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A11649 Annotations upon the five bookes of Moses, the booke of the Psalmes, and the Song of Songs, or, Canticles VVherein the Hebrevv vvords and sentences, are compared with, and explained by the ancient Greeke and Chaldee versions, and other records and monuments of the Hebrewes: but chiefly by conference with the holy Scriptures, Moses his words, lawes and ordinances, the sacrifices, and other legall ceremonies heretofore commanded by God to the Church of Israel, are explained. With an advertisement touching some objections made against the sinceritie of the Hebrew text, and allegation of the Rabbines in these annotations. As also tables directing unto such principall things as are observed in the annotations upon each severall booke. By Henry Ainsworth.; Annotations upon the five bookes of Moses, and the booke of the Psalmes Ainsworth, Henry, 1571-1622? 1627 (1627) STC 219; ESTC S106799 2,398,875 1,194

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Priests and Levites and Israelites 〈…〉 fully goe in that is 〈◊〉 one to ano 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is 〈◊〉 goeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ● as it is written ACCORDING TO THE HOVSE OF THEIR FATHERS the house of his father that is his familie and not the house of his mother Maimony in Issure biah c. 19. sect 15. V. 16. the mouth that is as the Chaldee expoundeth it the word and the Greeke saith the voice of the Lord. V. 17. Gershon in Greeke Gersom but in vers 25. Gerson So Ezron in Gen. 46. 12. is Esrom Mat. 1. 3. Kohath or as in Greeke Kaath See Gen. 46. 11. Exod. 6. 16. V. 18. Libni in Greeke Lobnei and Semeei See Exod. 6. 17. V. 19. Hebron or as the Greeke also writeth it Chebron and Oziel See Exod. 6. 18. Here Kohath hath foure families so many as both his brethren had together V. 20. Mahli in Greeke Moolei and M●usi See Exod. 6. 19. Vers. 21. Gershon in Greeke Gedsom mistaking D. for R. by reason of the likenesse of the letters in Hebrew See the notes on Gen. 4. 18. V. 23. Seaward that is as the Chaldee explaineth it westward See Num. 2. 18. V. 24. house of the father that is principall house so in v. 30. and 35. Eliasaph in Greeke Elisaph by interpretation God hath added Lael that is For God V. 25. the charge or the custodie the Holy things which they were to carrie keepe and looke unto whereof see more in Num. 4. Tabernacle the curtaines of the Tabernacle Num. 4. 25. for the boords were under Meraries charge Num. 3. 36. Tent made of ten curtaines see Exod. 26. 1. c. covering made of goats haire Exod. 26. 7. And here is to bee understood the other coverings also made of rammes skinnes and Tachash skinnes Exod. 26. 14. for they belonged to the Gershonites charge Num. 4. 25. hanging veile whereof see Exod. 26. 36. V. 26. tapestrie hangings whereof see Exod. 27. 9. c. hanging veile mentioned in Exod. 27. 16. V. 28. of the Sanctuarie Hebr. of the sanctifie or holinesse meaning the holy things as the Greeke saith of the Holies what they were is expressed in v. 31. See Num. 4. 4. 15. and 10. 21. Here the families of the Levites may be viewed by their numbers 1. Of the Gersonites 7500. 2. Of the Kohathites 8600. 3. Of the Merarites 6200. By their situation when they camped about the Tabernacle 1. Gersonites behinde westward v. 23. 2. Kohathites Southward v. 29. 3. Merarites Northward v. 35. And to make up the square Moses and Aaron with the Priests encamped formost Eastward v. ●8 By their charges for there was committed unto the care and cariage of the 1. Gersonites the Tent coverings veile hanging of the court c. 〈◊〉 Koha 〈…〉 the Arke Table Altars and Instruments of the Sanctuary 3. Merarites the boords barres pillars sockers c. Among these families of Levi wee may observe the speciall prerogatives of Kohath the second sonne 1. Hee excelleth in multitude of families or chiefe fathers having foure when as each of his brethren had but two 2. He excelleth in multitude of children having 8600. that is 1100 moe than his elder brother Gerson and 2400. moe than Merari 3. Of him came Moses the king Aaron the priest and Marie the prophetesse and so all the Priests were of this familie Exod. 6. 18. 20. Num. 26. 58 59. 4. His families have the chiefest place about the Sanctuary the South quarter next unto Moses Aaron and the priests Num. 3. 29. 5. They have the charge of the most holy things within the Sanctuarie as the Arke Table Candlesticke Altars c. Num. 3. 31. 6. Whereas the tribe of Levi had 48. cities allowed them in Canaan Kohaths posterity had 23. of them for the Priests had 13. cities and the other Kohathites ten and so he had in a manner a double portion as much as both his brethren Ios. 21. 7. Of the Prince of these Kohathites Elizaphan Num. 3. 30. there were 200. Levites to helpe home with the Arke in Davids daies no such mention being made of the other two princes besides 312. Kohathites of other families when of Gershon and Merari there were not so many 1 Chron. 15. 5. 8 9 10. V. 29. Southward the south is in Psal. 89. 13. called the right side and in this place it hath a name in Hebrew derived also of the right hand because so it is when men stand with their faces to the East see the notes on Num. 2. 3. V. 30. Elizapham sonne of Vzziel hee was of the fourth and youngest familie of the Kohathites yet preferred to be the prince over them This as the Hebrewes thinke was offensiue to Korah who was of the second familie of Izhar and occasioned him to rebell See the notes on Num. 16. 1. Elizaphan is by interpretation My God hath stored ●p and Uzziel God is my strength V. 31. all the service thereof in Greeke all the 〈…〉 ks of them V. 32. of the princes the Greeke saith over the princes and the Chaldee addeth appointed over the princes of the Levites Hebr. of Levi whose name is put for all his posteritie as the Greeke and Chaldee translate Levites So Aaron is used for the Aaronites 1 Chron. 12. 27. Eleazar by interpretation The helpe of God having the oversight or the Bishop having the Bis 〈…〉 office which hath the name in Hebrew of Uisitation in Greeke of Overseeing and so this word is translated by the holy Ghost Episcopee that is a Bishops office or charge in Act. 1. 20. from Psal. 109. 7. And in Num. 4. 16. the Greeke translateth it Episcopos Bishop So in Ezek. 44. 11. having charges that is Bishops at the gat of the house where the Greeke translateth it Porters In Thargum Ionathan it is explained thus Hee inquired by Urim and Thummim under his hand were they appointed that keepe the custodie of the Sanctuarie As Aaron the high Priest figured Christ Heb. 5. 1. 4. 5. so Eleazar in this office being Prince of Princes shadowed the office of our Lord Iesus who is the Prince of the Kings of the earth Rev. 1. 5. the Archpastor 1 Pet. 5. 4. the great Pastor of the sheepe Hebr. 13. 20. and Bishop of our soules 1 Pet. 2. 25. And hence arose the distinction of the high Priest and the second priest as in 2 King 25. 18. And when Aaron was dead and Eleazar high priest in his place Num. 20. 26. 28. then Phinehas Eleazars sonne was Governour over the Levites 1 Chron. 9. 20. V. 35. Zuriel in Greeke Souriel which signifieth God is my Rocke Abihail or Abichail as the Greeke pronounceth it by interpretation The fathers strength V. 36. the oversight of the charge that is as the Chaldee expoundeth it that which shall be committed to the charge or custodie of the sonnes of Merari the service thereof in Greeke the workes of them And because these things were heavy to beare the Lord allowed
wrath as the Greeke translateth it because the Hebrew Aph signifieth both anger and the nostrils and this speech is used in cases of judgment upon Gods enemies as in Iob 4. 9. by the blast of God they perish c. The Chaldee here translateth with the word of thy mouth It respecteth Gods command in Exod. 14. 26. 27. which was performed also by a winde as after verse 10. So the Lord will consume Antichrist with the spirit of his mouth 2 Thes. 2. 8. gathered or heaped up became as heaps And this being done with a mighty winde was with a great noise to which the Prophet hath reference saying the deepe uttered his voice and life up his hands on high Habakkuk 3. 10. congealed as ice frozen hardned It may be meant of the seas bottome which being muddy and soft was hardened that they went as on dry land He led his people through the deepe as an horse in the wildernesse Esay 63. 13. Some understand it of the waters that they were congealed as ice the heart that is the mids or deepe of the sea so Psalme 46. 3. Ezek. 28. 2. And now the channels of waters were seene and the foundations of the world were revealed at the rebuke of the Lord at the breath of the winde of his anger as David singeth for his victories Psal. 18. 16. Vers. 9. divide the spoile which is done after victory Luke 11. 22. and with joy Esay 9. 3. Thus the enemie vainely promised themselves the victory so in Iudg. 5. 30. soule that is lust or will so in Psal. 27. 12. and 41. 3. and 78. 18. destroy them or repossesse them for so the originall is used sometime for destroying or disinheriting as Numb 14. 12. sometime for causing to inherit or taking possession Numb 14. 24. The Chaldee here translateth it destroy the Greeke have dominion or Lord over them The Egyptians came out as a whirlewinde to scatter Israel their rejoycing was even to dovoure the poore in secret Hab. 3. 14. Vers. 10. blow the Chaldee translateth it thou didst say with thy word Of this winde there was no mention in Exod. 14. 27. but it is gathered from verse 21. where the Lord by a strong east winde caused the sea to goe backe covered them God made the waters of the red sea to flow over their faces as they pursued after Israel Deut. 11. 4. the waters covered the distressers of Israel not one of them was left Psal. 106. 11. And here God brake the heads of the Dragons in the waters the heads of Livjathan Psalme 74. 13. 14. Vers. 11. the Gods or the Mighties the Potentates so the Princes of the world are called Psal. 82. and 89. 7. wonders or marvels so the Greeke also and Chaldee translateth it the Hebrew being singular a wonder or miracle but one is often put for many as is noted on Gen. 3. 2. So in Psal. 78. 12. Vers. 12. the earth in the bottome of the sea so Ionas in the sea said the earth with her bars was about me for ever Ion. 2. 6. Vers. 13. leadest to wit softly or quietly as a flocke is led this was done by the pillar of the cloud and fire also by the hand of Moses and Aaron but ascribed to God as the principall even as in verse 12. God is said to stretch out his hand which was ministerially done by Moses Exodus 14. 26. So in Psalme 77. 21. thou didst leade thy people like a flocke by the hand of Moses and Aaron habitation of thine holinesse in Greeke thine holy lodging or mansion It is a continuance of the former similitude of a shepherds lodge or habitation which is in pleasant pastures to feed and give rest to his flocke as in all the cities thereof shall be an ha 〈…〉 of shepherds causing their flockes to lie downe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 12. It meaneth the land of Canaan where God 〈…〉 uld give his people rest and feed them with his Word So when God promiseth to return them out of Babylon hee useth this word I will bring Israel againe to his habitation and hee shall feed c. Ier. 50. 19. and in that land Ierusalem was as the fold of the flocke and is called a quiet habitation Esay 33. 20. The fulfilling of this prophesie is celebrated by Asaph shewing how God made his people to goe forth like sheepe and guided them like a flocke in the wildernesse and led them on in safety and they dreaded not but the sea covered their enemies And hee brought them to the border of his Holinesse to that mountaine which his right hand had purchased Psal. 78 52. 53. 54. Vers. 14. stirred with feare or anger both which doe stirre the minde and body and cause it to quake and tremble and these were in the peoples hearing of Gods workes for Israel Deut. 2. 25. Ios. 2. 10. 11. Num. 20. 18. 20. and 22. 3. 6. The Greeke here translateth it angry Vers. 15. amazed or suddenly troubled it implieth both feare and haste and so the Greeke translateth it hasten See this fulfilled in Deut. 2. 4. and of Edoms Dukes see Gen. 36. take hold that is they shall greatly tremble For passions of the minde feare trembling astonishment and the like are said to take hold or fall upon men when they are overcome by them In Luk. 5. 26. it is said amazement tooke all which in Mark. 2. 12. is expounded all were amazed melt that is faint with feare as was accomplished Ios. 2. 9. 10. 11. and 5. 1. A similitude whereby the heart is likened to waxe which melteth with feare as waxe with fire Psal. 22. 15. and 68. 3. Vers. 16. terrour this also is signified in Deut. 2. 25. and 11. 25. Thargum Ierusalemy expounds it the terrour of death which phrase David useth in Psal. 55. 5. terrours of death are fallen upon me The Hebrew aemathah hath here a letter added in the end to denote the excesse of feare great terrour This though it was in respect of the people as it is said your terrour is fallen upon us Ios. 2. 9. yet proceeded it from God as he saith I will send my terrour before thee Exod. 23. 27. purchased or gotten bought and possessest The Hebrew Kanah signifieth to get either by generation as Gen. 4. 1. or by buying and purchasing whereby it becommeth ones owne possession Gen. 25. 10. Ex. 21. 2. All are in God creating redeeming and regenerating his people in Christ. So Moses elsewhere saith Is not he thy father that hath gotten or bought thee Deut. 32. 6. and Asaph saith Remember thy congregation which thou hast purchased Psalme 74. 2. and the Apostle speaketh of such as deny the Lord that hath bought them 2 Pet. 2. 1. The Chaldee here translateth it redeemed as in verse 13. Vers. 17. plant that is give them a setled dwelling a similitude from the vine tree as Psal. 80. 9. and 44. 3. mountaine that is mountany country such as Canaan was Deut. 11. 11. and in
shut it up he shall be uncleane untill the evening And hee that lieth in the house shall wash his clothes and he that eateth in the house shall wash his clothes And if the Priest comming shall come in and see and behold the plague hath not spred in the house after the house was plaistered then the Priest shall pronounce the house cleane because the plague is healed And he shall take to purifie the house two birds and Cedar wood and scarlet and hysope And he shall kill the one bird in an earthen vessell over living water And hee shall take the Cedar wood and the hysope and the scarlet and the living bird and dip them in the blood of the killed bird and in the living water and he shall sprinkle the house seven times And hee shall parifie the house with the blood of the bird and with the living water and with the living bird and with the Cedar wood and with the hysope and with the scarlet And he shall let-goe the living bird out of the citie upon the face of the field and shall make-atonement for the house and it shall be cleane This is the law for every plague of leprosie and skall And for the leprosie of a garment and of an house And for a swelling and for a scab and for a bright-spot To teach in the day of the uncleane and in the day of the clean this is the law of Leprosie Annotations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here beginneth the 28. section or lecture of the Law called in Hebrew Metsorangh that is the Leper See Gen. 6. 9. THat he shall be brought The leper dwelt without the host and in the day of his cleansing hee was brought to the utmost part of the host and in ages following to the gates of Ierusalem and the Priest went out thither to meet him and performed certaine rites for him and after that he came into the host or citie and so by degrees into the Sanctuarie as after is explained And this comming to the Priest was requisite for every leper though he were never so well healed wherefore Christ said to him whom hee had cured Goe shew thy selfe to the Priest and offer the gift that Moses commanded Matth. 8. 4. Vers. 3. be healed The Priest healed it not but looked upon it when it was healed and directed and assisted the patient in duties of thankefulnesse to God who is both the striker and the healer Deut. 32. 39. Exod. 15. 26. Neither doth the Law send the Leper to the Physician or prescribe salves or medicines to cure him but leaveth him unto the worke of Gods grace which should after bee fully manifested in Christ who himselfe tooke our infirmities and bare our sicknesses Matth. 8. 16. 17. And the rites and sacrifices following which were a profession of thankes unto God in Christ closely taught them this but the Gospell declareth the way of curing to be by faith as unto the Samaritane that was healed of his leprosie Christ said Thy faith hath made thee whole Luke 17. 19. which faith causeth Lepers though they stand a farre off to lift up their voices and cry unto Iesus for mercy Luk. 17. 12. 13. who sendeth his word and healeth them and delivereth them from their corruptions Psal. 107. 20. Matth. 10. 7. 8. For being moved with compassion hee putteth forth his hand toucheth and speaketh and immediately the leprosie departeth Mark 1. 41. 42. and so healeth he the soules of sinners that come unto him The Heb. say Leprosie is the finger of God therefore it is unlawfull to endevour to heale it c. the only healing of it is by the hand of the Priest that maketh atonement for by mercy atonement is made for iniquity Prov. 16. 6. even as uncleannesse which is not done away but by water R. Menachem on Levit. 13. This being the judgment of the Iewes themselves the Lepers whom Christ healed were a good testimonie against them that he was the son of God Matth. 8. 4. and by that and other like workes hee declared himselfe to be he that should come Matth. 11. 3 4. 5. And he is the Priest who cleanseth us all leprous sinners and bringeth us into the true Sanctuary being washed sanctified and justified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God 1 Cor. 6. 11. Vers. 4. and he shall take the Greeke saith and they shall take speaking indefinitely of the leper or any of his friends that might procure these things for his cleansing birds whether doves or turtles commonly used in sacrifices which are called birds in Gen. 15. 9. 10. or any other cleane fowles for the scripture determineth them not otherwise then that they must be cleane such as all are save those excepted in Lev. 11. 13. c. and all that are cleane for meat are called birds in Deut. 14. 11. The Hebrew canons say of these they must bee free birds that is such as are not tame or any mans owne but at libertie to flie from place to place and as God saith he shall take them for him so they expound it they must be taken in the name of cleansing of leprosie that is designed for that purpose onely Maimony in treat of Lepr chap. 11. sect 1. These two birds of which one was killed the other let goe alive were to figure out Christ who should be killed for our offences and rise againe for our justification Rom. 4. 25. The like was figured by the two goats on expiation day Levit. 16. Cedar wood or a Cedar sticke which the Hebrewes say was to be a cubit that is a foot and an halfe long and so thicke as the square foot of a bed Maimony ibidem and Thalmud Bab. in Negagnim chap. 14. sect 6. Cedar wood rotteth not the pitch that runneth out of it is said to keepe dead bodies from corrupting but corrupteth living bodies and it us good against the Leprosie and other foule ulcers Plinie hist. lib. 24. cap. 5. and Dioscorides l. 1. 〈◊〉 89. scarlet this the Iewes say was wooll died in scarlet or crimsin colour and so the Apostle in an other like case calleth it scarlet wooll Heb. 9. 19 and there was to be of it a shekel weight which weighed 320. graines of barley Maimony ibidem This scarlet colour resembled Christs blood and the essicacie therof in the soule restoring the naturall lively colour and vigour which the pale white leprosie of sinne had done away hysope or hyssope whereof see the notes on Exod. 12. 22. This was for length not to be lesse then an hand-bredth and they say it might not be Greeke hysope nor Roman hysope nor wilde hysope nor any other sort that was surnamed by the place but the common hysope that grew in gardens Talmud in Negagnim chap. 14. sect 6. These two plants were the greatest and the smallest that grew and so the Cedar is opposed to the bysope 1 King 4. 33. The Cedar that will not rot
