seems that the Gibeonites did therefore seek it by craft because otherwise they saw it would not be granted them and thirdly it is expressely noted as a fault in the Israelites Judges 1. 28. that they put the Can●anites to tribute and did not utterly drive them out therefore this is onely to be understood of such cities as they should besiege that were not of the cities of the land of Canaan Vers 13. And when the Lord thy God hath delivered it into thine hands c. That is when through Gods assistance thou hast taken it by force and assault Vers 15. Thus shalt thou do unto all the cities which are very farre off from thee which are not of the cities of these nations But these must neither have peace offered them nor must their women and little ones and cattel be spared when their cities are taken by force for the following reason doth manifestly exclude them from both these favours vers 18. That they teach you not to do after all their abominations which they have done unto their Gods so should you sinne against the Lord your God Vers 19. Thou shalt not destroy the trees thereof c. That is fruit-trees wherewith the land cannot be suddenly stored again these might not be cut down no not for their use in the siege I do not think that it was unlawfull to cut down a fruit-tree when necessitie required it onely the Lord teacheth them to take heed that in their rage they did not so waste the land as to ruine even posteritie also Vers 20. And thou shalt build bulwarks against the citie c. That is with such trees as are not fruit-trees CHAP. XXI Vers 1. IF one be found slain in the land which the Lord thy God giveth to thee to possesse it lying in the field c. The field is onely here mentioned because in cities and towns such murders are seldome committed so secretly but that the murderer is found out yet when it so happened that in a town or citie a man was found murdered and the man that did the fact could not be found though all diligence had been used to find it out it is most probable that the same course was taken for the expiation of the bloudshed that is here prescribed vers 3. Vers 2. Then thy Elders and Judges shall come forth and they shall measure c. That is the Elders and the Judges of the towns or cities round about shall for the better satisfaction of them all come forth and see the measure taken betwixt the dead bodie and the cities round about it to wit if it be doubtfull what ●itie is nearest and that because the next citie was to make expiation for the murder as it follows in the next verse Vers 3. The Elders of that citie shall take an heifer which hath not been wrought with c. This is enjoyned for the expiation of that murder the authours whereof could not b● found out thereby to teach them how much the Lord is displeased with murder and with the neglect of Magistrates if they did not use all care to secure the high-wayes about them from all robberie and murder and to search out the murderers when any man was secretly killed that he might be pu●ished for the bloud he had shed The Elders of the citie next to the slain man had this work of making an expiation imposed upon them because there was most probabilitie that some of the inhabitants there had shed this bloud and besides they were most culpable for not well guarding and watching the place where the murder was committed and that which is enjoyned to be done by way of expiation for this murder thus secretly committed is the killing of a heifer which hath not been wrought with and which hath not drawn in the yoke and however some hold that this heifer did represent the murderer in whose stead it was put to death and therefore it was an heifer that had never born the yoke to signifie the murderer to have been a wicked wretch a sonne of Belial that is lawlesse and without yoke yet it is more generally and upon better grounds held that this heifer did signifie Christ by whose death they were to expect that satisfaction should be made to Gods justice that the guilt of this murder might not be laid to their charge And indeed in that it was an heifer which had not been wrought with and which had not drawn in the yoke and consequently could not be slain for any thing disliked in it the fitter it was to be a lively representation of Christ who was never under the bondage of sinne nor never did any thing blame-worthy but did voluntarily undergo that which he did suffer for our sakes See the note upon Numb 19. 2. Vers 4. And the Elders of that citie shall bring down the heifer unto a rough valley c. This was done principally to strike them with the great●r horrour for the sinne committed for the carrying of this heifer that was to bear the punishment due to the offender as an accursed thing that would defile their fields c. into a desert place did notably teach them that murder was an execrable sinne and dangerous But yet withall it might also signifie that Christ of whom this heifer was a type was to suffer in a horrid place called Calvarie or Golgotha Matth. 27. 33. as likewise that by this expiation the guilt of this accursed
sinne was removed from them their fields and cities Vers 5. And the priests the sonnes of Levi shall come near c. The priests are here enjoyned to be present first to shew by their presence that this was a kind of extraordinary sacrifice secondly that the Elders might before them as in Gods presence protest their innocencie thirdly to see that all was done according to the law and to satisfie the Elders in any thing that might seem doubtfull fourthly that they might blesse them in the name of the Lord that is pray for them and upon these things thus done pronounce them free from the bloudshed all which is implyed in the following words for them the Lord thy God hath chosen to minister unto him and to blesse in the name of the Lord and by their word shall every controversie and every stroke be tried Vers 6. And all the Elders of that citie that are next unto the slain man shall wash their hands over the heifer c. To wit thereby first to signifie that they were guiltlesse of the bloud of the slain man as for the same reason when Pilate was to condemne Christ he took water and washed his hands before the multitude saying I am innocent of the bloud of this just person Matt. 27. 