their captives and spoile are to be purified 25 The proportion whereby the prey is to be divided 28 The tribute levied unto the Lord of the divided prey and given to the Priests and Levites 48 The captaines of Israel numbring their souldiers misse not a man and therefore giue a voluntary oblation unto the Treasury of the Lord. ANd Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Avenge the vengeance of the sons of Israel upon the Midianites afterward shalt thou be gathered unto thy peoples And Moses spake unto the people saying Arme yee some men of your selves unto the warre and let them be against Midian to render the vengeance of Iehovah upon Midian A thousand of a tribe a thousand of a tribe of all the tribes of Israel shall ye send to the warre So there were delivered of the thousands of Israel a thousand of a tribe twelve thousand armed for war And Moses sent them a thousand of a tribe to the warre them and Phinehas the sonne of Eleazar the Priest to the warre and the holy instruments and the trumpets of alarme in his hand And they warred against Midian as Iehovah commanded Moses and they killed every male And they killed the Kings of Midian beside those that were slaine of them Evi and Rekem and Zur and Hur and Reba five Kings of Midian Balaam also the sonne of Beor they killed with the sword And the sonnes of Israel tooke the women of Midian captives and their little ones and tooke the prey of all their cattell and all their flockes and all their goods And they burnt all their cities in their habitations and all their castles with fire And they tooke all the spoile and all the booty of men and of beasts And they brought the captivity and the booty and the spoile unto Moses and unto Eleazar the Priest and unto the congregation of the sonnes of Israel unto the campe unto the plaines of Moab which are by Iordan neere Iericho And Moses and Eleazar the Priest and all the Princes of the Congregation went forth to meet them without the camp And Moses was wroth with the Officers of the host the captaines of thousands and the captaines of hundreds which came from the battell of the warre And Moses said unto them Have yee saved alive all the females Behold these were to the sonnes of Israel through the word of Balaam a cause to commit trespasse against Iehovah in the matter of Peor and there was a plague among the Congregation of Iehovah Now therefore kill every male among the little ones and kill every woman that hath knowne man by lying with a male But all the little ones among the women that have not knowne the lying with a male keepe alive for your selves And you encamp ye without the campe seven dayes whosoever hath killed any soule and whosoever hath touched any slaine purifie your selves and your captivitie in the third day and in the seventh day And purifie every garment and every instrument of skinne and every worke of goats haire and every instrument of wood And Eleazar the Priest said unto the men of the Armie which went to the warre This is the ordinance of the Law which Iehovah commanded Moses Onely the gold and the silver the brasse the iron the tinne and the lead Every thing that goeth thorow the fire ye shall make it passe thorow the fire and it shall be cleane neverthelesse it shall be purified with the water of separation and every thing that goeth not thorow the fire yee shall make passe thorow the water And yee shall wash your clothes in the seventh day and ye shall be cleane and afterward ye shall come into the campe And Iehovah spake unto Moses saying Take thou the summe of the bootie of the captivitie of man and of beast thou and Eleazar the Priest and the heads of the Fathers of the Congregation And divide the bootie into two parts between them that tooke upon them the warre who went out to battell and betweene all the Congregation And levie a tribute unto Iehovah of the men of warre which went out to battell one soule of five hundred of the men and of the beeves and of the asses and of the sheep Of their halfe shall yee take it and thou shalt give it unto Eleazar the Priest for an heave-offering of Iehovah And of the sons of Israels halfe thou shalt take one portion of fifty of the men of the beeves of the asses and of the sheepe of all beasts and thou shalt give them unto the Levites which keep the charge of the Tabernacle of Iehovah And Moses and Eleazar the Priest did as Iehovah commanded Moses And the booty the residue of the prey which the people of the armie had made prey of was six hundred thousand and seventy thousand and five thousand sheepe And seventie and two thousand beeves And sixtie and one thousand asses And soules of mankinde of the women which had not knowne the lying with male all the soules were two and thirtie thousand And the halfe which was the portion of them that went out to warre was the number of sheepe three hundred thousand thirty thousand and seven thousand and five hundred And Iehovahs tribute of the sheepe was six hundred seventie and five And the beeves were six and thirtie thousand and Iehovahs tribute of them was seventy and two And the asses were thirtie thousand and five hundred and Iehovahs tribute of them was sixtie and one And the soules of mankinde were sixteene thousand and Iehovahs tribute of them was two and thirty soules And Moses gave the tribute the heave-offering of Iehovah unto Eleazar the Priest as Iehovah commanded Moses And of the sonnes of Israels halfe which Moses divided from the men that warred Now the Congregations halfe was of the sheepe three hundred thousand and thirtie thousand seven thousand five hundred And beeves six and thirty thousand And Asses thirtie thousand and five hundred And soules of mankinde sixteene thousand And Moses tooke of the sonnes of Israel halfe one portion of fifty of man and of beast and gave them unto the Levites which kept the charge of the Tabernacle of Iehovah as Iehovah commanded Moses And the officers which were over the thousands of the host the captaines of thousands and captaines of hundreds came neere unto Moses And they said unto Moses Thy servants have taken the summe of the men of warre which were in our hand and there lacketh not a man of us Therefore we have brought an oblation for Iehovah what every man hath found of jewels of gold chaines and bracelets rings eare-rings tablets to make atonement for our soules before Iehovah And Moses and Eleazar the Priest tooke the gold of them every wrought jewel And all the gold of the heave-offering that they offered up to Iehovah was sixteen thousand seven hundred and fiftie shekels of the captaines of thousands and of the captaines of hundreds The men of the armie had taken spoile
they were numbred to make atonement for their soules Exod. 30. 15 16. CHAP. XXXII 1 The Reubenites and Gadites sue for their inheritance on that side Iordan 6 Moses reproveth them 16 They offer him conditions to his content 28 Moses commandeth Eleazar and Iosua to give them that inheritance when they had performed the conditions 31 The Gadites and Reubenites promise againe to performe them 33 Moses assigneth them the land 34 They build fenced cities for their wives and children and folds for their cattell 39 The sons of Manasses conquer the Amorites in Gilead and have it and the villages thereof given them by Moses for a possession NOw the sonnes of Reuben and the sonnes of Gad had a very great multitude of cattell and they saw the land of Iazer and the land of Gilead and behold the place was a place for cattell And the sonnes of Gad and the sonnes of Reuben came and said unto Moses and unto Eleazar the Priest and unto the Princes of the Congregation saying Ataroth and Dibon and Iazer and Nimrah and Heshbon and Elealeh and Shebam and Nebo and Beon The land which Iehovah smote before the Congregation of Israel is a land for cattell and thy servants have cattell And they said If we have found grace in thine eyes let this land be given unto thy servants for a possession bring us not over Iordan And Moses said unto the sonnes of Gad and to the sonnes of Reben Shall your brethren goe to warre and shall you sit here And wherfore break ye the heart of the sons of Israel from going over into the land w ch Iehovah hath given them Thus did your fathers when I sent them from Kadesh-barnea to see the land For they went up into the land of Eshcol and saw the land and brake the heart of the sonnes of Israel that they should not goe into the land which Iehouah had given them And Iehovahs anger was kindled in that day and he sware saying If the men that came up out of Egypt from twenty yeares old and upward shall see the land which I sware unto Abraham unto Isaak and unto Iakob because they have not followed mee fully Save Caleb the sonne of Iephunneh the Kenizite and Iosua the sonne of Nun for because they have followed Iehovah fully And Iehovahs anger was kindled against Israel and hee made them wander in the wildernesse fortie yeares untill all the generation was consumed that had done evill in the eyes of Iehovah And behold ye are risen up in your fathers sted an increase of sinfull men to augment yet the burning anger of Iehovah against Israel For if yee turne away from after him then will he yet againe leave them in the wildernesse and yee shall destroy all this people And they came neere unto him and said We will build sheep-folds here for our cattell and cities for our little ones But wee our selves will goe ready armed before the sonnes of Israel untill that we have brought them unto their place and our little ones shall dwell in the fenced cities because of the Inhabitants of the land Wee will not returne unto our houses untill the sonnes of Israel have inherited every man his inheritance For we will not inherit with them on yonder side Iordan and forward because our inheritance is come unto us on this side Iordan Eastward And Moses said unto them If ye will doe this thing if ye will goe armed before Iehovah to warre And will goe all of you armed over Iordan before Iehovah untill he have driven out his enemies from before him When the land is subdued before Iehovah then afterward yee shall returne and ye shall be guiltlesse before Iehovah and before Israel and this land shall be yours for a possession before Iehovah But if ye will not doe so behold you have sinned against Iehovah and know ye your sinne which will find you out Build ye cities for your little ones and folds for your sheepe and doe that which hath proceeded out of your mouth And the sonnes of Gad and t●e sonnes of Reuben said unto Moses saying Thy servants will doe as my lord commandeth Our little ones our wives our flocks and all our cattell shall bee there in the cities of Gilead But thy servants will passe over every one armed for warre before Iehovah to battell as my lord speaketh So concerning them Moses commanded Eleazar the Priest and Iosua the sonne of Nun and the heads of the fathers of the tribes of the sonnes of Israel And Moses said unto them If the sonnes of Gad and the sonnes of Reuben will passe with you over Iordan every man armed to battell before Iehovah and the land shall be subdued before you then yee shall give unto them the land of Gilead for a possession But if they will not passe over with you armed then they shall have possessions among you in the land of Canaan And the sonnes of Gad and the sonnes of Reuben answered saying As Iehovah hath spoken unto thy servants so will I doe We will passe over armed before Iehovah into the land of Canaan and the possession of our inheritance on this side Iordan shall bee ours And Moses gave unto them unto the sonnes of Gad and unto the sonnes of Reuben and unto halfe the tribe of Manasses the sonne of Ioseph the kingdome of Sihon king of the Amotites and the kingdome of Og king of Bashan the land with the cities thereof in the coasts the cities of the land round about And the sonnes of Gad built Dibon and Ataroth and Aroer And Atroth Shophan and Iazer and Iogbehah And Beth-Nimrah and Beth-Haran fenced cities and folds for sheepe And the sonnes of Reuben built Heshbon and Elealeh and Kirjathaim And Nebo and Baal-Meon the names being changed and Sibmah and they called by names the names of the cities which they builded And the sonnes of Machir the sonne of Manasses went to Gilead and tooke it and dispossessed the Amorite w ch was in it And Moses gave Gilead unto Machir the sonne of Manasses and he dwelt therein And Iair the sonne of Manasses went and tooke the villages and called them the villages of Iair And Nobah went and tooke Kenath and the daughters thereof and hee called it Nobah after his owne name Annotations REuben he was Israels first-borne of his wife Leah Gen. 29. 32. and Gad was the first sonne of Zilpah Leahs handmaid Gen. 30. 10. 11. To these are added some of the sonnes of Manasses vers 39. c. who was the sonne of Ioseph the eldest sonne of Israel by his wife Rachel Gen. 30. 22. 24. Iazer a citie taken a while before from the Amorites Num. 21. 32. Gilead in Greeke Galaad a mountaine also of the Amorites which had many cities halfe that mount was given to the sonnes of God the other halfe to the sonne of Manasses vers 40. Deut. 3. 12 13. Ios. 13. 24. 25. 31. a place for cattell that is meet to seed and
use of these is after shewed 42. cities These with the six cities of refuge are declared in Ios. 21. how they were given out of every tribe Of the Kohathites the Priests the sons of Aaron had thirteene cities Ios. 21. 19. the residue of the Kohathites had ten cities Ios. 21. 26. The Gershonites had thirteene cities Ios. 21. 33. The Merarites had twelve cities Ios. 21. 40. So all the cities of the Levites within the possession of the somes of Israel were fortie and eight cities with their suburbs Ios. 21. 41. Thus Iakobs prophesie of Levi was fulfilled that he should be scattered in Israel Gen. 49. 5 7. But because of the Levites zeale for the Lord the curse was turned into a blessing as is noted on Exod. 32. 29. and they were teachers of the law 〈…〉 o the tribes of Israel Deut. 33. 8 10. Wherfore God gave them cities out of every tribe How 〈◊〉 whatsoever remained of these cities besides the habitations of the Levites and the suburbs ●orementioned as the fields of the cities and their villages continued under the dominion and in the possession of the tribes to whom they had been distributed before as the example of Hebron given unto Caleb sheweth Ios. 14. 13 14. and 21. 11 12. Vers. 8. yee shall give many or yee shall multiply to give so the tribes that had many cities and 〈…〉 ge inheritances gave the more cities For 〈◊〉 of the tribes of the sonnes of Iudah and of Si 〈◊〉 were given nine cities out of Benjamin foure out of Ephraim foure out of Dan foure out of the halfe tribe of Manasses two out of the other halfe 〈◊〉 of Manasses two out of Issachar foure out of Aser foure out of Naphtali three out of Zabulon foure out of Reuben foure out of Gad foure Ios. 21. 9 16 c. Vers. 11. shall appoint or prepare as the Chaldee explaineth it in Greeke yee shall distinguish or distinctly separate elsewhere it is called separ 〈…〉 ng Deut. 4. 41. and sanctifying Ios. 20. 7. by errour or ignorantly unadvisedly unawares the Greeke translateth unwillingly this is opened in vers 22 23. and Deut. 19. 5. In ●os 20. 3. it is declared by two words by errour o● unawares and without knowledge or unwittingly Vers. 12. the avenger to wit of the bloud as is expressed in vers 19. and the Chaldee and Greeke here adde the same Goel here Englished an Avonger elsewhere signifieth a Redeemer but properly one of the same bloud and kindred as Ruth 2. 20. and 3. 9 12. who if things were sold was to redeeme them as Levit. 25. 25. if bloud were shed was to avenge it as in this case And so the Greeke here usually calleth him Agchiste●on that is one neere of kin Of this kinsman the avenger it is said in v. 19. that he should put the murderer to death see the notes there before the congregation When a man had done a murder he fled to some citie of refuge the way being alwaies prepared that he might flee thither without hinderance as is noted on Deut. 19. 3. Comming thither at the entring of the gate he shewed his cause to the Elders of the citie of refuge who tooke him in till he was sent after and fetched home to the citie where hee had done the murder and there he stood before the congregation Ios. 20. 4 6. who if they found him worthy of death they delivered him to the avenger to kill him if not they returned him to his citie of refuge where hee lived in a kinde of exile and imprisonment untill the death of the high Priest as after followeth See Deut. 19. 12. Before the cities of refuge were appointed the Altar was a place of refuge as is probable by Exod. 21. 13 14. And from that place the Hebrewes gather that the Altar was a place of refuge Maim Treat of Murder chap. 5. sect 12. Vers. 14. Three cities which were Bezer Ramoth and Golan Deut. 4. 41 43. and three cities Kedesh Shechem and Hebron Ios. 20. 7. And if the Lord enlarged their coast and gave them all the land they were to adde three cities moe Deut. 19. 8 9. Vers. 15. the stranger in Greeke the proselyte meaning him that was not an Israelite by nature but by religion the sojourner that dwelt a stranger in the land of Israel and yet not of their Church and religion Deut. 14. 21. These all had benefit by the cities of refuge but if an heathen by errour killed an heathen the cities of refuge received him not saith Maim Treat of Murder chap. 5. sect 4. smiteth a soule that is killeth any person so vers 11. Vers. 16. if he smite him to wit purposely and presumptuously as the punishment after sheweth surely put to death or put to die the death Hebr. dying hee shall be put to death so in vers 17 18 21. Vers. 17. a stone of the hand that is throwen with the hand the Greeke translateth it a stone out of the hand the Chaldee a stone that is taken in the hand he may die the Chaldee more fully explaineth it which is enough for him to die therewith so in vers 18. Vers. 18. wood of the hand Greeke out of the hand Chaldee wood taken in the hand which is sufficient for him to die thereby as in vers 17. These cautions are here added to discerne of murders the Hebrewes explaine them thus He that smiteth his fellow presumptuously with a stone or with wood that he die they measure the thing wherewith he smote him and the place whereon he smote him to see ●f that thing were enough to kill him upon such a member of his body or not as it is written WITH A STONE OF THE HAND c. so that it be enough to kil him They measure also the might of him that smote c. For iron instruments the Law gives no measure Num. 35. 16. He is to die that killed him though it were with a needle and whatsoever is sharp like a needle as bodkin knife or the like Hee that smiteth his fellow without any instrument and killeth him as with his hand or his foot c. they measure the strength of him that smote and of him that was killed and the place of the blow c. Maim Treat of Murder chap. 3. sect 1. c. Vers. 19. he shall put to death or he may put him to death to wit after he is adjudged to death by the Magistrate vers 12. If the avenger of bloud will not or if he be not able to kill him or if he have no avenger of bloud then the Iudges shall kill the murderer with the sword Maim Treat of Murder chap. 1. sect 1. When he meeteth him though it be within the cities of refuge saith Iarchi But this is to be understood after lawfull judgement by the Magistrate for the Elders of his citie were to send and fetch him from the citie of refuge and deliver him into the hand
If then the whole tenour of that Revelation be to prophesie of matters from former types and predictions it is consonant and proportionable that the like is done in Revel 21. 2. And that 21. Chapter foretelling the restauration of the Church after the fall of Antichrist and withall as the best Expositors have opened it of the calling againe of the Iewes according to the prophesies of old and of our Apostle in Rom. 11. it is not likely but the holy Ghost who throughout those visions and in matters concerning the Gentiles alludeth to the old Testament would much rather doe the like where he prophesieth of the Iewes 3. Many particulars in that Chapter confirme this as when the Church is called by the 〈◊〉 name Ierusalem Revel 21. vers 2 10. and the Tabernacle of God vers 3. when expresse mention is made of the names of the 〈◊〉 tribes of Israel to be at the twelve gates v. 12. when the Citie is measured according to the visions of old Ezek. 40. 3. with a reed ver 1● when God and the Lambe are called the Temple of it vers 22. and sundry the like 4. It will not be denied I suppose by men of under standing which compare the Scriptures that these last visions of Iohn have reference in many things to the last visions of Ezekiel As the gates of the Citie have their names of the tribes of Israel which there are expressed one of Reuben one of Iudah one of Levi c. 〈◊〉 48. 31 c. so the gates of this C 〈…〉 which Iohn saw have at them the names of the twelve tribes of the sonnes of Israel Rev. 21. 12. There waters issue out of Gods house Ezek. 47. 〈◊〉 so here is a pure river of water of li●e Rev. 22 1. There trees grow by the river Ezek. 47. 12. here the tree of life Rev. 22. 2. with other things concordant So that the state of the Church there being described from Israel and the possession of the tribes by name Ezek. 48. yeeldeth strong probability of the like allusions here and consequently of the twelve precious stones to the stones of the tribes which are no where named but by Moses in Exodus 5. And this the rather because as Aarons ornaments were for glory and beauty Exod. 28. 2. so these stones are for garnishment to the foundations of the walls of the Citie Rev. 21. 19. And the Tabernacle of Moses was walled as we may say with the twelve Tribes which compassed it in a square Numb 2. Now seeing the Saints are compared to precious stones Lam. 4. 1 2 7. 1 Pet. 2. 5. unto what company rather than to the twelve tribes described by their precious stones in Aarons Ephod may we thinke hath the Lord reference in Rev. 21. 6. Againe seeing the names of the Lambes twelve Apostles are in the foundations of this wall Rev. 21. 14. which Apostles are answer able to the twelve Patriarchs of the tribes both in number so noted by the Spirit of God v. 12. 14. and in propagation of the Church spiritually by the Gospel 1 Cor. 4. 15. Gal. 4. 19. 3 Ioh. v. 4. as the Patriarchs were fathers of the ancient Church both in the flesh and in the Lord and in government as the other governed the Tribes Psal. 45. 16. Matth. 19. 28. 1 Cor. 4. 19 21. besides other things wherein they may be compared it seemeth most fit and according to the things both in this Chapter whole Booke that the precious stones by which these twelve foundations are described should be answerable to the twelve precious stones whereon the names of the Patriarchs were graved Exod. 28. for there is no place else in the Scripture whereto they can have reference 7. Moreover there is in the Prophets another name of the Adamant or Diamond called in Hebrew Shamir which is noted of the Holy Ghost to be hard even harder than flint Zach. 7. 12. Ezek. 3. 9. and to be of use for graving Ier. 17. 1. so that the speciall things which mine Opposite observeth from Plinie an heathen writer of the nature of the Adamant are by the testimony of God found in this Shamir And it is translated the Adamant by consent of the most Interpreters both old and new and by the Greeke version in Ier. 17. 1. that if the voices of learned men may end this controversie there be as many or moe for Shamir to be the Adamant than can I suppose be brought for Iahalom And the same Prophet which useth Shamir for the Adamant when he hath reference to the stones on the Ephod retaineth the names in Exodus the Iahalom among them Ezek. 3. 9. and 28. 13. Wherefore if Shamir be the Hebrew name of the Adamant the stone Iabal●m in Exo. 28. may well be another than it and if another where may we safer seeke it than in Rev. 21. for the reasons before shewed That which is alleaged for the contrary from the notation of the word Iahalom and consent of many Interpreters and the like hath I confesse probability and were it not for the causes above shewed I would thinke it to be the Adamant though the notation likewise of Shamir and agreement of Interpreters may also perswade it to be the Adamant and for Plinies testimony of the Adamants that they are desired of engravers it accordeth to this Shamir as we may learne of the Prophet Ier. 17. 1. And for the price of the Adamant above the Sardonyx or any gem or other humane things as the same Plinie reporteth it will not though so it be end this question seeing it is not necessary to conclude that God would chuse the most precious thing to signifie grace in men which have it but in part especially seeing hee putteth this stone not in the first but in the sixt place as the Iahalom is ordered in Exo. 28. 18. Yea it is plainly without likelihood that God would impart the most precious thing among the Patriarchs and take it away from among the Apostles for it is sure no Adamant is to be found in Rev. 21. This were to preferre the old Tehament before the New the Law before the Gospel Moses before Christ contrary to the Apostles doctrine in 2 Cor. 3. and to make the holy Ierusalem the Bride the Lambs wife which is said to have the glory of God and her wals garnished with all manner of precious stones and many other like excellencies Revel 21. 9 10 19. c. to be inferiour in glory to Moses Sanctuary and the earthly Ierusalem and those that ministred in the same which a man of sound judgement will not easily beleeve And whatsoever Plinie saith of the preciousnesse of the Adamant we are assured from God that the Sardonix is precious Revel 21. 19 20. and Plinie himselfe confirmeth it by the example of the Tyrant Polycrates who so greatly esteemed the Sardonix in his Ring that he valued the losse thereof with all his wealth and felicity which he
to weet after that Abrams father was dead Acts 7. 4. Thus God was he that redeemed Abram Esay 29. 22. Goe thou or Goe for thy selfe signifie in that though no other would yet he should for his own good get him out from that idolatrous place So God calleth al from such estate Rev. 18. 4. from thy land or out of thy country that wherein he now dwelt in Charran which was in the same land of Mesopotamia that Vr stood in Gen. 24. 10. and 28. 2. 7. 10. compared with Act. 7. 2. Gen. 11. 28. The Hebrew Doctors expound the name Charan by Charonaph that is wrathfull anger R. Menachem on Gen. 12. as if hee were now to depart from the place of wrath So wee which by nature were children of wrath Eph. 2. 3. are called and chosen of Christ out of this world and from worldly corruption Iohn 15. 19. 2 Pet. 1. 4. and are by him delivered from the wrath to come 1 Thes. 1. 10. thy kinred to weet Nachor and the rest excepting Lot For although there is no expresse mention of Nachor among others that went with Thara from Vr in Gen. 11. 31. yet it appeareth by the history following that Nachor went so farre as Padan Aram in Mesopotamia and there setled so that it was after called Nachors City Gen. 25. 20. and 24. 10. 15. and the same was Charran Gen. 28. 2. 10. and there was Abrams kinred and country here spoken of Gen. 24. 4. fathers house for the father Thararah being dead his houshold as it seemeth would goe no further but stayed there with Nachor and onely Lot and his house went with Abram as the fourth verse and history following doth confirme So Tharahs house and Nachor left following of God and turned againe to idolatry as appeareth by Gen. 31. 30. 53. Ios. 24. 2. From such Christ also calleth all to follow him Luke 14. 26. 27. and so the Spirit saith to the Church forget thy people and thy fathers house Psal. 45. 11. will shew thee that is the land of Canaan verse 5. but God here nameth it not for more proofe of Abrams faith and obedience For as he raised up this man of justice from the east so called he him to his foot that is to follow him and his direction Esay 41. 2. Exod. 11. 8. But under this earthly inheritance was typed an heavenly which Abram looked for Heb. 11. 9. 10. And in Salem a city of Canaan Melchisedek raigned and was Priest of the most high God and blessed Abram Gen. 14. 18. 19. Vers. 2. a great or to a great nation that is to become the father of a great nation see Gen. 2. 7. and 17. 4. Of this promise there was no visible hope because Sarai his wife being 65 yeere old was barren Gen. 11. 30. for which Abram complained Gen. 15. 2. 3. But under this promised Nation was implyed also a spirituall seed of faithfull people Rom. 4. 11. 12. Gal. 3. 7. blesse thee in all things both earthly Gen. 24. 1. 35. and heavenly Gal. 3. 14. Ephes. 1. 3. Gods blessing is his favour and thereupon an abundant multiplication of all good things on the contrary his curse is both the depriving of good and heaping of evill things upon them whom he hateth and punisheth Lament 3. 65. 66. thy name which is better then a good ointment then great riches Eccl. 7. 3. Prov. 22. 1. So God made David a great name 2 Sam. 7. 9. be thou that is thou shalt be as the Greeke translateth it but this mannner of speech is more vehement as whereby God commandeth the blessing Psal. 13. 33. So Psal. 128. 5. 6. See thou Vers. 3. that speaketh thee-evill or curseth thee but here are two words used and this first signifieth evill speaking with light esteeme or vile contempt and dishonour Cursing also signifieth evil-speaking by men as Paul sheweth Act. 23. 5. from Exod. 22. 28. The like blessing Isaak pronounced unto Iaakob Gen. 27. 29. and Balaam to Israel Num. 24. 9. in thee that is in thy seed Christ who shall come of thee according to the flesh Gen. 22. 18. For Christ was sent of God to blesse us in turning every one of us from our iniquities Act. 3. 25. 26. and that wee may receive the promise of the Spirit through faith Gal. 3. 14. Wherefore this was a preaching of the gospell to Abram Gal. 3. 8. And this covenant confirmed before of God in Christ is observed to bee foure hundred thirty yeeres before the Law and could not by the Law be disanulled because God gave it him by promise Gal. 3. 17. 18. Vers. 4. went By faith Abraham being called did obey to goe out unto a place which hee should after receive for an inheritance and he went-out not knowing whither he should come Heb. 11. 8. old Hebr. sonne of five yeeres and seventy yeeres that is going in his 75 yeere See Gen. 5. 32. And his father Tharah being two hundred and five yeeres old when he dyed it appeareth that he begat Abram at 130 yeeres and so not hee but Haran was begotten at Tharahs 70 yeere Gen. 11. 26. Abram after an 100 yeeres pilgrimage more died Gen. 25. 7. and Isaak his son then 75 y. old is left heire of Canaan Vers. 5. substance or gathered-goods for of getting and gathering it hath the name and is a generall word for cattell money or other like goods the soules Hebr. the soule put for soules that is persons of men and women as Gen. 14. 21. and 46. 26. Rom. 13. 1. and often in the Scripture So in the Hebrew text man 1 Chron. 10. 1. is put for men 1 Sam. 31. 1. wizard 2 Chron. 33. 6. for wizards 2 King 21. 6. See before Gen. 3. 4. and 4. 20. and 10. 16. The Greeke translateth every soule As here soules so elsewhere flesh and spirit Act. 2. 17. 1. Iohn 4. 1. are put for the whole persons had made that is had gotten to weet into their possession as the Greeke manifesteth But this may be meant not onely of getting them to their service as 1 Sam. 8. 16 but also of winning them to the faith of God as the Chaldee paraphrast saith had subdued unto the law which is very probable by that example of his houshold souldiers Gen. 14. 14. and his commendation for teaching his house Gen. 18. 19. and their receiving the wound of circumcision Gen. 17. 23. So Thargum Ierusalemy also calleth these soules of proselytes or converts land of Canaan a country in Asia the lesse possessed by Canaan the son of Cham the son of Noe and his sonnes but for their wickednesse the land was to spue them out Levit. 18. 25 and it is now promised to be given to Abrams seed vers 7. and was thereupon called the land of promise Heb. 11. 9. a goodly country it was having water-brooks fountaines and springing depths mountaines and vallies and mines corne and wine and oyle honey other fruits it
Tell mee I pray thee thy name and hee said wherefore is it that thou askest for my name And hee blessed him there And Iakob called the name of the place Peniel for I have seene God face to face and my soule is delivered And the Sunne arose unto him as hee passed over Penuel and hee halted upon his thigh Therefore the sonnes of Israel eate not of the sinew that shranke which is upon the hollow of the thigh unto this day because hee touched the hollow of Iakobs thigh in the sinew that shranke Annotations ANgels by interpretation Messengers and so the word is used in the 3. vers but these were heauenly spirits of whom see the notes on Gen. 16. 7. By this vision God confirmed Iakobs faith in him who commanded his Angels to keepe his people in all their waies Psal. 91. 11. host or campe armie as in warres for Angels are heavenly souldiers Luk. 2. 13. horses and charrets of fire 2 King 9. 17. fighting for Gods people against their enemies Dan. 10. 20. Of them there are thousand thousands and tenne thousand times ten thousand Dan. 7 10. and they are all sent forth to minister for them who shal be heyrs of salvation Heb. 1. 14. and they pitch a campe about them that feare God Psal. 34. 8. The heathens retained the knowledge hereof though corruptly for the Greeke Poet saith there be thrise ten thousands of the immortall Angels of God here upon the earth keepers of mortall men and observers of their workes both just and unjust they are clad with the ayre and goe abroad all over the earth Hesiod Oper. Dies l. 1. Machanaim that is two hosts or campes either because the Angels appeared in two companies for Iakob to goe betweene them or because there was one campe of Angels and one of Iakobs family About this place there was a citie afterwards called Machanaim inhabited by the Priests of God Ios. 21. 38. This also hath a spirituall application to the Church of God in Song 6. 13. Vers. 3. AND IAKOB Here beginneth the eight section or lecture of the law called of the first word Vajishlak that is And he sent But it it not distinguished with great letters as usually they are See Gen. 6. 9. messengers the same word which before was translated Angels verse 1. Seir a mountainy land possessed before by the Chorims Gen. 14. 6. but Esau with his children destroyed them and dwelt in their stead Deut. 2. 22. Thither was Esau gone from the face of his brother Iakob See Gen. 36. 6. 7. field that is as the Greeke translateth it country of Edom that is Esau. See Gen. 14. 7. 25. 30. Vers. 4. my Lord by this title Iakob honoured and submitted to him as to his elder brother Gen. 4. 7. 1 Pet. 3. 6. For Iakobs superiority foregiven in Gen. 27. 29. the time was not yet come that it should be fulfilled So David caried himselfe to Saul● 1 Sam. 24. 7. 9. c. Vers. 5. Oxen Hebr. Oxe and Asse c. singular for plurall see Gen. 3. 2. to finde that is that I may finde as Gen. 6. 19. The Greeke translateth that thy servant may finde grace before thee Vers. 6. and 400. men armed for warre as seemeth by vers 8. Here the ancient quarrell 20. years before Gen. 27. 41. was remembred and Iakobs danger and trouble renewed In Pirkei R. Eliezer c. 37. it is said Iakobs case was As if a man did flee from a Lion and a Beare met him Amos 5. 19. The Lion was Laban that pursued after Iakob to teare his soule the Beare was Esau which stood by the way as a Beare robbed of her whelpes and came to slay the mother with the children And the Lion hath shamefastnesse but the Beare hath no shamefastnesse Vers. 7. companies or camps the word used before in verse 2. Vers. 8. smite that is slay or kill it as Gen. 14. 17. So after vers 11. shall escape Hebr. shall bee to escaping or shall have evasion the Greeke saith shall be saved Vers. 9. will doe thee good or will deale well with thee thus Iakob understood the promise I will bee with thee Gen. 31. 3. So after in vers 12. Vers. 10. lesse to weet in worth that is am unworthy all or any of the mercies So the Chaldee translateth Lesse are my deserts then all the mercies and all the benefits which thou hast done to thy servant with my staffe that is having nothing else the Chaldee expounds it my selfe alone Vers. 11. mother with the sonnes in Greeke and the mother with the children or upon them It meaneth great cruelty in sparing none as Hos. 10. 14. For smite the Chaldee translateth kill me Vers. 12. doing good c. that is I will surely doe thee good put that is make thy seed see this promise Gen. 28. 14. Vers. 13. came into his hand that is such as he had and could send for the present And it was a rich gift of five hundred and fiftie beasts of sundry sorts for store A mans gift maketh roome for him and bringeth him before great men Prov. 18. 16. Vers. 15. yong-ones or colts in Hebrew sonnes see Gen. 18. 7. Verse 16. every herd or drove Hebr. herdherd see the like phrase in Gen. 14. 10. and herd Hebr. and betweene herd This was done that by distant spaces the heat of Esaus rage might bee abated verse 20. Vers. 20. is behinde or as the Chaldee explains it commeth after us appease his face or cover and pacifie his face that is his anger as the Chaldee interpreteth it for anger as favour appeareth in the face See the like in Lev. 20. 6. Psal. 21. 10. And appeasing is the word so often used in the law for covering or taking-away offences and so pacifying the anger by gifts and making atonement Exod 19. 36. Levit. 1. 4. and 4. 20. 26. and 5. 6. 10. 13. c. the present for a gift in secret pacifieth anger Prov. 21. 14. my face that is favour me and grant my request see Gen. 19. 21. Vers. 22. handmaids or bondwomen the Chaldee translateth them concubines See Gen. 35. 22. the foord or the passage so the Greeke saith the passage of Iaboch A river mentioned also in Deut. 2. 37. and 3. 16. Vers. 24. wrastled or combated by taking hold one of another A peculiar word not used but in this historie It figureth the spirituall wrastling strife and conflict of the children of God Phil. 1. 27. Ephes. 6. 12. Rom. 15. 30. Heb. 10. 32. a man called after and by the Prophet Hosee God and an Angell verse 28. 30. Hos. 12. 3. 4. It was therefore Christ appearing in the forme of a man as before to Abraham Gen. 18. 2. 22. the Angel that redeemed Iakob from al evil Gen. 48. 16. God wrastleth with men by tentations and wee with him by prayers and teares as Iakob now also did for he wept and made supplications unto him Hos. 12. 4. Rom. 15.