24. secondly to intimate their desire that the guilt of this murder might fall and lie upon this heifer over whom they washed their hands and that so the people might be free and thirdly to teach us that even those that are mo●t guiltlesse and innocent ought to clear themselves from the very suspicion of any evil amongst men Vers 7. And they shall answer and say Our hands hav● not shed this bloud c. This word answer may seem to imply that the priests did examine the Elders concerning this murder and then they answered him as here is expressed Vers 10. When thou goest forth to warre against thine enemies c. This Law which implyes a liberty for men to marry women taken captives though they had wives already is herein like that of divorce Deut. 24. which was onely suffered for the hardnesse of their hearts and it is to be understood onely of the captives of forein nations not of the Canaani●es who were to be all destroyed Vers 12. Then thou shalt bring her home to thine house and she shall shav● her head and par● her nails c. According to the two different translations of this last clause there are two different Expositions given of it for if we reade it as it is in the margin of our Bibles she shall shave her head and suffer her nails to grow then it seems evident that her head was shaved her nails suffered to grow and the servile attire of captives was put upon her purposely that being thus deformed he might hereby be beaten from desiring her to be his wife But if we reade it as upon better grounds it is in our text she shall shave her head and pare her nails and put the raiment of her captivity from off her that is the goodly attire which she had on when she was taken captive then these outward signes were to teach them that if they desired to marry such a captive she must renounce her heathenisme and all the superfluous and corrupt customes and superstitions thereof and worship God onely as the Israelites did living now a new and holy life as became Gods people into whose stock she was to be ingrafted and to shew them in what manifest danger they would b● of being defiled by such wives if they did not renounce their former religion and heathenish cus●omes and course of life I know there are some Expositours do hold that hereby also was figured that if Gods people would make use of the philosophy of the heathens or any other thing which being good in it self hath been abused by them they must be carefull to shave off and pare away whatever is superstitious and sinnefull therei● But that these rites were intended to signifie this it is hard to say Vers 13. And bewail her father and her mother a full mone●h This was enjoyned either that the Israelite that had taken this woman captive might have so much time to consider of what he did beforehand and not to do that in the heat of his lust which he should afterwards repent but might rather be weaned from his desire of taking her to be his wife or else this was enjoyned as the other par●iculars before mentioned as an outward expression of the womans utter renouncing her fathers house that she might be ingrafted into the Israel of God for this mourning for her parents as if they were dead was a kind of bidding farewell for ever to them according to that of the Psalmist Hearken O daughter and consider and encline thine eare forget also thine own people and thy fathers house Psal 45. 10. Vers 14. And it shall be if thou have no delight in ●er then thou shalt let her go whither she will c. By way of satisfaction for the wrong he had done her he was freely to set her at liberty Now this putting away ●f the captive woman after he had married her upon some dislike or displeasure taken against her was one of those things which God did never approve but onely tolerate to the Jews for the hardnesse of their hearts And indeed if there were danger lest the husband should kill or grievously oppresse a wife of their own nation upon displeasure taken against her and therefore they were permitted rather to give their wives a bill of divorce and put them away much more would there have been great danger of the killing or extreme hard usage of a wife that had form●rly been taken as a captive and therefore the man is here allowed to put her away but withall he is restrained from selling her under pretence that she was his captive and servant but is appointed to set her at liberty to go whither she would Vers 16. He may not make the sonne of the beloved first-born before the sonne of the hated c. That is the sonne of the hated being yet living and that because the right of the first-born by Law of nature belonged unto him Vers 19. Then shall his father and his mother lay hold on him and bring him out unto the Elders of his citie c. Who were no doubt to examine the truth of the accusation brought against him and accordingly to proceed Vers 21. And the men of his citie shall stone him with stones that he die c. That is after the accusation given in against this rebellious sonne is sufficiently proved the Elders shall condemne him and so he shall be stoned and thus by the severity of this Law not onely children were kept in aw that they might not da●e to rebell against their parents but also parents were taught to be the more carefull of the education of their children Vers 23. His body shall not