swallowed-up the seven good eares and I told this unto the magicians and there is none that declareth it to mee And Ioseph sayd unto Pharaoh the dreame of Pharaoh is one that which God is a doing hath he declared to Pharaoh The seven good kine they are seven yeares and the seven good eares of corne they are seven yeares the dreame is one And the seven leane and evill kine that came up after them they are seven yeares and the seven empty eares of corne blasted with an east-wind shall bee seven yeares of famine This is the word which I have spoken unto Pharaoh that which God is a doing hee sheweth unto Pharaoh Behold seven yeares are comming of great plenty in all the land of Egypt And seven yeeres of famine shall rise after them and all the plenty shall bee forgotten in the land of Egypt and the famine shall consume the land And the plenty shall not be knowne in the land because of that famine afterwards for it shall be very heauy And for that the dreame was doubled unto Pharaoh twise it is because the thing is firmly-prepared of God and God hasteneth to doe it And now let Pharaoh provide a man discreet and wise and set him over all the land of Egypt Let Pharaoh doe this and let him appoint Bishops over the land and take up the fift part of the land of Egypt in the seven yeares of plenty And let them gather all the meat of these good yeeres that come and lay-up corne under the hand of Pharaoh for meat in the cities and let them keepe it And the meat shall bee for store to the land for the seven yeares of famine which shall bee in the land of Egypt that the land be not cut-off by the famine And the word was good in the eyes of Pharaoh and in the eyes of all his servants And Pharaoh said unto his servants shall we find such a one as this is a man in whom the spirit of God is And Pharaoh said unto Ioseph forasmuch as God hath made known unto thee all this there is none discreet and wise as thou art Thou shalt be over my house and at thy mouth shall all my people kisse onely in the throne will I be greater then thou And Pharaoh said unto Ioseph see I set thee over all the land of Egypt And Pharaoh took-off his ring from on his hand and put it upon Iosephs hand and arayed him in vestures of fine-linnen and put a chaine of gold upon his necke And he made him to ride in the second charret which he had and they cryed before him Abrek and he set him over all the land of Egypt And Pharaoh said unto Ioseph I am Pharaoh and without thee shall not a man lift-up his hand or his foot in all the land of Egypt And Pharaoh called Iosephs name Zaphnath-paaneach and he gave unto him Asenath the daughter of Poti-pherah priest of On to wife and Ioseph went-out over the land of Egypt And Ioseph was thirty yeares old when he stood before Pharaoh King of Egypt and Ioseph went-out from before Pharaoh and passed through all the land of Egypt And in the seven yeares of plenty the land yeelded by handfulls And he gathered up all the meat of the seven yeares which were in the land of Egypt and layd-up the meat in the cities the meat of the field which was round about every city he layd-up within the same And Ioseph gathered corne as the sand of the sea very much untill he left numbring for it was without number And unto Ioseph were borne two sonnes before there came a yeare of the famine which Asenath the daughter of Poti-pherah priest of On bare unto him And Ioseph called the name of the first-borne Manasses for God hath made me forget all my molestation and all my fathers house And the name of the second called he Ephraim for God hath made me fruitfull in the land of my affliction And the seven yeares of plenty which were in the land of Egypt were ended And the seuen yeares of famine beganne to come as Ioseph had said and the famine was in all lands but in all the land of Egypt there was bread And all the land of Egypt was famished and the people cryed to Pharaoh for bread and Pharaoh said unto all the Egyptians Goe unto Ioseph what hee saith unto you doe And the famine was over all the face of the earth and Ioseph opened all the houses that had corne in them and sold to the Egyptians and the famine wexed strong in the land of Egypt And every land came into Egypt to Ioseph for to buy corne because the famine was strong in every land Annotations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here beginneth the tenth section of the ●aw called AT THE END See Gen. 6. 9. Vers. 1. of dayes that is two full yeares as a moneth of dayes is a full moneth Gen. 29. 14. See the notes on Gen. 4. 3. So in the second yeare Nebuchadnezar dreamed Dan. 2. 1. and behold the Greeke translateth he thought he stood So in v. 17. Vers. 3. ill that is deformed or as the Greeke translateth foule So after in v. 4. c. brink or bank Hebrew lip So v. 17. Vers. 6. East-wind whose propertie is to burne and blast the fruits Ezek. 17. 10. and 19. 12. Hos. 13. 15. Vers. 7. the thin the Greeke addeth the seven thin eares so in ver 20. 24. a dreame or the dreame was that is continued in his minde and troubled him as the next words manifest Of a dreame see Gen. 20. 3. and 37. 5. V. 8. striken amazed the Greeke translateth his soule was troubled The Hebrew word signifieth striken or beaten as with a hammer be hammered The same is spoken of King Nebuchadnezar in like case Dan. 2. 1. 3. It sheweth the power of God in his word works even before men do understād the meaning of them magicians in Hebrew Chartummim the Greeke calleth them here expositors elsewhere inchanters Exod. 7. 11. they were such as had skill in the nature of things Nebuchadnezar King of Babylon called also for such to shew him his dreame Dan. 2. 2. and Belshazzar his vision Dan. 5. 7. 8. wise-men the Learned of all Nations were so called even among the Iewes Matt. 23. 34. among the Greeks they were named Philosophers that is Lovers of wisdome Act. 17. 18. Pythagoras was the first who devised the name because he thought no man was wise but God onely dreame both his dreames as the word them after manifesteth called a dreame because they were both one v. 26. or after the usuall manner of the Hebrew tongue that putteth one for many see Gen. 3. 2. interpreter that could interpret Thus God maketh the wisedome of the wise to perish Esay 29. 14. So was it also with the Mages of Babylon Dan. 2. 10. and 5. 8. Vers. 13. he that is Pharaoh restored v. 20. The Greek translateth that I was restored to my
willing to dye The Chaldee translateth now though I should dye yet am I comforted since I see thy face So Simeon when he saw Christ Luk. 2. 29. 30. Vers. 32. sheep-herds or feeders of sheepe so verse 34. men that feed cattell so the Greeke well explaineth the Hebrew phrase men of cattell that is which feed or nourish them grasiers The Chaldee saith Lords or possessors of flockes So man of the ground for an husbandman Gen. 9. 20. Ioseph was not ashamed of his kindred and their base trade before King Pharaoh though he knew their occupation was abhominable in Egypt verse 33. Vers. 33. workes in Greeke worke that is your occupation or trade So in Gen. 47. 3. an abhomination therefore the Egyptians would not so much as eate with them see Gen. 43. 32. This is the condition of Gods Church on earth they are made as the filth of the world the off-scouring of all things 1 Cor. 4. 13. Even Christ himselfe the sheepherd of our soules 1 Pet. 2. 25 was the reproach of men and despised of the people Psal. 22. 7. Esa. 53. 3. CHAP. XLVII 1 Ioseph presenteth five of his brethren 7 and his father before Pharaoh 11 He giveth them habitation and maintenance 13 The famine increasing Ioseph for corne getteth all the Egyptians money 16 their cattell 18 their lands to Pharaoh 22 The Priests land was not bought 23 He letteth the land to the Egyptians for a fift part 28 Iakobs age 29 He sweareth Ioseph to bury him with his fathers ANd Ioseph came and told Pharaoh and said my father and my brethren and their flockes and their herds and all that they have are come out of the land of Canaan and behold they are in the land of Goshen And he tooke some of his brethren five men and presented them before Pharaoh And Pharaoh said unto his brethren what are your workes And they said unto Pharaoh thy servants are sheepherds both we and also our fathers And they said unto Pharaoh for to sojourne in the land are wee come for there is no pasture for the flocks which thy servants have for the famine is heavy in the land of Canaan and now we pray thee let thy servants dwell in the land of Goshen And Pharaoh said unto Ioseph saying thy father thy brethren are come unto thee The land of Egypt it is before thee in the best of the land make thou thy father and thy brethren to dwell● let them dwell in the land of Goshen and if thou knowest that there bee among them men of activitie then appoint thou them rulers of cattell over those which I have And Ioseph brought-in Iakob his father and made him stand before Pharaoh and Iakob blessed Pharaoh And Pharaoh said unto Iakob how many are the dayes of the yeeres of thy life And Iakob said unto Pharaoh the dayes of the yeeres of my pilgrimages are an hundred and thirtie yeeres few and evill have beene the dayes of the yeeres of my life and they have not attained unto the dayes of the yeers of the life of my fathers in the daies of their pilgrimages And Iakob blessed Pharaoh and went out from before Pharaoh And Ioseph placed his father and his brethren and gave them a possession in the land of Egypt in the best of the land in the land of Rameses as Pharaoh had commanded And Ioseph nourished his father his brethren and all his fathers house with bread according to the little-ones And there was no bread in all the land for the famine was very heavy and the land of Egypt the land of Canaan fainted by reason of the famin And Ioseph gathered up all the money that was found in the land of Egypt in the land of Canaan for the corne which they bought and Ioseph brought the money into Pharaohs house And the money was spent out of the land of Egypt and out of the land of Canaan and all the Egyptians came unto Ioseph saying give us bread and why should we dye in thy presence because money faileth And Ioseph said give your cattell and I will give you for your cattell if money faile And they brought their cattell unto Ioseph and Ioseph gave them bread for horses and for cattell of the flocke and for cattell of the herd and for asses and hee led them with bread for all their cattell in that yeere And that yeere was ended and they came unto him in the second yeere and said unto him we will not hide it from my Lord how-that money is spent and the possession of beasts is come unto my Lord there is not left before my Lord ought save our bodies and our land Wherfore shall we dye before thine eyes both wee and our land buy us and our land for bread and wee will be wee and our land servants to Pharaoh and give thou seed that wee may live and not die that the land be not desolate And Ioseph bought all the land of Egypt for Pharaoh for the Egyptians sold every man his field because the famine prevailed over them and the land became Pharaohs And the people he removed them to cities from one end of the border of Egypt even to the other end thereof Onely the land of the priests bought he not for the priests had an allowance from Pharaoh and they did eat their allowance which Pharaoh gave them therfore they sold not their land And Ioseph said unto the people behold I have bought you this day and your land for Pharaoh loe here is seed for you and yee shall sow the land And it shal be in the revenue that you shal give the fift part unto Pharaoh and four parts shall be for you for seed of the field and for your meat and for them that are in your houses for meat for your little-ones And they said thou hast preserved-us-alive let us finde grace in the eyes of my Lord we will be servants to Pharaoh And Ioseph put it for a statute unto this day over the land of Egypt for the fift part unto Pharaoh onely the land of the priests of them alone was not Pharaohs And Israel dwelt in the land of Egypt in the land of Goshen and they held-possession therin and were fruitfull and multiplied exceedingly AND IAKOB LIVED in the land of Egypt seventeen yeers and the daies of Iakob the yeers of his life were an hundred fortie yeers seven yeers And the daies of Israel drew nigh to dye he called his sonne Ioseph and said unto him if now I have found grace in thine eyes put I pray thee thy hand under my thigh thou shalt doe with me mercy and truth bury mee not I pray thee in Egypt But I will lye with my fathers thou shalt cary me out of Egypt and bury me in their burying place and hee said I will doe according to thy word And he said sweare unto me and hee sware unto him and Israel bowed-himselfe upon the beds
of God is with men and he will dwell with them they shal be his people God himself wil be with them c. Rev. 21. 3. set or fastened Heb gave which is used for a firme setting or stablishing as is noted on Gen. 1. 17. This setting of the sockets with the boards bars and pillars signified the stability of the Church and members thereof grounded and stablished by faith in Christ Esay 33. 20. and 14. 32. 1. Tim. 3. 15. V. 19. the Tent in Gr. the curtaines which were of two sorts some of white blew purple and scarlet cunningly wrought with Cherubims coupled together others of Goats haire Exod. 26. 1. 7. the covering both that of rams skins and the other of Tachash skins Ex. 26. 14. This tent covering shadowed the heavenly graces wherewith Christ and his Church in him are adorned their uniting together by the Spirit through faith and love and their safe protection though these things veiled and obscure See the notes on Exod. 26. V. 20. the Testimonie the two tables of Gods law Ex. 25. 16. Covering-mercy-seat a figure of Christ in whose heart was Gods law by whom our transgressions of the Law are covered and the word of grace from God commeth unto us see Ex. 25. 17. V. 21. covered the Arke hid it with the veile hanged before it A figure of Christs flesh veiling the divine things in him till hee entred through it into the holy heavens and opened a way for his Church thereinto Heb. 10. 19. 20. Rev. 11. 19. Ver. 23. the order of bread that is the bread set in order called in Gr. the bread of proposition and so in Mat. 12. 4. but Paul nameth it the proposition of bread Heb. 9. 2. which we call Shew-bread twelve cakes representing the twelve tribes that is all beleevers presented pure unto God in Christ see Ex. 25. 30. Vers. 24. the Candlesticke a figure of the Law which giveth light to his people standing before God in his sanctuary Psal. 119. 105. See the notes on Exod 25. 31. c. Ver. 25. to ascend that is to burne and shine as v. 4. representing the seven Spirits of Christ whereby through the oile of his grace his word shineth unto his Church Rev. 4. 5. Ver. 26. Altar of gold figuring Christs mediation for his Church whereby they and their praiers are presented as sweet odours unto God See the notes on Ex. 30. These all being in the most holy and holy places hidden with veiles from the eies of the people signified the obscuritie of the heavenly mysteries of the Gospell before the veile of Christs flesh was rent the treasures of his grace more fully opened Heb. 10. 1. Rom. 16. 25. 26. Ephes. 3. 5. Ver. 29. the altar of burnt-offring the brazen Altar standing in the open Court for all to see wherupon the daily sacrifices figuring Christs death and sufferings were burned to lead the Church unto the expectation of his body to bee offred for us and our bodies by him unto God Heb. 10. 5. 6. 7. Rom. 12. 1. Ver. 30. The Laver a figure of the sanctification of the Church washed frō their sins by the blood of Christ that they may come neere unto God Heb. 10. 22. Rev. 1. 5. 6. Tit. 3. 5. Vers. 33. the Court an holy inclosure for the Church to be kept in pure when they came to appeare before God And here was the finishing of the worke of the sanctuary about which thus erected first the tribe of Levi Numb 1. 50. and behind them the other tribes of Israel pitched their Tents in holy order appointed of God in a foure square forme Num. 2. such as is the forme of the heavenly Ierusalem Revel 21. 16. which Tents were also holy might have no uncleane person within them Num. 5. 2. as nothing that defileth may be in the new Ierusalē the Church of Christ Rev. 21. 27. and unto which Tents or camp e the earthly Ierusalem the holy citie Neh. 11. 1. was answerable For some open uncleane might not be in the campe or citie others though in the campe might not come into the Lords Court of those in his court none entred into the sanctuary but the Priests of thē none into the most holy of the sanctuary but the high priest once in the yeer He. 9. 6. 7. because holines becōmeth the House of the Lord for ever Ps. 93. 5. and the neerer they come unto him the more they ought for to be sanctified Lev. 10. 2. 3. 16. 2. 3. c. So after that Israel came into Canaan and had there a temple they had degrees of holy places both of thē are de scribed by the Heb. thus Three Camps were in the wildernesse the campe of Israel which was in foure camps Num. 2. the camp of Levi Numb 1. 50. and the campe of the Divine Majestie which was from the doore of the Court of the Tabernacle of the congregation and forward And answerable unto thē in the ages following frō the gates of Ierusalem unto the mountaine of the Temple was as the camp of Israel from the gates of the mountain of the Temple unto the doore of the Court which was the gate of Nicanor was as the Campe of Levi and from the doore of the court forward was the camp of Gods Majesty Maim in Beth habchirah c. 7. s. 11. Other like differences of holinesse of places they also observe which are to be mentioned otherwhere V. 34. the cloud a testimony of Gods presence and approbation who thus took as it were possession of the Tabernacle to dwell therein amongst his people but with an hiding of his glory and power So when Solomon had builded the Temple the cloud filled the house then spake Solomon The LORD said that he would dwell in the thicke darknesse 1 Kin. 8. 10. 12. But when Gods presence was with displeasure for the sins of the people it was signified by a smoake filling the Temple Esa. 6. 4. Rev. 15. 8 for smoake was a signe of anger Psal. 18. 9. Esay 14 31. glorie a signe of Gods glorious presence who now came to dwell there as he had promised Exod. 25. 8. So in 2 Chron. 5. 14. and Ezek. 43. 4. 5. where it is opened by God himselfe thus Sonne of man the place of my throne and the place of the soles of my feet where I will dwell in the midst of the sons of Israel for ever c. Ezek. 43. 7. So the holy Ierusalem hath the glory of God Rev. 21. 11. Vers. 35. dwelt that is abode or continued and as the Greeke translateth over-shadowed it And in that Moses could not now goe into the Tent nor the priests into the Temple 2 Chron. 5. 14. and 7. 2. it sheweth the weaknesse and unworthinesse of all flesh to come into the presence of God who therefore gave a Law that the high Priest himselfe should not at all times come into the holy place within
the males among the Priests within the court Other offerings tithes firstfruits shoulder and brest of the peoples Peace-offrings and the like were for the Priests their sonnes daughters c. that were cleane Numb 18. 9. 10. 11. 19. Againe the most holy things are here limited to bee eaten within the court the light holy things were to bee eaten in the place which the Lord should choose c. Dent. 12. 5. 6. 7. and 16. 5. 6. which after was Ierusalem whereupon the Hebrew canons say who so eateth a bit of the flesh of the most holy things without the court is to bee beaten c. The same judgement is for him that eateth the light holy things out of Ierusalem For Ierusalem walls are for the light holy things as the walls of the court for the most holy Flesh of the most holy things that is caried out of the walls of the court and flesh of the light holy things caried out of the walls of Ierusalem is polluted and unlawfull for ever And though it be brought back againe to his place yet is it vnlawful to be eaten Maim in treat of offring the sacrif ch 11. s. 5. 6. Hereupon Ierusalem is called the holy Citie Nehem. 11. 1. Esay 48. 2. and 52. 1. Mat. 4. 5. Vers. 18. Every male although he bee a ble●ished priest saith Sol. Iarchi all that toucheth or who-soever toucheth whether person or thing as any vessell of ministerie and the like meaning that no uncleane person or common vessell might touch them The Greeke translateth whosoever toucheth them shall be sanctified and so Chazkuni adding this and he shall purifie himselfe before he touch them See after in v. 27. and Exod. 29. 37. Vers. 20. in the day and so from that day forward every day Chazkuni saith that In here is in stead of From. And that it is used for After is noted on Exod. 2. 23. the day that he that is Aaron him-selfe as Lev. 8. or any of his sons after him The Chaldee called Ionathans saith in the day that they anoint him to possesse the high priests office The Priest-hood was by naturall succession to Aarons sonnes such as were meet for the same having no blemishes or other impediments which the Magistrates of the highest Court judged of and put him in place None doe constitute an high priest but the Senate of 71. Iudges and they doe not anoint him but by day as it is written Lev. 6. 20. In the day that he is anointed c. and they set not up two high Priests at once The high Priest he is the head of all the priests and they doe anoint him with the anointing oile Exod. 30. and clothe him with the garments of the high Priesthood Exod. 28. They clothe him with the 8. garments and when he puts them off they clothe him againe on the morrow so 7. daies day after day as it is written Exod. 29. 30. the sonne that shall bee Priest in his stead shall put them on 7. dayes And as they aray him with the clothes seven dayes so they anoint him with ●ile seven daies one after another Maimony in treat of the Implements of the sanctuarie c. 4. s. 15. 12. 13. This high Priest was a figure of Christ clothed with the garments of justice and salvation offring himselfe to God for us and us unto God through himselfe making us and our service acceptable unto his Father Heb. 8. 1. and 7. 25. 28. and 10. 10. 22. and 13. 15. Ephah or Bushel the tenth part whereof was an Omer see Exod. 16. 36. continuall or thus a Meat-offring continually The ordinary priests offred their Minchah but at their Initiation or entring upon their office the high priest continually every day See the notes on Lev. 2 1. Vers. 21. a pan to weet a flat-pan plate or slice whereof see Lev. 2. 5. Such being baken dry without li●●ot were the more subject to the heat and parching of the fire And as the high Priest was in speciall manner a figure of Christ so his dayly Meat-offring being of this kinde figured out the suffrings of Christ who was so parched with the site of afflictions for our sins hastily fryed or ●●ken with bubbles that is so fried that it may bee hoven as with bubbles so in Lev. 7. 12. The manner of making these cakes is said to be thus The high Priest brought a whole tenth-deale of st●wre and sanctified it and divided it by the halfe tenth-deale measure which was in the sanctuarie for although the oblation was halfe at once yet was it not sanctified by the halfe And he brought therewith three logs of oile as it is written it shall bee made with oile to adde oile thereunto like the meat-offrings of the lamb Then hee mingled the flowre with oile and hastily-baked it with bubbles And he kneaded of each halfe tenth part six cakes And they were made one by one thus he divided the three logs of oile by the quarter measure that was in the sanctuary a fourth part for every cake And he baked the cake a little and after that fried it upon the pan with the other fourth part of oyle which belonged to it And he did not bake it much as it is written Tuphinei i. Bakings Lev. 6. 21 between baken and raw And afterwards hee divided every cake into two by measure that he might offer the halfe at morning and the halfe at evening And he tooke the halfes and doubled them every one into two and brake them in in peeces til he found every peece doubled into two And he offred the one halfe with halfe the handfull of frankincense in the morning and the other halfe with halfe the handfull of frankincense at evening And if it were the Meat-offring of Initiation or first entring upon his office he divided it not but offred all at once with the handfull of frankincense and both of them were a whole Burnt-offring for offrings made by fire Maim in treat of offring the sacrifices ch 13. s. 2. 3. 4. baken peeces Hebrew bakings of the Meat offring of peeces that is which was broken into peeces See the like phrase in Lev. 5. 15. thou shalt meaning thou priest whosoever as the next verse sheweth therefore the Greeke explaineth it hee shall offer of rest that is of sweet smell as the Greeke translateth in Chaldee to be accepted with favour before the Lord. Vers. 22. the Priest that is anointed Thargum Ionathan explaineth it the high Priest that is anointed with oile a whole-burnt-offring Hebr. a Ca●●● that is whole or altogether in Greeke it is translated here Hapan All in the verse following Holocautos that is wholly-burnt The peoples Meat-offering was eaten by the Priests that made a●onement for them v. 15. 16. Lev. 7. 7. but because no Priest being a sinner could make atonement for himselfe therefore his Meat-offring might not be eaten but all burnt on the Altar to teach him to expect salvation not by himselfe nor by