for ever The like is said of the Canaanites Ezra 9. 12 Now therefore give not your daughters to their sonnes neither take their daughters unto your sonnes nor seck their peace or their wealth for ever Now this is not meant of private revenge in malice which was alwayes unlawfull for the people of God o● that they should not seek the salvation of the souls of these people For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Saviour Who will have all men to be saved and to come unto the knowledge of the truth 1. Tim. 2. 3 4. but onely of publick confedracies with these people which was likely to be for their own hurt though for the others good The meaning therefore of these words is onely this that they must not make peace nor have any thing to do with them but rather be at perpetuall enmity with them And herein therefore if David offended by making peace with the Ammonites 2. Sam. 11. 1. 2. as many Expositours hold he did no marvell though the Lord suffered his messengers to be so basely used by them Vers 7. Thou shalt not abhorre an Edomite for he is thy brother That is thou shalt not so abhorre and Edomite as to exclude his posterity after he had embraced the faith of Israel from being admitted into the commonwealth of Israel unto the tenth generation as thou must exclude the Ammonites and Moabites for that this is meant by abhorring the Edomite in this clause and the Egyptian in the next is evident in the eighth verse where it is said by way of explaining these words The children that are begotten of them shall enter into the congregation of the Lord in their third generation The reason here given why the Lord would have them shew more respect herein to the Edomites then to the Ammonites and Moabites is this because they were their brethren as being the posterity of Isaac by Esau as they were by Jacob and so indeed the nearest of kinne to Israel of all the people on the earth Though the Edomites used them as discourteously as they passed along to go into Canaan as the Ammonites or Moabites did for they refused to let them passe through their land and came out armed against them Numb 20. 20 21. and the fault of the Edomite was the greater because he was Israels brother yet God will have them shew the Edomites more favour then other nations because they were their brethren the Lord hereby teaching them what love men ought to bear to their brethren and how we ought to bear with the injuries of brethren because of their near relation to us though it be a greater sault in them to be so injurious then it is in others Thou shalt not abhorre an Egyptian because thou wast a stranger in his land Though the Egyptians did most cruelly oppresse them yet must they be favoured f●● t●e courtesie which in former times they received amongst them God hereby tea●●ing men rather to remember good turns then injuries Vers 9. When the host goeth forth against thine enemies then keep thee from every wicked thing c. That is then no lesse then at other times yea then especially above all other times For this charge is given them first to teach them that God requires that in times of warre they should be as wary to avoid all kind of wickednesse as at other times Souldiers in the warre are wont to carry themselves as if they were lawlesse and might do what they list and therefore to prevent this they were told here that the Lord expects that his people should in such times of confusion keep themselves as strictly to the rule of holinesse and righteousnesse as at other times according that charge given by the Baptist to souldiers Luke 13. 14. Do violence to no man and be content with your wages yea secondly to shew them that then they had reason to be most carefull not to provoke God by any misdemeanour whether against the morall or ceremoniall Law such as are those particulars mentioned in the following verses to wit first because souldiers go out as it were to execute vengeance upon others for the evil they have done and they are not fit to punish others that are as bad themselves secondly because a clear conscience is one of the best means to make men tr●ly valorous and thirdly because then there is most evident need of Gods assistance and most danger of mischief to come upon them if the Lord should leave them and give them over into the hands of their enemies as is implyed in the reason given for this law vers 14. For thy Lord thy God walketh in the midst of thy camp to deliver thee therefore shall thy camp be holy c. Vers 10. If there be among you any man that is not clean by reason of uncleannes that chanceth him by night c. Though for the pollution here spoken of they were not to be shut out of their camps and cities as lepers and others were yet they were it seems to go forth voluntarily from amongst their brethren till having washed themselves with water they returned at evening again to their tents and dwellings and this was to teach them what exact puritie and holinesse God required in his people Vers 12. Thou shalt have a place also without the camp c. That is a place designed for the use by public appointment whither they were bound to go that so their camp might not be defiled with their excrements and though the Lord might herein intimate their dutie in regard of civilitie and the care men ought to take not to do any thing that might offend or annoy their brethren yet doubtlesse the chief drift of this law was to teach them that in regard of Gods presence amongst them they ought to keep themselves clean from all spirituall pollutions the outward cleannesse and neatnesse here required being onely a shadow of that spirituall puritie which even in times of warre God required in his people Vers 15. Thou shalt not deliver unto his master the servant which is escaped from his master c. That is when it should be manifest that they fled to escape the 〈…〉 rage of cruel masters that did causelessely oppresse them In this case if they fled from their masters in other countreys and sought for shelter in the land of Israel or if they fled from any cruel ma●●er amongst the Israelites and sought for shelter from the Magistrate they were not to deliver them back to the tyrannie of savage men but in other cases as when they ●led in a gadding humour from their lawfull lords who did no wayes oppresse them or being guiltie of some capitall offense to escape deserved punishment we must not think God appointed his people to give harbour to such for this were to make this law contrary to that law Thou shal● not steal if they must be so just in all their dealings as to restore the beast