accompany him And there remained betweene the last boothe and the rocke in the wildernesse two miles At every boothe they said unto the man loe here is meat and here is water if his strength failed him and hee had need to eat hee might eat but there never was man they say that needed so to doe And without necessitie no man might eat for it was their most solemne Fast. From the last boothe they went not with him to the Rocke but halfe way one mile their sabbath daies journey and stood a farre off to see what he did with the goat When he had put the goat downe the Rocke they at the boothes aforesaid waved with linnen clothes or white flagges to the end that they in Ierusalem might know that the goat was come to the wildernesse Talmud in Ioma chap. 6. and Maimony in his Comment thereon and in his Misneh in Iom hakippurim chap. 3. sect 7. c. Of their sabbath dayes journey see the notes on Exodus 16. 29. Vers. 22. all their iniquities by this it appeareth that as the killed goat figured Christ killed for the sinnes of his people so this living goat figured him also who bare our griefes and caried our sorrowes and on whom God laid the iniquity of us all Esa. 53. 4. 6. And because Christ was not onely to dye for our offences but also to rise againe for our justification Rom. 4. 25. to be crucified through weakenesse yet to live by the power of God 2 Cor. 13 4. to be put to death in the flesh but quickned by the Spirit 1 Pet. 3. 13. and for that these two things could not fitly be shadowed by any one beast which the Priest having killed could not make alive againe therefore God appointed two that in the slame beast Christs death in the live beast his life and victory might be fore shadowed Heb. 9. 23. 24. 28. See the like mysterie in the two birds for the cleansing of the Leper Levit. 14. 6. 7. Or the sending of this goat into the wildernesse as the former was sacrificed in the Sanctuarie might figure out the salvation of Christ communicated with the gentiles and peoples of the world as Esa. 42. 1. 4. 11. and 49. 6. For the wildernesse is sometime used to signifie peoples Ezek. 20. 35. The Hebrewes say The scape goat made-atonement for all the transgressions of the Law both the lighter and the more heavy transgressions whether done presumptuously or ignorantly whether they were knowne unto a man or unknowne all are expiated by the Scape-goat if so be the partie doe repent Maimony in treat of Repentance chap. 1. sect 2. This goat was but a shadow of Christ and unto repentance must be added faith sor God hath set him forth to bee a propitiation through faith in his blood Rom. 3. 25. land of separation or a land cut-off a land separated to weet from other lands or from all people that is as the Chaldee translateth it a land that is not inhabited which the Greeke calleth Abaton waylesse or inaccessibles where no man goeth afterward Moses calleth it a wildernesse Or it may meane a place decreed of and determined whither to send him for the Hebrew word sometime signifieth a decree Iob 22. 28. Dan. 4. 17. Hereby was figured the utter abolishing of our sinnes by Christ both from the face of God that they should not appeare against us before him to be imputed unto us and also from us that sinne should have no more dominion over us nor we serve it any longer but having our consciences purged from dead workes should serve the living God 2 Cor. 5. 19. Heb. 9. 26. 14. Rom. 6. 6. 12. So the Prophet speaking of the like grace saith unto God Thou wilt cast all their sinnes into the depths of the sea Mich. 7. 19. And this word which Moses here useth is not elsewhere used in like sort for a land but for cutting off of other things and in particular is applied to Christ working our redemption that hee was cut-off out of the land of the living Esa. 53. 8. which the holy Ghost expoundeth thus his life was taken from the earth Act. 8. 33. and whereof himselfe speaking said whither I goe ye cannot come Ioh. 13. 33. That eternall Spirit through which Christ offred himselfe without spot unto God Heb. 9. 14. and by which he was made-alive after death 1 Pet. 3. 18. inabled his flesh or manhood to suffer such things as no other creature could come neere unto and thereby Sin is put-away and the body of sinne abolished Heb. 9. 26. Rom. 6. 6. The Hebrewes say of this goat sent away that the man which caried it threw it downe the rocke and so it dyed Thalmud in Ioma chap. 6. Vers. 23. Aaron shall come whiles the goat afore-said was going to the wildernesse these services following began and other after them in this order as the Hebrewes have recorded After he hath sent away the goat by the hand of him that led him hee returneth to the bullocke and goat wholse blood hee had sprinkled within the Sanctuarie and openeth them and taketh out their fat which he putteth in a vessell to burne them upon the Altar And he cutteth the rest of their flesh into great pieces but one cleaving to another and not parted asunder and them he sondeth by the hand of others to be caried out to the place of burning without the campe Levit. 16. 27. When the Scape goat is come to the wildernesse the high Priest goeth out into the womens court to read the Law And whiles hee is reading they burne the bullocke and the goat in the place of the ashes without the citie therefore hee that seeth the high Priest when he readeth seeth not the bullocke and the goat burnt When he readeth all the people stand before him and the minister of the Congregation taketh up the booke of the Law and giveth it to the Chief of the congregation and he to the Sagan or second chiefe Priest and the Sagan giveth it to the high Priest who standeth up when he receiveth it and standeth and readeth the 16. of Leviticus and Levit. 23. 27. 32. c. And when he readeth he blesseth God before and after c. After this hee putteth off his white garments and washeth himselfe and putteth on his golden garments and sanctifieth his hands and his feet and offreth the goat which is for the generall addition to this daies service Numb 29. 11. and offreth his owne ram and the peoples ram as it is said AND HE SHAL COME FORTH AND SHALL MAKE HIS BVRNT-OFFRING AND THE BVRNT-OFFRING OF THE PEOPLE Lev. 16. 24. And he burneth on the altar the fat of the bullocke and of the goat that were burnt without the campe And he offreth the daily evening sacrifice the Lambe Numb 28. 3. and trimmeth the Lempes as on other dayes Exod. 27. 21. After this he sanctifieth his hands and his feet and putteth off the golden
that boweth downe or that sacrificeth and such like So hee speaketh of him that hath a Familiar spirit and not of the Wizard who is in the same estate Lev. 20. 6. Of these forementioned some are to dye by the hand of the magistrate some are to be beaten but not put to death as elsewhere is observed defile my Sanctuary that is the Tabernacle Exod. 25. 8. or Temple which was defiled when God was sacrificed unto other where or by other wayes then he commanded Levit. 17. 4. 5. or when they sacrificed to idols and yet would come into the Sanctuarie to serve God also whereas the Temple of God hath no agreement with Idols 2 Cor. 6. 16. And thus the Prophet reproveth them for that they burned incense to Baal and walked after other gods and yet came and stood before him in the house whereupon his name was called Ier. 7. 9. 10. and to prophane that is as the Greek explaineth it and that he might prophane Of prophaning Gods name see Levit. 18. 21. Vers. 4. the people of the land which the Chaldee expoundeth the people of the house of Israel and so the Greeke saith the homeborne of the land hiding shall hide that is shall any waies hide the Greeke explaineth it with winking shall winke at that is neglect or not regard no punish That word Paul useth in Act. 17. 30. the times of this ignorance God wincked at Vers. 5. my face the Chaldee expoundeth it mine anger and so face often signifieth Psal. 21. 10. and 34. 17. Lam. 4. 16. See the notes on Gen. 32. 20. his familie in Greeke his kinred and so the word familie signifieth in Gen. 24. 38. the Chaldee translateth it his helpers that is such as tooke part with him as the next words doe declare that goe a whoring after him that is commit idolatrie as the Chaldec explaineth it that erre so in verse 6. the Greeke translateth all that consent unto him This judgment God executed upon the Iewes for this idolatrie and their other sins as he signified by his Prophet that he would give their city Ierusalem into the hand of the Chaldeans who should set fire upon it and burne it with the houses upon whose roofes they had burnt incense unto Baal c. Because they their Kings their Princes their Priests and their Prophets and the men of Iudah and the inhabitants of Ierusalem had set their abhominations in the house which was called by his Name to defile it and built the high places of Baal to cause their sonnes and their daughters to passe through the fire unto Molech c. therefore it should be delivered into the hand of the King of Babylon by the sword and by the famine and by the pestilence Ier. 32. 28. 29. 32. 34. 35. 36. Vers. 6. the soule that is as the Chaldee expoundeth the man that turneth unto or looketh after in Greeke followeth meaning that consulteth with them as Deut. 18. 11. familiar spirits Targum Ionathan expoundeth it them that aske of familiar spirits Of these and the wizards following whom the Greeke calleth Inchanters see the annotations on Leviticus 19. 31. and Deuteronomie 18. 11. set my face Hebr. give my face in Chaldee give mine anger against that man and destroy him This judgment was executed upon K. Saul who dyed for asking counsell of one that had a familiar spirit 1 Chron. 10. 13. 1 Sam. 28. Vers. 7. And This may bee a reason of the former Therefore ye shall sanctifie your selves by abstaining from all evill and doing good be holy or be saints for I am Iehovah to weet that sanctifieth you as vers 8. or for I am holy as the Greeke addeth and as Moses wrote before in Lev. 19. 2. Vers. 9. For every man or any man Hebr. man man meaning any whosoever as vers 2. And this is inferred upon the former precept be holy For otherwise judgements abide you curseth or revileth speaketh evill as the Greeke translateth which the holy Ghost approveth in Acts 23. 5. See the notes on Exodus 21. 17. or Hebrew and which the Greeke translateth or and so in Matthew 15. 4. For death was his due if he cursed either of them and they are distinguished to make him guilty for the one without the oth●r as Chazkuni here explaineth it and as Iarchi addeth though it be after his parents death Whose curseth his father or his mother his Lamp shall be p●tout in obscure darkenesse Prov. 20. 20. his bloods shall be upon him that is his death shall be upon his owne head for he hath caused it by his sinne So the Greeke translateth he shall be guilty and the Chaldee he is guilty or worthy to be killed so after often in this chapter The manner of his death was stoning as is noted upon Exod. 21. 10. and as Moses after sheweth for the rebellious sonne Deut. 21. 21. And it is observed as a generall 〈◊〉 by the Hebrew doctors Every place where it is 〈◊〉 in the Law they shall be put to death THEIR BLOODS VPON THEM it is meant by stoning Maimony Issureibiah c. 1. s. 6 and Sol. Iarchi on Lev. 20. 9. Vers. 10. that committeth adultery the Greek addeth in the second place or that commits-adul 〈…〉 ry with his neighbours wife It is expouuded in Deut. 22. 22. a woman maried to an husband dye the death the manner of their death is not set downe either here or in Deuter. 22. 22. unlesse by that which is before and after for other unlawfull copulations we say it is meant stoning to death as the man that lyeth with a beast vers 15. is to bee stoned because the wom●n for like beastlinesse is to be stoned verse 16. The Pharisees which brought unto Christ a woman taken in adulterie said Moses commanded that such should be stoned Ioh. 8. 4. 5. but whether that were this very case is to bee considered Also to lye with a bettothed woman the punishment was stoning as for humbling his neighbours wife Deut. 22. 24. Howbeit the latter Pharisees say the adulterers death was Strangling Maimony in Sanhedrin chap. 15. sect 13. And in another place he openeth this and the other like ●●wes more fully thus Who so presumptuously committeth any of all the unlawfull copulations spoken of in the l●w is guilty of cutting off Levit. 18. 29. and if they doe it ignorantly they are bound to bring the Sin-offring appointed And there be some of the Nakednesses that is the unlawfull copulations which deserve death by the Iudges more then the cutting-off which is meet for them all Of those which are to be put to death by the Iudges some are to dye by stoning and some by burning and some by strangling And these are they that are put to death by stoning He that lyeth with his mother or with his fathers wife or with his sonnes wife which is called his daughter-in-law he that lyeth with mankinde or with a beast and the woman that lyeth downe to a beast
other was divided to all the custodies the Priests in their charges and both of them were eaten the same day and halfe the night as the 〈◊〉 of the most holy things Maimony in Tamidin chap. 8 sect 11. holinesse that is most holy The Peace-offrings of particular persons were light holy things but the peace-offrings of the Congregation were holy of holies that is most holy as 〈◊〉 Iarchi here observeth for the Priest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may eat them as before is shewed The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deth for the Priest that offreth them The 〈◊〉 the Priests to eat these and other ●oly things 〈◊〉 in Numb 18. 8. 9. 10. c. Vers. 21. shall proclaime or shall convocate 〈◊〉 is call-together the people in Greeke ye shall 〈◊〉 this day this selfe same day Hebr. the strength or bodie of this body so in verse 14. and 28. and 29. See Gen 7. 13. a convocation of holi 〈…〉 an holy convocation and meeting together of all the people partly in remembrance of their comming out of Egypt Deut. 16. 12. who came thence to-keepe a feast to the Lord in the wildernesse Ex●● 5. 1. 3. which they keepe at mount Sinai Exod. 24. where also the Law was given at this time of the yeere Exod. 19. 1. 11. the memoriall where 〈◊〉 celebrated by this yeerely feast and pardy to 〈…〉 ctifie the first fruits of their wheat harvest and to celebrate Gods mercies for the fruitfulnesse 〈◊〉 their land as this place sheweth The chiefe th●●g figured hereby was the solomne giving of the 〈◊〉 of Christ which after was performed in Ierusalem at this feast of Pentecost when he sent his Apostles the gifts of his spirit in fierie tongues Act. 2. 1. 2. 3. whereupon they went forth to reape that which the Prophets had sowne gathcring fruit unto 〈◊〉 eternall and bringing the wheat of God into his garner unto the everlasting praise of the glory of his grace Ioh. 4. 35. 38. Luke 3. 17. Eph. 1. 3. 〈◊〉 And this Feast we now celebrate whiles with joy and thankfulnesse unto God we receive the 〈◊〉 the spirit of life in Christ Iesus which hath mac●● free from the law of sinne and death Rom. 8. 2. 15. Galath 3. 2. Vers. 22. not wholly-rid not ●ut downe all 〈◊〉 leave some in the corner of thy field for the 〈◊〉 This law was given before in Levit. 19. 9. in the very words see the annotations there God speaking here of the Feasts which were in harveth which they celebrated to the honour of 〈◊〉 repeateth that law concerning the poore whose reliefe he joyneth with his owne service as in repeating these feasts hee maketh expresse mention of such also to bee made partakers of their joy Deut. 16. 11. 14. See also Deut. 24. 19. 22. where this law is inlarged Vers. 24. the seventh moneth called of the Hebrewes ●isri of us now September in scripture it is named Ethanim 1 King 8. 2. which the Chaldee there expoundeth the moneth of the Ancients which they called the first moneth c. and now it is the seventh moneth So Targum Ionathan here explaineth it In Tisri which is the seventh moneth In this moneth Solomons Temple was dedicated the first day which was at the new moone for all their moneths in Israel were counted by the Moone asabbatisme that is a rest or cessation from your labours Targum Ionathan calleth it a good day blowing-of-trompets or of cornets the Greeke translateth a memoriall of trompets the Chaldee a memoriall of showting The Hebrew Tragnah here used is generally a lowd showing noise commonly for joy as Ezra 3. 11. 12. 1 Chro. 15. 28. sometime for sorrow as Ier. 20. 16. Mich. 4. 9. and is either with mans voice or with sound of trompet and then it is that broken sound called an alarme Numb 10. 5. 7. Againe Trompets were of two sorts some of metall as the silver trompets in the Sanctuarie Numb 10. 2. some of horne called cornets 2 Chron. 15. 14. Psal. 98. 6. That this was with blowing of trompets and cornets appeareth by Numb 10 10. in your solemne dayes and in the beginnings of your moneths yee shall blow with the trompets over your burnt offrings c. and in Psal. 81. 3. Blow up the cornet or trompet in the new-moone c. At every new-moone they had a solemnitie in Israel and offred besides the daily sacrifices two bullockes one ram seven lambs for burnt-offrings with their meat and drinke-offrings and a goat for a sin-offring Numb 28. 11. 15. and at this new moone which was the beginning of the yeere they offered all the foresaid sacrifices and over and besides them one bullocke one ram and seven lambs for burnt-offrings and a goat for a sin-offring Num. 29. 1. 6. The trompet which they proclaimed the new yeere with was the same that they proclaimed the Iubilee with which was a cornet called in Hebrew Shophar Levit. 25. 9. The Hebrew doctors write here of thus It is commanded by the Law to heare the sound of the trompet or cornet in the beginning of the yeere Numb 29. 1. and the tr●mpet which they blew with either in the beginning of the yeere or at the Iubilee was of arams horne crooked and all cornets save of rammes horne were unlawfull And although it bee not expressed in the law that the blowing at the new yeere should be with the cornet Levit 23. 24. yet of the Iubilee it is said SHOPHAR TRVGNAH the cornet of loud sound Levit. 25. 9. whereupon we have beene taught the sound or blowing at the Iubilee was with the cornet Shophar also the sound at the beginning of the yeere was with the cor 〈◊〉 In the Sanctuarie they did blow in the beginning of the yeere with one cornet and two trompets because it is written in Psal. 98. 6. with trompets and sound of cornet shout triumphantly before the LORD the King but in other places they did not blow in the beginning of the yeere save with the cornet onely All are bound to heare the sound of the cornet Priests and Levites and Israelites and Proselytes and servants that are made free but women and servants and children are not bound The sound Trugnah or alarme spoken of in the law is not certainely knowue of us by reason of the length of yeeres and our many captivities so that we know not how it was Maimony in Shophar c. chap. 1. sect 1. 2. and chap. 2. sect 1. and chap. 3. sect 2. Howbeit by the same author and by Thalm. Bab in Rosh hasshanah chap. 3. and 4. it appeareth that they used to blow with these cornets both in Ierusalem and in all other cities in the Synagogues for the feasts were proclaimed in all their cities and not onely in Ierusalem Nehem. 8. 15. and with it they used prayers and blessings and reading of some scriptures ●itting the matter in hand This blowing of trompets by the Priests in the Sanctuarie and Ministers in the Synagogues which all the
sect 4. 5. from the sonnes understand receiving it or it being taken from the sonnes of Israel for many such imperfect speeches are to be found which sometime the Holy Ghost supplieth as in a void place 1 King 22. 10. where is to be understood sitting in a void place as 2 Chron. 18. 9. So burden 2 Chron. 2. 18. implieth men that bare burden 1 King 5. 15. and many the like See the notes on Exod 4. 5. and 13. 8. Now this was received from the sonnes of Israel in that it was bought with the money which the people gave Nehem. 10. 32. 33. And it is the Hebrewes opinion that with the halfe shekels which all the people gave yeerely for the service of the sanctuarie Exod. 30. 13. 16. they provided the daily sacrifices and offrings for the congregation salt for the sacrifices wood incense the shew bread the waved sheafe or Omer Levit 23. 10. 11. the two wave loaves Levit. 23. 17. the red heiffer Numb 19. the scape goat Levit. 16. and the like Maim treat of Shekels c. 4. s. 1. Vers. 9. for Aaron and for his sonnes that is for the high Priest and for the other Priests such as did the service that is both the Priests that went out and those that came in on the Sabbath as before is noted on verse 8. And the Hebrew canons declare it thus In the Sabbath when there are the daily sacrifices and the additions Num. 28. 9. 10. and the two cups of frankincense Levit. 24. 7. to bee burned in the morning the men of that fathers house 1 Chron. 23. 6. 11. 24. of the charge or course that went-out they offred the daily sacrifice of the morning and the two lambs of Burnt-offring which were the additions c. and the other course that came in on the Sabbath offred the daily sacrifice of the evening and both these and the other had their part in the Shew bread And they did not eat the bread untill the two cups of frankincense were burned on the fire and the frankincense was to have salt as the other oblations And after that they had offred the additions of the Sabbath they burned the two cups of frankincense And every Sabbath throughout the yeere they parted the Shew bread thus the course of Priests that came in had sixe cakes and they which went out had sixe They which came in parted the bread among them on the northside of the court because they were prepared to serve and they that went out parted on the south side But when there was a feast day of any of the three sol●mn feasts on the Sabbath likewise on the Sabbath that was in the midst of the feast all the courses of the Priests had their parts equally in the Shew bread c. The high Priest he alwayes tooke from every course halfe the cakes which were his due as it is written AND IT SHALL BE FOR AARON AND FOR HIS SONNES Levit. 24. 9. halfe for Aaron and halfe for his sonnes Maimony in Tamidin chap. 4. sect 9. 10. 11. 12. 14. in the holy place within the court of the Sanctuarie but without they might not eate it The Hebrewes observe that there were Foure and twenty gifts given unto the Priests all of them expressed in the Law and concerning them all was the covenant made with Aaron And whosoever did eat of a gift wherein holinesse was they blessed God who sanctified them with the sanctitie of Aaron and commanded them to eat so and so Eight of those gifts the Priests might not eat of but in the Sanctuarie within the wals of the Courtyard and five gifts they might not eat but in Ierusalem within the wals of the citie The eight which might not be eaten but in the sanctuarie were the flesh of the Sin-offring were it fowle or beast Levit. 6. 26. and the flesh of the Trespasse-offring Levit. 7. 6. and the Peace-offrings of the congregation Levit. 23. 19. 20. and the remainder of the Sheafe or Omer Levit. 23. 10. 11. and the remnant of the Israelites Meat-offrings Levit 2. 3. 10. and the two loaves Levit. 23. 20. and the Shew bread Levit. 24. 9. and the Lepers leg of oile Levit. 14. 10. 12. 13. These might not be eaten but in the Sanctuarie Maimony treat of First fruits chap. 1. sect 1. 2. 3. 4. Of all those gifts see the annotations on Numb 18. Vers. 10. Israelitish Heb. an Israelitesse which the Chaldee expoundeth a daughter of Israel her name was Shelomith vers 11. Vers. 11. blasphemed the Greeke here translateth it named the Chaldee expressed The Hebrew Nakab properly signifieth to pierce or strike through Esa. 36. 6. Habbak 3. 14. Whereupon it is figuratively used for cursing or blaspheming Numb 23. 13. 25. which is as a striking through with evill words It is also used for expresse-naming of a thing sometime in the good part as Esa. 62. 2. and sometime in the evill as the Greeke and Chaldee interpret it in this place the Name understand of Iehovah as verse 16. which is here omitted for the more reverence and because such wickednesse as this it is even a shame to speake as Eph. 5. 12. 3. So elsewhere the scripture sometime omitteth the name of God for reverence as the right hand of the power Mark 14. 62. for the right hand of the power of God Luk. 22. 69. and in common speech among the Iewes they used to say the Blessed for the blessed God Mark 14. 61. Math. 26. 63. And when the High Priest heard words which he thought to be blasphemie hee rent his clothes Matth. 26. 65. according to a canon which they have recorded by Maimony in his treat of Idolatrie chap. 2. sect 10. thus Whosoever heareth blasphemy of the Name he is bound to rend his clothes whether hee himselfe heareth it or heareth from the mouth of him that heard it he is bound to rend his clothes But he that heareth it from the mouth of an heathen is not bound to rend his clothes and Elinkim Shebna had not rent their clothes but for that Rabshakeh was an Apostate from the faith Esa. 36. 22. they brought either the witnesses which heard him or the inferiour Iudges who not knowing how to punish this man brought him to Moses according to the order set in Exod. 18. 22. 26. 〈◊〉 Shelmoith in Greeke Salomith daughter of Dabrei she being an Hebrewesse had maried an Egyptian whiles she dwelt in Egypt whose sonne now blasphemed God Vers. 12. in ward or in prison 〈◊〉 that he might declare meaning that Moses might declare or that it might be declared unto them The Hebrew phrase to declare or expound may be expressed both these wayes as is noted on Gen. 6. 19. 20. The Chaldee explaineth it thus untill it was declared or expressed unto them by the decree of the word of the Lord to weet what punishment the blasphemer should have therefore the Greeke translateth to judge him by the commandement of
that woman shall beare her iniquitie Annotations COmmand After that God had set his church and ministery in order he next giveth lawes for the puritie and holinesse of his church in that order by removing all sinne and uncleannesse from among them and after by appointing the exercises of godlinesse Of this he saith Command whereby the weight of the things here spoken of is signified that they send away or as the Greeke translateth and let them send away that is put out of the campe and there were three Campes the Sanctuary called the Campe or tents of the LORD 2 Chron. 31. 2. the Campe of the Levites Num. 3. and the Campe of Israel the twelve tribes Num. 2. See the annotations on Exod. 40. 33. And as the uncleane were to be put out of the Campe pitching about the Sanctuary so out of he campe which went to warre against their enemies D●●s 23. 10 11. The Campe of the Lords Sanctuary was most holy none which was un●leane in any thing might enter in 2 Chron. 23. 19. Leper who was defiled and uncleane all the dayes that the plague was upon him and was to dwell alone without the campe Lev. 13. 46. see the annotations there an issue the Law of their uncleannesse is given in Levit. 15. a soule that is a dead soule as Num. 6. 6. meaning a body the Chaldee here translateth by the bones of the soule of a man taking the soule for a dead carkasse as in Levit. 21. 1. there the Chaldee hath the dead Who so touched any dead man was uncleane seven dayes Num. 19. 11 c. whereas for touching other dead creatures they were uncleane but un●●ll evening Lev. 11. 24. 39 40. These legall pollutions figured our pollution by sinne of all sorts as in their places is shewed and the removing of such out of the Lords campe figured the removall of unrepentant sinners out of the church into which any thing that defileth may in no wise enter Rev. 21. 27. the uncleane may not come into it Esai 52. 1. Vers. 3. male and female Hebr. From male unto female whereby he meaneth both sorts and as Chazkuni here observeth he saith not man and woman to teach that in case of uncleannesse the great and the small are alike Vpon this Law Marie the sister of Moses Aaron being striken with leprosie was put out of the Campe Num. 12 14 15. without the campe or to without that is to a place without the campe But were they all to be together in one place seeing the Lepers were to remaine alone Lev. 13. 46. The Hebrew doctors expound this Law thus There were three ●ampes the campe of the Divine Maiesty that is the Sanctuary about that the campe of the Levites and from thence unto the end the campe of the standards on all foure quarters that was the campe of Israel The Leper was put forth out of them all he that had an issue might be in the campe of Israel but was put forth out of the second and the defiled by the dead he might be even in Lev●es campe and was 〈◊〉 put forth save from the campe of the Majestie of God Sol. Iarchion Num. 5. This though it seemeth contrary to Moses is the common opinion of the Hebrewes as may be seene in Thalmud B●● in Pesachim chap. 6. and Maimony in Mis● in B●ath h●mikdash ch 3. where he rendreth this reason The Leper because his uncleannesse is greater he is sent away further than his fellowes for every one whose uncleannesse is greater his putting forth is further than his neighbours Therefore they send forth the Leper out of the three campes which is out of Ierusalem because he defileth by entrance whereas ●e that hath an issue defileth not so And they send forth men and women that have issues the menstruous and women in childbed out of the two campes which is out of the mountaine of the house of God because they defile bed and seat which the uncleane by the dead doe not The C●el that is the Ramp 〈…〉 or Courtyard in the Temple which was more ou●ward than the womens court as the womens was more than the mens court they put forth out of it heathens and such as are defiled by the dead and 〈◊〉 by lying with the menstruous If a Leper 〈◊〉 into Ierusalem he 〈…〉 eaten with 40. stripes if 〈◊〉 come into the mountaine of the house of God ●e is beaten with fourescore stripes c. Wee may here note the difference and degrees of places and their holinesse which the Hebrewes say were ten within the Land of Canaan Ierusalem and the Temple 1. The walled townes 2. The city Ierusalem 3. The mountaine of Gods house mount Sion 4. The Chel or outmost court 5. The womens court which some thinke to be that which is called the new court 2 Chron. 20. 5. 6. The mens court 7. The Priests court 2 Chro. 4. 9. 8. The place betweene the Porch and the Altar 2 Chron. 8. 12. 9. The Temple or House it selfe 10. And the most holy place or Oracle within the Temple 1 King 6. 16. 17. 19. Of these it is written in the Bab. Thalmud in Celim ch 1. sect 6 c. and by Maimony in M●sn in Beth h●●chirah chap. 7. sect 12 c. thus All the land of Israel is holy above all other lands for they bring out of it the Sheafe and the Two loaves Lev. 23. 10. 17. and the First-fruits which they 〈◊〉 not out of other lands Ten holinesses are in the land of Israel one above another The walled townes are holier then the rest of the land for out of them they put the leprous neither doe they bury the dead within them without consent of seven good men of the city or of all the people of the city c. Ierusalem is holier then other walled cities for they eat the light holy things and the second tithes within the walies thereof The mountaine of Gods house is holier then it for none that have issues are menstruous or in childbed may come in thither The Chel or Rampart is holier than it for no heathens or defiled by the dead or that hath ●●en with the menstruous may come in thither The womens court is holier then the Chel for none that is washed from his uncleanenesse that day before Sun setting as Levit. 15. 6. may come thereinto The court of the men of Israel 〈◊〉 holi●r than the womens court for none that hath not brought his offering for a●oxement though he be otherwise cleane as Levit. 12. 6. 7. and 14. 9. 10. and 15. 13 14 15. may come into it And the 〈◊〉 that commeth there into is guiltie of cutting off The Priests c●●rt is holier then that for no 〈◊〉 may come in thither saue at the time of their 〈…〉 ssities for imposing of hands or for atone 〈…〉 〈◊〉 for staying or for waving the Sacrifices 〈◊〉 the Porch and the Altar is holier than 〈◊〉 for none that are blemished
Priest but through the veile that is his flesh he is entred into heauen it selfe now to appeare unto the face of God for us Heb. 8. 2. 4. and 10. 2. 20. and 9. 24. Thus shall ye blesse The Priest blessed standing as it is written to stand before Iehovah to minister unto him and to blesse in his name Deut. 10. 8. And it was with lifting up of hands as it is said And Aaron lift up his hand towards the people and blessed them Levit 9. 22. which gesture our Lord Christ also used when he blessed his disciples Lu. 24. 50. The Hebrew Doctors understand the word Thus to imply both matter and manner wherof they haue sundry traditions as Thus shal ye blesse standing Thus with lifting vp of hands Thus in the holy tongue that is Hebrew Thus with your faces against the peoples faces Thus with an high voyce Thus by Gods expressed name Iehovah if ye blesse in the Sanctuarie It is not lawfull for the Priests in any place to adde any blessing unto these three verses as to say like Deu. 1. 11. The Lord God of your fathers make you a thousand times so many moe as ye are or any the like Maimony in treat of Prayer chap. 14. sect 11. 12. The manner they also say was thus The Priests went up to the banke or stage after that the Priests had finished the daily morning service and lifted up their hands on high above their heads and their fingers spred abroad except the high Priest who might not lift his hands higher than the Plate whereof see Exod. 28. 36. and one pronounced the blessing word by word till the three verses were ended And the people answered not after every verse but they made it in the Sanctuary one blessing and when they had finished all the people answered Blessed be the Lord God the God of Israel for ever and ever And he pronounced Gods name as it is written with I●●h but in the citie or countrey they pronounced it Adonai Lord for they mention not the name as it is written save in the Sanctuary onely And after Simeon the just was dead the Priests left off blessing by Gods proper name Iehovah even in the Sanctuary to the end that no man which was not honest and of good esteeme might learne it The Priests blessing is not pronounced in any place but in the holy Hebrew tongue as it is said THVS SHAL YE BLESSE c. The lifting up of hands is by ten Priests of the number A Synagogue which is all of Priests they all lift up hands and the women and children answer Amen If there remaine ten Priests moe than they which are gone up the banke the ten answer Amen A Congregation wherein there is no Priest but a Minister onely he lifteth not up his hands but when he is come to conclude with peace he he saith Our God and the God of our fathers ble 〈…〉 us with the threefold blessing in the Law written by Moses thy servant which was pronounced out of the mouth of Aaron and his sonnes the Priests with thy Saints as it is said THE LORD BLESSE THEE AND KEEP ETHEE c. A Priest that hath lift up his hands in one Synagogue and goeth to another Synagogue and findeth the Congregation at prayer and they are not come to the Priests blessing he lifteth up his hands for them and blesseth them though it be oft times in a day Maim treat of prayer chap. 14. sect 9 10 11. and chap. 15. sect 9 10 11. By these their traditions it appeareth that the not pronouncing of Gods name Iehovah as it is written was a device of their owne first restrayning it to the Sanctuary and blessing onely at last omitting it in the Sanctuarie also lest it should be by the unworthy polluted as they supposed Yea so farre went they in this their precisenesse as they say that their first wise men taught not this name to their disciples or sons which were of honest conversation but once in seven yeeres Maim ibidem c. 14. sect 10. And this it seemeth they did because the nations corrupted the name calling him Iao Iave Iabe Ievo Iovis and sundry other wayes as in humane writers is yet to be seen and applyed those names sometime to false Gods Of the meaning of this name Iehovah see the Annotations on Gen. 2. 4. and Exod. 6. 3. and of blessing see Gen. 14. 19. 20. Vers. 24. Iehovah blesse thee The name Iehovah thrice repeated in this blessing is a mysterie of the Trinitie in the Godhead the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost into whose name we are baptised Mat. 28. 19. which Iehovah is one and his name one Deut. 6. 4. Zach. 14. 9. So the Apostle beginneth wishing Grace and Peace from him which Is and which Was and which Is to come that is Iehovah God the Father and from the seven Spirits which are before his throne that is the Holy Spirit whose graces are seven that is manifold and plentifull but though there be diversities of gracious gifts yet it is the same Spirit 1 Cor. 12. 4. and from Iesus Christ Revel 1. 4 5. And another Apostle concludeth The grace of the Lord Iesus Christ and the love of God and the communion of the holy Spirit 〈◊〉 with you all Amen 2 Cor. 13. 14. Which as all other blessings are derived from this set downe by Moses who sheweth the grace of God the Father in blessing that is giving all good things both for this life and that which is to come as it is written Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spirituall blessings in heavenly things in Christ c. Ephes. 1. 3. This blessing God offered the Iewes when he sent his Sonne Iesus to blesse them in turning away every one of them from his iniquitie Act. 3. 26. The Hebrew Doctors as R. Menachem Rakanat on th●● place have also noted how this name of God Iehovah is thrice mentioned and every time with 〈◊〉 different accent in the Hebrew implying a mysterie which cannot better be applyed than to the three distinct persons of the holy Trinitie 〈◊〉 thee in grace and good estate and safe from evill as it is said Iehovah will keepe thee from all evill hee will keepe thy soule Psal. 121. 7. And for good it is spoken in 1 Chron. 29. 18. So our Saviour prayeth Holy Father keepe through thine owne name those whom thou hast giuen me that they may be one as we are and keepe them from the evill Iohn 17. 11. 15. Ver. 25. his face to shine upon thee or his countenance to shine to be lightsome unto thee For face the Chaldee putteth Shecinah the Divine Maiestie whereby Christ seemeth to be meant as is noted on Exod. 34. 9. Gods face sometime signifieth his anger as Levit. 20. 6. Psal. 21. 10. and. 34. 17. sometime his favour Psal. 21. 7. But the light or shining of his face
who c. this is an earnest wish as would God or the like the word and setteth forth the earnestnesse of his passion as Act. 23. 3. Psal. 2. 6. his spirit that is the gifts of his spirit as the Chaldee saith his spirit of prophesie So Paul wisheth that all the Church could prophesie and saith Follow after loue and zealously desire spirituall gifts but rather that ye may prophesie 1 Cor. 14. 1. Verse 30. gathered that is gat himselfe or at the Greeke saith departed the Elders who were authorised of God to be of the high Councell or Synedrion with Moses and his assistants and thus they differed from those inferiour Magistrates which had beene appointed before by Iechroes advice Exod. 18. 21 25. And as then all hard causes were brought unto Moses Exod. 18. 26. so after this such causes were brought to the high court or Synedrion first ordained here This is shewed by the Hebrew Canons in Talmud Bab. Sanbedrin c. 1. and Maimony in Sanbedrin c. 5. thus They set up no King but by the mouth of the Senate of 71. Elders neither make they any lesser Synedrion for every tribe and for every citie but by the Senate of 71. Neither judge they a whole tribe revolted to idolatry nor a false Prophet nor the high Priest in judgement of life and death but by the great Synedrion But money-matters are judged by the Court of three Iudges Likewise they make or judge no elder rebellious Deut. 17. nor any citie drawne 〈◊〉 to idolatrie Deut. 13. neither cause they the suspected woman to drinke the bitter waters Nam 5. but in the great Synedrion Neither doe they adde unto or in Large the Citie or the Courtyard neither goe they forth to permitted warre c. whereof see the notes on Deut. 20. 1. but by the great Synedrion as it is said in Exod. 18. 22. every great matter they shall bring unto thee Verse 31. a wind God made an East wind to passe forth in heaven and brought on a South wind by his strength Psal. 78. 26. brought Quailes such fowles as he had fed them with before in Exod 16. 13. them now God againe brought swiftly and as with violence which the Chaldee translateth made to flie let them fall or spred them abroad so this word is Englished in 1 Sam. 30. 16. two cubits Sol. Iarchi saith they flew so hie as against a mans heart that he was not toyled in getting them either by reaching hie or by stooping low Verse 32. ten homers or ten heaps as the Chaldee translateth for the Hebrew homer sometime signifieth an heape as in Ex. 8. 4. sometime a kind of measure containing ten Ephahs or Bushels Ez. 45. 11. the w ch measure is called also a Cor. Eze. 45. 14. so Targum Ierusalemy interpreteth it here Thus also the Greek translateth it ten Cors for of the Hebrew Cor the Greeke Coros in Luk. 16. 7. Latine Corus are derived And Chazkuni here explaineth it ten homers there are in an homer thirtie Seahs or Pecks so ten homers containe three hundred Seahs loe he that gathered least had every day ten Seahs Of the Seah or Pecke see the notes on Gen. 18. 6. This abundance of fowles was miraculous whereupon it is said God rained flesh upon them as dust and feathered fowles as the sand of the seas Psal. 78. 27. And with these they filled their greedy lust seeding themselves without feare as Iude verse 12. though the Lord had threatned to punish them verse 20. Verse 33. not yet cut off to wit from their mouth that is not taken from them which the Greeke translateth before it that is the flesh failed Thus the phrase is opened in Ioel 1. 5. the new wine is cut off from your mouth that is taken away from you Or by cutting may be meant chewing The Psalmist alleaging this saith They were not estranged from their desire the meat was yet in their mouth when the anger of God came up against them c. Psal. 78. 30 31. And here Chazkuni observeth how they were plagued of God after that he had sufficed all of them with flesh that men should not say hee had not plagued them but because he was not able to suffice them all with flesh a very great plague or ve●●ment great smiting Abr. Ezra writeth that it was the pestilence God gave-them their request when they lusted for flesh but sent leannesse into their soule Psal. 106. 14 15. The anger of God came up against them and slew of the fat of them and smote downe the choise young men of Israel Psal. 78. 31. Verse 34. hee called meaning Moses called and by the name of the place left a memoriall of their sinne and punishment for a warning to them after Deut. 9. 22. and to us that we should not lust after evill things as they lusted 1 Cor. 10. 6. Or as the Greeke translateth it the name of the place was called see verse 3. Kibroth hattaavah that is as the Greeke expoundeth it Graves or monuments of lust Where lust may be used for the men that lusted as circumcision in Rom. 2. 26. is for men circumcised Pride for the proud man Ier. 50. 31 32. Psal. 36. 12. and many the like See the notes on Gen. 45. 7. Vers. 35. were in Hazeroth or Chatseroth in Greeke Aseiroth here they were that is abode or continued as Daniel was that is continued Dan. 1. 21. and they were that is continued there Ruth 1. 2. The cause of which abode was a new trouble which Moses sister and brother raised against him Num. 12. CHAP. XII 1 Marie and Aaron speake against Moses about his wife and office 4 The Lord calleth them all before him justifieth Moses magnifieth his office rebuketh the murmurers and departeth in anger 10 Marie is made a Loper Aaron confesseth sinne Moses prayeth God to heale her 14 The Lord commandeth her to be shut out of the campe seven dayes 15 The peoples journey is stayed till she was brought in againe then they goe on into Pharan ANd Marie and Aaron spake against Moses because of the Aethiopian woman whom he had taken for hee had taken an Aethiopian woman And they said Hath Iehovah spoken onely indeed by Moses hath he not spoken also by us And Iehovah heard it Now the man Moses was very meeke above all the men which were upon the face of the earth And Iehovah said suddenly unto Moses and unto Aaron and unto Marie Come out ye three unto the Tent of the Congregation and they three went out And Iehovah came downe in the pillar of the cloud and stood in the doore of the Tent and called Aaron and Marie they two came forth And he said Heare now my words If there shall be a Prophet among you I Iehovah will make my selfe knowne unto him in a vision I will speake unto him in a dreame My servant Moses is not so he is faithfull in all mine house Mouth to mouth