upon thee unexpectedly Vers 3. Blessed shalt thou be in the citie and blessed shalt thou be in the sield That is in all places Vers 4. Blessed shall be the fruit of thy body and the fruit of thy ground c. That is blessed shalt thou be in all thy possessions Vers 5. B●●ssed shall be thy basket and thy store That is blessed shalt thou be in the use of all that thou hast Vers 6. Blessed shalt thou be when thou comest in and blessed shalt thou be when thou goest out That is in all thy imployments publick or private Vers 9. The Lord shall establish thee an holy people unto himself c. This chiefly is meant of spirituall blessings of being Gods peculiar people and the firm perpetuity of ●he covenant made with them and it is added in the last place as the chief ●iece 〈◊〉 their happ●nesse V●●● ●0 And all the people of the earth shall see that thou art called by the n●me of the Lord c. That is that thou art the peculiar people of God for the meaning is that all nations should plainly perceive by the singular blessings that shall be heaped upon this people that God did indeed own them for his speciall people and that they were called by his name as sonnes are called by the name of their 〈…〉 and wives by the names of their husbands V●●● 12. The Lord shall open unto thee his good treasure the heaven c. Mos●s calls the heavens the Lords good treasure because he keeps there in store those things wherewith he causeth the earth to yield abundance of increase for the enriching of those that dwell therein as the rain to water the ground the heat of the sunne and the influence of the moon and starres to make all things therein to grow and prosper c. Vers 13. And the Lord shall make thee the head and not the tail c. That is thou shalt be highly esteemed above other nations and not scorned and despised as a base and contemptible people Vers 15. All these curses shall come upon thee and overtake thee That is there shall be no avoyding these judgements though thou triest all wayes and with all the skill and diligence that can be used dost endeavour to escape and fly from these miseries yet it shall not be thou mayest sometimes think that thou art gotten out of danger but thy hopes shall be in vain these judgements shall still pursue thee and at last overtake thee Vers 21. The Lord shall make the pestilence cleave unto thee c. That ●s God will send the pestilence into thy cities and towns and you shall be no wayes able to rid your selves of it when it is among you in vain shall any means be used to stay the spreading of the infection because the Lord shall command it to cleave unto you and to continue amongst you Vers 23. And the heaven that is over thy head shall be brasse and the earth that is under thee shall be iron It is not without cause that Moses saith not The heavens shall be brasse and the earth iron but the heaven that is over thy head shall be brasse and the earth that is under thee shall be iron for the Lord intended that this should give them a hint of fear by shewing them how God had hemmed them in with judgements on every hand if they should walk rebelliously against him Vers 24. The Lord shall make the rain of thy land powder and dust c. That is in stead of rain there shall fall upon thy grounds trees plants c. powder and dust which the wind and other things raise in times of drought Vers 28. The Lord shall smite thee with madnesse and blindnesse c. It is a spirituall madnesse and blindnesse and astonishment of heart which God here threatens to wit when God deprives men of the use at least of their understanding that they stand in a manner like a blind man or one that is suddenly amazed or astonished not knowing which way to turn themselves or shall do such things which if they were not bewitched as S. Paul saith of the Galatians Gal. 3. 1. if they were not blind or drunk or mad as we use to say they would never Accordingly therefore by groping at noon-day in the following verse all the effects are meant of this brutish stupidity and spirit of giddinesse wherewith the Lord in his just judgement doth many times strike men as when they shall cast themselves headlong into manifest dangers and shall not be able to apprehend the occasions of helping themselves or doing good to themselves though never so clearly proffered unto them when men shall runne on securely in those sinnes which the very light of nature must needs tell them are the high-way to hell and when Gods anger is clearly discovered by his judgements yet they will not see it when they shall live under plentifull means of grace and yet shall continue ignorant or wilfully reject both Christ and heaven and indeed in this regard we may well say that the Jews did thus through Gods just judgement grope at noon-day and so still do unto this houre in that the light of the Gospel shining upon them they would not nor will yet acknowledge Christ their promised Messiah which makes the Apostle say 2. Cor. 3. 14. that untill this day there is a vail over their minds in the reading of the old testament and Rom. 11. 8. God hath given them the spirit of slumber eyes that they should not see and ears that they should not hear unto this day Vers 30. Thou shalt betroth a wife and another man shall ly with her c. The sting of the judgement here threatned lies in this that their enemies should lie with those they had newly betrothed to be their wives before themselves had enjoyed them and so it is likewise in the particulars following that they should be bereaved of their new-built houses before they had dwelt a day in them and of their vineyards before themselves had eaten of the fruit of them Though it be misery enough at any time to have those things taken away by enemies wherein we delight yet it is a great aggravation of this misery when after we have taken much pains to get them and have set our hearts upon them and are filled with hope and expectation of enjoying the fruit of our labours then on a sudden they should be snatched away and so all our hope should be quite dashed and others should enjoy all the swee● we had laboured for Vers 32. Thy sonnes thy daughters shall be given unto another people thine eyes shall look and fail with longing c. The judgement here threatned is first that they should behold with their eyes when their children were carried away captive which is a great aggravation of this calamity for it is not so great a vexation to heare of the losse of goods or children as to have