to the Law in Num. 5. 8 compared with Lev. 6. 2 6. And unto that par●●cular do Iarchi Chazkuni here referre it N●● that ram was most holy because it was a Trespasse-offring but the thing it selfe which was stollen and restored to the Priest was of the common things as after shall be shewed Vers. 10. In the holy of holies Observe how the Court of the Sanctuarie is here called the holy of holies or most holy place in respect of the Camp of Israel and citie Ierusalem which were holy places for the light holy things as the Passeover Peace-offerings and the like to be eaten in as also in comparison with the great court for the people which was without the Priests court 2 Chron. 4. 9. Ezek. 42. 14. For that which is commonly called the holie of holies or most holy place which was in the Tabernacle after the second veile was not a place to eat in or for any to come into save for the high Priest once in the yeare to make atonement Levit. 16. Hebr. 9. 3. 7. Neither might they eat in the Tabernacle but in the Court and that is here meant as the Law sheweth In the holy place in the court of the Tent of the congregation they shall eat it Levit. 6. 16. And in the court of the Temple there were chambers for such uses Nehem. 13. 5 9. whereupon in Ezek. 42. 13. he speaketh of holy chambers where the Priests that approach unto the LORD shall eat the most holy things there shall they lay the most holy things and the Meat-offering and the Sin-offering and the Trespasse-offering for the place is holy And whereas Ezekiel there prophesieth of the third Temple the Temple of the Gospell which Christ should build at which time the legall Priesthood of Aaron should have an end Heb. 7. these ordināces did signifie besides the Ministers maintenance forespoken of 1 Cor. 9. 13 14. that they which should by Christ be made Priests unto God his Father Rev. 1. 6. as all true Christians are 1 Pet. 2 5 9. should be made partakers of Christ who is both our Meat-offering our Sin Trespasse-offring and feeding on his flesh by faith should be nourished unto life eternall Ioh. 6. 35. 50. 51. cōpared with Heb. 13. 10. 15. every male and not the female for the Priests wives daughters might not eat of the most holythings as they did of the holy and common things v. 11. 13 19. Lev. 6. 18 29. and 7. 6. But now for our partaking of Christ there is neither male nor female for we are all one in Christ Iesus Gal. 3. 28. holy Hebr. holinesse in Greeke holy things shall they be unto thee meaning that onely the Priests and they in their holinesse and cleannesse should eat thereof The blemished Priests might eat but the uncleane might not eat Lev. 21. 21 22. 22. 3 6. The flesh i● selfe also must be holy for if any uncleane thing touched it it was burnt and might not be eaten Lev. 7. 19. Vers. 11. And this Here he passeth on to the light holy things which might be eaten by the Priests male female without the Sanctuarie the heave-offering of their gift that is which the Israelites give to the Priest out of their heave-offerings such were as Iarchi also here explaineth the heave-offring of the sacrifice of confession of the peace-offerings and of the Nazirites ram whereof see Lev. 7. 11 12 14. 32 34. Num. 6. 17 20. In Deu. 12. 6. 17. there is mētioned the heave-offering of your hand w ch is meant of the first-fruits spoken of in Deut. 26. See the annotations on those places the wave-offerings as the breast of the Peace-offerings Levit. 7. 30 31 34. for that was waved as the shoulder was heaved thy daughters understand whiles they remained in their fathers house but being married to strangers they might not eat of the holy things see Levit. 22. 12 13. every cleane person though the Priests slave bought into or borne in his house but no stranger nor hired servant Levit. 22. 10. 11. neither might any uncleane person eat of it Lev. 7. 20 21. Verse 12. All the fat that is as the Chaldee expoundeth it All the best which the Greeke translateth All the first-fruits The fat is often used for that which is good and best of things not of beasts onely but of wheat as Deut. 32. 14. Psal. 81. 17. and 147. 14. and here of oile and wine and so of the land in generall as Gen. 27. 28. and 45. 18. And as after God saith to the Levites in v. 30. whē ye have heaved the fat therof so this concerned all the people that they should doe the like They heave not up any but the fairest saith Maimony in Trumoth ch 5. sect 1. See the annotations on Gen. 4. 4. the new oile in Greeke the oile so after of the wine The Law concerning these is repeated in Deut. 18. 4. thus The first-fruits of thy corne of thy new wine and of thy new oyle c. shalt thou give unto him that is unto the Priest Vnder these three all other of like sort are comprehended which the Hebrews explaine thus All mans meat that i● kept which groweth out of the earth is bound to pay the Heave-offering or first-fruits And it is a commandement to separate out of it the first-fruits for the Priest Deut. 18. 4. As corne wine and oile are mans meat and grow out of the earth and have owners as it is written THY CORNE so whatsoever is of like sort is bound to pay the heave-offering and likewise the tithes Maimony in Trumoth ch 2. s. 1. See after on v. 21. for the tithes As for the first-fruits w ch the owners brought into the Sanctuarie Deut. 26. the Hebrewes say they were but of seven things only as is noted on Ex. 22. 29. Observe therefore a difference between the first-fruits left for the Priests the first-fruits brought before the Lord there given to the Priest for these were two gifts as after shall be shewed the first-fruits called in Hebrew Reshith that is the first or the beginning after in v. 13. he speaketh of first-fruits called in Hebrew Biccurim of them he saith which they shall bring unto Iehovah to wit into the Sanctuarie according to the Law in Deut. 26. 2. 3 c. of these he saith which they shall give unto Iehovah for they were not bound to bring them out of their place but the Priests came where they were and tooke them These for distinctions sake the Hebrewes call the great heave-offering the other they call the first-fruits So in this place Sol. Iarchi saith the first-fruits of them this is the great heave-offering And of these the Hebrew Canons say The Israelites are not bound to take paines about the Heave-offering and to bring it from the corne-floore to the Citie or from the wildernesse to the inhabited land but the Priests goe out to the corne-floores
and the Israelites give them their portion there And if the Priests come not then he separateth it and leaveth it in the cornest●●re And if there be wilde beasts or cattell that wi●● devoure it there and there be none to keepe it from them our wise-men have ordained that they should then bring it to the citie and be payed of the Priest for the bringing of it For if he separate it and leave it for the beasts be profaneth the name of God Maimony in Trumoth ch 12. sect 17 For the practise of these ordinances see Nehem. 10. 35 39. how the people brought their first-fruits and tithes to the nouse of God which they shall give The Law saith not how much they should give but leaveth it to the peoples liberality Howbeit in Ezek. 45. 13. it is written This is the Heave-offring which ye shall heave up the sixth part of an Ephah of an Homer of wheat c. that was the sixtieth part for an Homer contained ten Ephahs Ezek. 45 11. whereupon the wise-men of Israel ordained that none should give for his first-fruits lesse than the sixtieth part The great Heave-offring hath no set measure by the Law for it is said in Deut. 18. 4. The first fruits of thy corne c. But a man may not separate save according to the measure which our wise-men have set c. And what measure is that A good eye that is a liberall person one of forty and a meane eye one of fifty an evill eye that is a niggard one of sixty And he may not give lesse than one of sixty Maimony in Trumoth ch 3. s. 1 2. The like measure they set for the other First-fruits brought into the Sanctuary Maim in Biccurim or First-fruits ch 2. s. 17. See the notes on Exod. 22. 29. According hereunto is that saying of Ben Syrach give the Lord his honour with a good eye and diminish not the first-fruits of thine hands Ecclus. 35 8. unto Iehovah They were given unto the Lord in that they were given by his appointment to his Priests for their anointing ve s. 8. and service in his Sanctuary therefore they were holy For this cause the Priests were not to receive them after any base or servile manner but as gifts due to the Lord and to them from him and as the Hebrew Canons shew the Israelites were to give them their portion with honour And it was unlawfull for the Priests or Levites to snatch away the heave-offrings or the tithes yea if they did but aske their portion with their mouth it was unlawfull but they were to receive them with honour For at the Lords table they did eat and at his able they did drinke these gifts were the Lords and he did vouchsafe them unto them as it is written I have given unto thee the charge of mine heave-offrings Num. 18. 8. Maimony in Trumoth ch 12. sect 18 c. given unto thee namely for the Priest to eat drink and anoint himselfe with them according to the ordinary use of the creatures The great Heave-offring is given for meat and for drinke and for anointing for anointing is as drinking as it is said And let it enter as water into his inward part and as oile into his bones Psal. 109. 18. And drinking is comprehended under eating that he is to eat that which is wont to be eaten and drinke that which is wont to be drunke and anoint with that which they use to anoint with not with wine or vineger But they anoint with oile that is cleane and burne in lampes that which is uncleane Maim in Trumoth ch 11. sect 1. Who they were that might eat and who might not eat of these Heave-offrings i● shewed in Levit. 22. 3 c. Vers. 13. The First-fruits These were another gift which the people brought into the Sanctuary made consession over them to the Lord and then gave them to his Priest whereof see Deut. 26. 〈◊〉 c. These were paid before all other duties before the great Heave-offring fore-mentioned or the tithes after spoken of in vers 21. The Hebrews say When men separate the Heave-offring and the Tithe they are to separate them in order as he separateth the First-fruits spoken of in Deut. 26. first of all and after them the great Heave-offring and after that the first tithe which was given to the Levites vers 21. and after that the second tithe or tithe of the poore whereof fee Deut. 14. 22 23 28 29. Maim in Trumoth ch 3. sect 23. shal eat it in Greek shall eat them Of the cleane person in the Priests house see vers 11. The eating of these first-fruits was to be onely in Ierusalem the holy Citie and whosoever eateth of that gift wherein holinesse is blesseth God who sanctified them with the sanctification of Aaron and commanded them to eat so or s● Maim in Biccurim ch 1. sect 2. Vers. 14. devoted thing in Hebr. Cherem of this the Hebrewes say some things were devoted absolutely and such are spoken of here and given to the Priests some things were devoted in speciall unto God or to his Sanctuary and they o● the price of them went to the Sanctuary See the Annotations on Lev. ch 27. vers 28. c. shall be thine The use of these is not restrained to the Sanctuary or holy Citie or to the Priests alone but by the Hebrewes these were the Priests due in every place and were common things Maimony in Biccurim ch 1. sect 7. Vers. 15. that openeth the wombe Hebr. every opening of the wombe which the Greeke translateth every thing that openeth every wombe or matrice Hereby the first-borne onely is meant as the Law sheweth in Exo. 13. 2. and such as were males Deut. 15. 19. Exo. 34. 19. redeeming thou shalt redeeme that is thou shalt surely or in any case redeeme the father was to give the Priest to take the redemption money It figured the redemption of Gods people called the Church of the first-borne which are written in Heaven Hebr. 12. 23. who are not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold c. but with the precious bloud of Christ 1 Pet. 1. 18 19. So being bought from among men they are the First-fruits unto God and to the Lambe Rev. 14. 4. of the uncleane beast this is translated in Greeke of uncleane beasts as implying all sorts elsewhere the Law mentioneth the Asse it may be for an instance Exod. 13. 13. and 34. 20. But the Hebrews say The uncleane bea● spoken of here is the Asse only Maim in Biccurim chap. 12. sect 3. thou shalt redeeme the Asse was to be redeemed with a Lambe or else the owner was to breake the necke of the Asse see the notes on Exod. 13. 13. and 34. 20. The Hebrewes say These two commandements of redeeming it with a Lambe or of breaking the necke of it were of force in every place and at every time and the commandement of redeeming it was before the commandement of
breaking the necke of it The Lambe wherewith it was redeemed was given to the Priest Numb 18 15. The first-borne Asse was unlawfull to be used or made profit of till it were redeemed And if he sold it before it were redeemed the price of it was unlawfull c. Priests and Levites are freed from redeeming the first-borne Asse for it is said in Num. 18. 15. The first-borne of man and she first-borne of the uncleane beast thou shalt redeeme Whosoever was charged to redeem the first-borne of man was likewise for the unclean beast and he that was free frō the one was free from the other Maim in Biccurim ch 12. See other things noted hereabout on Exod. 34. 20. Vers. 16. Redeemed of him or of them meaning the men fore-spoken of the Greeke translateth the redemption of him and Targum Ionathan addeth for explanation of the son of man from a moneth old Hebr. from the son of a moneth See the Annotations on Lev. 27. 6. the silver of five shekels that is five shek●ls of silver This sum was before given for every first-borne Num. 3. 46. 45. twenty gerahs The gerah weighed 16. barley-cornes the shekel of the Sanctuary or holy shekel weighed 320. barley-cornes as is before noted on Levit. 17 25. The Hebrewes hold that this redemption of the son might be either with money or moneyes worth so as it were of moveable goods but not with lands nor with servants nor with bills or writings and if he redeemed his sonne with them he was not redeemed Maim in Biccurim c. 11. sect 6 Now because the tribe of Levi was taken in stead of all the first-borne of Israel Numb 3. therefore they and their seed were freefrom this redemption and so the Hebrew Canons say Priests and Levites are freed from the redemption of their sonnes And further an Israelite that commeth of a woman of Levi is free for the case dependeth not on the father but on the mother as it is said That which openeth the wombe c. Maim ibidem cap. 11. sect 9. Vers. 17. the firstling or the first-borne in Greek the firstlings of cowes c. understand being a male firstling as Exod. 34 19. otherwise it was not sanctified or given to the Priest A firstling which is both male and female hath no holinesse in it at all but it as a female whereto the Priest hath no right Maim in Becoroth ch 2. s. 5. shalt not redeeme thou mayest not give the worth of it or any other for it but the beast it selfe is to be given neither may the owner use or make profit of it or of the ●●oll or any thing thereon Deut. 15. 19. they are holy and therefore must be hallowed or sanctified to the Lord Exod. 13. 2. The Hebrewes say A man is commanded to sanctifie the first-borne of his cleane beast and to say Behold this is holy All are bound to sanctifie the firstling of a cleane beast both Priests Levites and Israelites although the firstling is the Priests If he have a firstling borne he is to offer the bloud fat on the altar and to eat the rest of the flesh according to the Law of the Firstlings Maim in Bechoroth c. 1. s. 4. 7. a savour of rest that is as the Greeke translateth of sweet smell which the Chaldee explaineth that it may be accepted with favour before the LORD But if it were blemished it might not be offred by the Law Lev. 22. 20 ●1 c. What did they then with their blemished firstlings The Law sheweth in Deut. 15. and the Hebrewes explaine it The firstling o● the cleane beast is slaine in the court-yard of the Sanctuary as other light holy things they sprinkle the bloud and burne the fat and the residue of the flesh is eaten by the Priests If the firstling have a blemish whether it be borne with his blemish or a blemish 〈◊〉 on it after it is perfect yet it is the Priests If he 〈◊〉 he may eat it in any place or he may sell it or feed others with it whom he will though it be an keathen for it is a common thing as it is written 〈◊〉 Deut. 15 21 22. And if there be any blemish therein c. thou shalt eat it within thy gates the uncleane and the cleane shall eat it alike as the Roe-bucke and as the Hart and loe that is the Priests goods Maimon in Bechoroth ch 1. s●ct 2 3. Vers. 18. as the wave-broast the parts of the Peace-offrings given to the Priests Levit. 7. 34. Set also before on vers 11. Vers. 19. All the heave-offrings the Greeke and Chaldee expound it Every separated thing This conclusion implieth all other holy gifts expressed in other places of the Law though not particulared here And this sheweth Gods bounty to his Priests in allowing them so large meanes of livelihood for their service of him that they might be incouraged in the Law of the Lord as is said in 2 Chro. 31. 4. There was none of them that did shut the doores of Gods Sanctuary or kindle fire on his altar for nought Malac. 1 10. And when the people neglected their dutie in not giving such things as were appointed then was the house of God for saken and the godly governours looked to the redresse hereof Nehem. 13. 10 11 12 c. The Hebrew Doctors write of 24. severall gifts which God bestowed on the Priests with the order and use of them all Foure and twenty gifts were given to the Priests and they are all expressed in the Law and concerning them all was the covenant made with Aaron And whosoever eateth of any gift wherein holinesse is blesseth God who sanctified him with the holinesse of Aaron and commanded him to eat so and so Eight of these gifts the Priests did eat no where but in the Sanctuary within the wall of the Court-yard And fine gifts they did not eat but in Ierusalem within the wal● of the citie And five gifts were not due unto them by the Law but in the land of Israel only And five gifts were due unto them both within the land a● a without the land And one gift was due unto them from the Sanctuary The eight gifts which they did not eat but within the Sanctuary were these 1 The flesh of the Sin-offring whether fowle or beast Levit. 6. 25 26. 2 The flesh of the Trespasse-offring Lev. 7. 1 6. 3 The Peace-offrings of the congregation Levit. 23. 19 20. 4 The remainder of the Omor or Sheafe Levit. 23. 10 c. 5 The remnants of the Meat-offrings of the Israelites Levit 6. 16. 6 The two Loaves Levit. 23. 17. 7 The Shew-bread Levit. 24. 9. 8 The Lepers log of oyle Levit. 14. 10. c. These were not eaten but in the Sanctuary The five which they might not eat but in Ierusalem and before that within the campe of Israel to which Ierusalem afterward was answerable as is noted on Numb 2. 27. were these 1 The
brest and shoulder of the Peace-offrings Levit. 7. 31. 34. 2 The Heave-offring of the sacrifice of confession Levit. 7. 12. 14. 3 The Heave-offring of the Nazirites Ramme Numb 6. 17. 20. 4 The First long of the cleane beast Num. 18. 15. Deut. 15. 19 20. 5 The First-fruits Num. 18. 13. These were not eaten but in Ierusalem The five things due from the land of Israel onely were 1 The Heave-offring or First-fruits Numb 18. 12. 2 The Heave-offring of the Tithe Numb 18. 28. 3 The Cake Numb 15. 20. And these three were holy 4 The First of the Fleece Deut. 18. 4. 5 The field of possession Numb 35. and both of these were common These were not due unto them by the Law save in the Land of Israel The five things due to the Priests in every place were 1 The gifts of the beasts slaine Deut. 18. 3. 2 The redemption of the First-borne son Numb 18. 15. 3 The Firstling of the Asse Exod. 34. 20. Num. 18. 4 The restitution of that which is taken by rapine from a stranger Num. 5. 8. 5 The devoted things Num. 18. 14 These five are common things in all respects Th● gift due unto them from the Sanctuary was 1 The skinnes of the Burnt-offrings Levit. 7. 8. And the same Law was for the skinnes of the other most holy things they all were the Priests The gifts which the females had part in as well as the male Priests were five 1 The Heave-offring or first fruits 2 The Heave-offring of the tithe 3. The cake 4 The gifts of the beast Deut. 18. 3. 5. And the first of the fleece Maimony in Biccurim ch 1. sect 1. c. a covenant of salt that is a stable firme and incorruptible covenant So the kingdome over Israel was given to David and to his sonnes by a covenant of salt 2. Chron. 13. 5. and there the Greeke explaineth it an everlasting covena 〈…〉 Vers. 20. Thou shalt have This concerneth not so much Aaron himselfe who died before he came into the Land Numb 20. 28. as his posterity and not them only but all the Levites as alter Moses sheweth in Deut. 18. 1. The Priests the Levites all the tribe of Levi shall have no part nor inheritance with Israel inheritance in their land which was divided by lot to the other tribes according as God numbred them when the tribe of Levi was numbred apart Numb 26. 53 55 57 62. Notwithstanding they had cities to dwell in and suburb given from the other tribes Num. 35. and in Ezek. 48. 10. c. an holy oblation out of the spiritual land is given to the Priests and Levites a part or a portion a share among them This word though often it be spoken of a part or portion of land as in Ios. 15. 13. and 19. 9. and 18. 5. c. yet also it is meant of a part in the spoiles or prey as in Numb 31. 36. 1 Sam. 30. 24. And so it seemeth to be intended here of the spoiles gotten by warre of the Canaanites which were of great worth as appeareth by Deut. 2. 35. and 3. 7. and 6. 11. so that Iosua said to some of the people Returne with much riches unto your tents and with very much cattell and with silver and with gold and with brasse and with iron and with very much-raiment c. Ios. 22. 8. yet Levi might have none because the Lord had given him his portion in the holy things and hee was to war another warfare in the Lords Sanctuarie Numb 4. 23. and according to the Apostles doctrine No man that warreth intangleth himselfe with the affaires of this life that he may please him who hath chosen him to be a souldier 2 Tim. 2. 4. O● this matter the Hebrews say All the tribe of 〈◊〉 are warned that they have no inheritance in the land of Canaan likewise they are warned that they take no part of the spoile at the time when they conquer the cities Deut. 18. 1. And a sonne of Levi that taketh a part of the spoile is to be beaten and if he have received an inheritance in the land they are to taken away from him It seemeth unto me that these things are not spoken but of the land which was promised by covenant to Abraham Isaak and Iakob c. But all other lands which any of the Kings of Israel should subdue the Priests and Levites were for those lands and the spoiles of them like all other Israelites And why had Levi no right of inheritance in the land of Israel and spoiles thereof with his brethren Because he was separated to serve the LORD and to 〈◊〉 ster unto him and to teach his right wayes and his just judgements unto many as Deut. 33. 10. Therefore were they separated from the wayes of the world they wage not war like other Israelites neither have they inheritance c. but they are the Lords power 〈…〉 written Blesse Lord his power Deut. 33. 11. and the blessed God himselfe is their reward as he saith I am thy part and thine inheritance Maimonytom 3. Treat of the Release and Iubilee ch 13. sect 10 11 12. So in Ezek. 44. 28. God saith of the Priests yee shall give them no possession in Israel I am their possession 1 I am thy part both by the g●ts fore-appointed as is said in Deut. 18. 1. the Fire-offrings of Iehovah and his inheritance shall they eat and by other blessings wherewith he would abundantly recompence their worldly want administring unto them his heavenly graces Hereupon the godly testified their faith and hope in God by these and such like speeches God is my part for 〈…〉 Psal. 73. 26. Thou art my part in the land of the living Psal. 1. 42. 6. Iehovah is my part saith my 〈…〉 therefore will I hope in him Lament 3. 24. 〈…〉 at thy word 〈◊〉 that findeth great spoile Psalm 119. 162. Vers. 21. And to the sonnes of Levi Now followeth the Law concerning the Levites who were joyned to the Priests in service and so in provision for their maintenance And this word And Ch●zkuni her 〈…〉 teth as an addition to that which went before saying that the covenant of salt for ever was to the Levites also all the tenth or all the tithes This is the first tithe which the Israelites payed to the Levites after which they separated a second tithe which they themselves did eat before the Lord the first yeare and the second and every third yeare gave it to the Levites and poore whereof see Deut. 14. 22 23. c. Touching this the Hebrewes say that the Israelites After they had separated the great Heave-offring or First-fruits spoken of in Numb 18. 12. they separated one of ten out of that which remained and this is called the first tithe and it is that which is spoken of in Numb 18. 24. and this tithe was for the males and females of the Levites They pay no tithe but of the choice or best
as it is said in Numb 18. 30. When ye have heaved the fat thereof c. as the tithes which the Levites separate is to be of the fat thereof so the tithe which the Israelites separate from the floore or wine-presse is to be of the fat They pay not the tithe but by measure or by weight or by number He that separateth this tithe blesseth God first as they use to blesse for other commandements so he blesseth for the second tithe and for the poore mens tithe and for the tithe of the tithe hee blesseth for every one severally Maim tom 3. Treat of Tithes chap. 1. sect 1. 13 14 16. Vers. 22. not come nigh any more to serve in the Tabernacle as they did in the rebellion of Korah Num. 16. to beare sinne that is lest they suffer the punishment for their sinne So in vers 23. beare their iniquity as in v. 1. to die or and die see the notes on Gen. 2. 3. this sheweth the punishment to be death the Greeke translateth it deadly or death-bringing sinne Vers. 23. beare their iniquity that is beare the punishment of their owne iniquity if they transgresse and of the peoples if they suffer them to transgresse Thus Sol. Iarchi expoundeth it They the Levites shall beare the iniquity of the Israelites for it is their duty to warne strangers from comming neere unto them Vers. 24. Heave up in Greeke and Chaldee separate unto the Lord so in vers 26. This sheweth the tithes to be an oblation to the Lord and a signe of the Israelites homage subjection and thankfulnesse unto him for his blessings And upon this ground the Apostle proveth Melchisedek to be a greater Priest than Abraham or Aaron because Abraham and all the Levites Priests in his Ioynes payed tithes to Melchisedek Gen. 14. Heb. 7. Now consider how great this man was unto whom even the Patriarch Abraham gave the tenth of the spoiles Heb. 7. 4. Vers. 26. the tithe of the tithe or a tenth part of the tenth Vers. 27. as the fulnesse or as the plenty that is the plentifull increase or the full that is ripe liquour the Greeke translateth it as the separated thing Sol. Iarchi saith Fulnesse meaneth the ripe fruit which is full See the notes on Exod. 22. 29. where this word is also used for Full ripe fruit From hence the Hebrewes gather that seeing the Levites first tithes out of which they payed the Priests tithes were as the corne of the floore and liquour of the presse therefore they were as common things The first tithe is lawfull to be 〈◊〉 by Israelites and lawfull to be eaten in uncleannesse for there is in it no holinesse at all and wheresoever holinesse or redemption of the tithe is spoken of as in Levit 27. it is not meant but of the second 〈…〉 they count the first tithes as common things because it is said And your heave-offring shall be reckoned unto you as the corn of the floore c. as the floore and wine-presse are common for every thing so the first tithe out of which the heave-offring is taken is common for every thing Maimony 〈◊〉 of Tithe chap. 1. s. 2. This is to be understood after the Levites had separated the tenth of the tithe then the rest should be common like the corne of the floore as is explained in vers 30. Vers. 28. Thus you also or So you also you Levites as well as the other Israelites though you have no inheritance in the land yet shall you honour the Lord with an heave-offring out of your first tithe and it shall be reckoned or imputed unto you as if you had lands and possessions and offred tithes out of them to Aaron and so to his posteritie the Priests as was observed in the ages following as it is written And the Priest the sonne of Aaron shall be with the Levites when the Levites take tithes and the Levites shall bring up the tithe of the tithe unto the house of our God to the chambers into the treasure-house Nehem. 10. 38. Thus also are we to understand the Apostle when he saith that the Priests the sonnes of Levi who receive the office of Priest-hood have a commandement to take tithes of the people according to the Law c. Heb. 7. 5. that the Levites tooke them of the people immediately and the Priest mediately in taking the tithe of the tithe from the Levites as this place sheweth compared with Nehem. 10. 37 38. Vers. 29. Out of all your gifts This is more generall and seemeth to imply besides the tenth of their tithe the tenth also of other things as of their owne ground the suburbs and fields which were given to the Levites Num. 35. 4. So Chazkunt here saith Out of all your gifts yee shall heave up to teach that even of the fruit that grew in the fields of the suburbs of the Levites cities they were bound to give unto the Priests c. And it is proportionable that as God was to be honoured with the tithes of other mens lands so of the Levites that they also hereby might signifie their homage and thankfulnesse to God Yea the Hebrews bring the Priests themselves also under this dutie saying Levites and Priests doe separate the first tithe for to separate out of it the heave-offring of the tithe And so the Priests doe separate the other heave-offrings the tithe for themselves that the Priests may receive of all Lest they should eat their fruits untithed the Scripture saith Thus you also shall heave up Numb 18. 28. which we have heard expounded thus YOV these are the Levites ALSO YOV this implieth the Priests Maim Treat of Tithe ch 1. sect 3. the fat that is as the Chaldee expoundeth the best or fairest in Greeke the first-fruits see before on vers 12. 21. So Chazkuni here saith Of all the best and of all the fairest thereof yee shall separate out of it the hallowed part thereof that it may be an heave-offering Vers. 30. the revenue in Greeke the fruit of the threshing-floore This word revenue as the Hebrewes distinguish it is corne after it is cared and after it is threshed and fanned it is called dagan corne Maimony tom 1. in Beracoth ch 3. sect 1. Vers. 31. in every place Sol. Iarchi explaineth it though it be in the place of buriall and that was an uncleane place The first tithes therfore which were paid to the Levi●es might be eaten by them as common things in every place but the second tithe which the owners separated after the first and did eat themselves might not be eaten every where but before the Lord only that is within the citie of Ierusalem after the Temple was built therein See Deut. 14. 22 23. c. your house that is your houshold as the Chaldee translateth it the men of your house a reward or wages and so your due for your service so the Apostle speaking of the honour due to the Ministers
this time when the sonne is a sonne of thirteene yeares and one day and the daughter is a daughter of twelve yeares and one day although they say we know not to whose name we have vowed their words are established and their vowes are vowes c. And this is the time of vowes spoken of in every place for as much as they are come to the yeares of great or aged persons their vowes are stablished Maimon tom 3. Treat of Vowes chap. 11. sect 1 3 4. Vers. 4. hold his peace at her or keepe silence at it though hee doe not by words app●●v yet by silence hee seemeth to consent therefore her vow standeth firme shall stand that is shall be stable firme and sure as the field which Abraham bought was said to stand when by sale it was made sure Gen. 23. 17. 20. So ones counsell or word is said to stand when it abideth firme Prov. 19. 21. Esay 14. 24. and 40. 8. Ier. 44. 29. Vers. 5. disallow her or disallow nulli●●e it to wit her vow so after the day that he heareth whether it be in the day that she vowed or many daies after that her father heareth of it If she vow and wait many daies and afterward her father or her husband heare of it then hee may breake it in the day that he he●reth c. as it is said In the day that he heareth and not in the day that shee voweth onely Maimony in Vowes chap. 12. sect 16. will mercifully forgive her in Greeke will purge or cleanse her her sin in vowing when she was not in her owne power but in her fathers shall be forgiven but she may not performe her vow which by her fathers authoritie is disanulled So for her husband in like fort vers 12. Vers. 6. if having she have a h●sband Hebr. if being she be to a man that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at all maried or the utterance of her lips or pronunciation that which she hath pronounced or distinctly uttered to wit by oath as appeaseth by the word Or which distinguisheth it from her vowes and by that which followeth which she hath bound upon her soule that is by oath as in vers 2. and 10. So the pronouncing with the lips is joyned with swearing in Lev. 5. 4 and Chazkuni here saith the pronunciation is not meant but of an oath Vers. 8. he disallow her or disallow it that is signifie his disallowance of her vow or oath The Hebrewes say A man maketh void or establisheth the words of his wife or of his daughter in any language although she know it not for it is not of necessity that the woman should heare the making void or the establishmēt c. He that maketh void the words of his daughter or of his wife it is necessary that he utter it with his lips and if he make it void in his heart only hee doth not make it void Maim in Vowes chap. 13. sect 1. 7. Vers. 9. put away to wit from her husband as is expressed in Levit. 21. 7. that is divorced shall stand she is to performe her vow and this as the Hebrewes thinke though she be afterward maried As A woman which hath no husband and which is not under her fathers power if she say Loe such flesh be unlawfull to me after thirty daies and she be married within thirty dayes although at the time when the vow beginneth shee be under the power of a husband he cannot make it void because at the time of the vow making she was not under his power And of this it is said in Num. 30. 9. But the vow of a widow and of her that is put away c. Maim in Vowes chap. 13. sect 16. Vers. 10. in her husbands house after that shee is married and in her husbands power But what if shee were betrothed onely and remained yet in her fathers house Of this case the Hebrewes say A maid that is betrothed none can make ther vow void but her father and her husband joyntly together And if the one of them alone doe make it void it is not made void If her espoused husband die she returneth into the power of her father and whatsoever she voweth her father may make void as before her espousals If her father die after that she is betrothed and she make a vow after his death her husband cannot make it void for an husband maketh not the vowes of his wife void untill shee be come into the wedding chamber or married Maim in Vowes chap. 11. sect 9 10. Vers. 11. shall stand shee is to keepe her vow though after her husbands death A young woman whom her father hath given in mariage if she become a widow or be divorced after mariage loe she is as an Orphan whiles her father liveth and her father cannot make her vowes of none effect although she be yet but a young woman Maim ibidem sect 25. Vers. 12. hath utterly made them void or hath any waies made them void Hebr. making void hath made them void so in vers 15. Vers. 13. oath of bond that is binding oath or bond confirmed with an oath to afflict the soule by abstenance fasting c. See the notes on Levit. 16. 29. This seemeth to be added for amplification rather than limitation or restraint howbeit the Hebrewes from hence gather that although the father may disanull all his daughters vowes of what sort soever yet the husband hath not power to disanull the vowes of his wife vnlesse they be of this sort to wit vowes or bonds to afflict the soule c. Sol. Iarchi on Numb 30. and Maimony in Vowes chap. 12. sect 1. may establish it or may make it stand shall confirme it Some understand these words to be a commandement and translate thus Let her husband establish it or let her husband make it void to wit out of hand and let him not deferre it till afterward Vers. 14. altogether hold his peace Hebr. holding his peace shall hold his peace or keepe silence from day to day and doe not disanull it the same day that he heareth it Vers. 15. shall utterly make them void or shall any waies make them of none effect see this phrase in vers 12. shall beare her iniquitie that is shall beare the punishment of her iniquitie God will require her sinne at his hand From hence wee learne saith Sol. Iarchi that he which is a cause of scandall or offence unto his neighbour shall cone in his stead unto all punishments CHAP. XXXI 1 The Israelites are commanded to take vengeance on the Midianites 5 Twelve thousand of the tribes of Israel with Phinehas the Priest are sent to warre 7 They slay all the males and the five kings of Midian and Balaam the sonne of Beor 9 They take the women and children captives and the spoile of their goods and cartell and burne their cities 13 Moses is wroth with the Officers for saving the women alive 19 How the souldiers with
which two phrases expound one another as is noted on Gen. 12. 16. So after in vers 7. and 12. the great sea so called in respect of the lesser inland seas as the salt sea vers 3. and the sea of Chinnereth vers 11. This great sea is commonly called the Mediterrane sea and the border thereof so the Chaldee here translateth it supplying the word thereof and so it is Englished in Ios. 15. 12. 47. The Greeke interpreteth it the great sea shall bound or shall limit Vers. 7. you shall point out or shall marke out shall designe in Greeke yee shall measure out so in vers 8. and 10. mount Hor This is not that mount Hor where Aaron died which was South-ward in the edge of Edoms land Num. 33. 37 38. but another mountaine on the North side of Canaan which in Ios. 13. 5. is called mount Hermon and neere the entring into Hamath as mount Hor is here And Hermon had many names as Moses sheweth in Deut. 3. 9. and 4. 48. Vers. 8. the entrance of Hamath or the entring into Chamath this Hamath in Greeke Emath is in Amos 6. 2. called Hemath the great See the Annotations on Num. 13. 21. Hamath is also mentioned among the Northerne borders of the land in Ezek. 47. 16 17. Zedad in Greeke Sedada so in Ezek. 47. 15. Vers. 9. Hazar-●nan in Ezek. 47. 17. Hazarenon in Greeke Arsenain This was the North-East part of the land Vers. 10. Shepham called in 1 Sam. 30. 28. Siphmoth in Greeke Sepphama by Targum Ionathan and some other it is called Apamiah Vers. 11. Riblah a citie in the land of Hamath where God executed his judgements on the Kings of Iudah for their sinnes by the Kings of Egypt and of Babylon 2 King 23. 33. and 25. 6. 20 21. Ier. 39. 5 6. east of Ain Ain by interpretation is aneie or a fountaine and so is translated here in Greeke Fountaines and by the old Latine interpreter the fountaine Daphnis the side or the shoulder that is the shore of the sea the sea of Chinnereth called in Greeke Chenereth in Chaldee Ginnosar and in the New Testament the lake of Gennesaret Luk. 5. 1. and in 1 Mac. 11. 67. there is mentioned the water of Gennesar And the countrey adjoyning was called the land of Gennesaret Mat. 14. 34. Mar. 6. 53. This sea is also named the sea of Galilee the sea of Tibertas Ioh. 6. 1. a lake and sea are the same as they ran into the lake Luk. 8. 33. that is into the sea Mat. 8. 32. Of the sea Chinnereth there is mention also in Ios. 12. 3. 13. 27. of a citie so named Ios. 19. 35. and of the countrey Ios. 11. 2. 1 King 15. 20. It is thought to be called in Chaldee Ginnosar and Genesar of Princely gardens which were in those parts This sea had store of fishes and from hence our Lord tooke his foure first Apostles fishers of Galilce and made them fishers of men by the preaching of his Gospell Mat. 4. 18 19 20 21. On this sea Christ walked and allayed the waves thereof Mark 6. 45. 48. 51. 53. Iohn 6. 16 21. and here he appeared to his Disciples after his resurrection at what time they tooke at one draught an hundred fiftie and three great fishes Iohn 21. 1 11. Vers. 12. Iordan in Hebrew Iarden in Greeke and in the New Testament Iordanes It was the goodliest river of all Canaan famous thorowout the Scriptures The waters of this river God did cut off and made them stand upon an heape at that time when Iordan over-flowed all his bankes untill his people Israel passed over it on dry groūd into the land of Canaan Ios. 3. 13 17. Elijah and Elisha the Prophets divided also the waters thereof and went over on drie ground 2 King 2. 8. 14. Naaman the Syrian washing seven times in it by the word of the Prophet was cleansed of his leprosie 2 King 5. 10. 14. In this river our Lord Iesus him-selfe and the nation of the Iewes were baptized Marke 1. 5. 9. salt sea or sea of salt See vers 3. The river Iordan ranne all along by the land of Canaan on the East side from the North end of the countrey to the South beginning at the foot of mount Lebanon where it is said to spring out of two fountaines the one called Ior and the other Dan and passed on to the lake of Merom by the waters whereof Ioshua vanquished the Canaanites Ios. 11. 4 5 7 8. and from thence it ran and emptied it selfe into the sea of Chinnereth forementioned and from that sea it passed along till it ended at the salt sea here spoken of where also the limits of the land began in vers 3. The promised land being thus inclosed and guarded with the maine sea Westward the inland seas and the river Iordan Eastward and at each end North and South with mountaines fore-shewed Gods providence towards his peple for their safe defence on every side And so it is written As the mountaines are round about Ierusalem so the LORD is round about his people from henceforth even for ever Psal. 125. 2. Vers. 14. sonnes of the Reubenites Hebr. of the Reubenite and after of the Gadite which the Greeke and Chaldee translate sonnes of Reuben and of Gad. Of these two tribes receiving their inheritance see Numb 32. Vers. 17. shall divide the land by inheritance unto you or shall inherit the land for you that is shall take possession of the land for you and in your names and after divide it unto you as in vers 29. See vers 18. Eleazar the Priest and Ioshua in Greeke Iesus These were the two chiefe Princes and both of them figures of Christ who divideth to his people the inheritance of the kingdom of heaven the one figuring him in his Priesthood the other in his kingdome for if Iesus that is Ioshua had given them rest then would he not afterward have spoken of another day Hebr. 4. 8. The Priest had an hand in parting the inheritance to signifie that it was an holy worke and a shadow of heavenly things Also that if difficultie did arise he might aske counsell for Ioshua after the judgement of Vrim before Iehovah Numb 27. 21. And likewise for that the Priests and Levites though they had no inheritance as the other tribes yet had they cities and suburbs from among their brethren Numb 35. which also the Levites claimed of Eleazar the Priest and of Ioshua and the other Princes and had the cities and suburbs given them by lot before the Lord Ios. 21. Thus also the truth of Gods promise to Abraham was manifested for hee had said that in the fourth generation they should returne from their affliction and servitude into the land of Canaan Gen. 15. 14 15 16. And so it came to passe for Kohath the sonne of Levi was one of them that went with Iakob into Egypt Gen. 46. 11. 26. of Koath proceeded Amram
that every one that smiteth a soule by errour may flee thither And if he smite him with an instrument of iron and he die he is a man-slayer the man-slayer shall be surely put to death And if he smite him with a stone of the hand wherewith he may die and he die he is a man-slayer the man-slayer shal be surely put to death Or if hee smite him with an instrument of wood of the hand wherwith he may die and he die he is a man-slayer the man-slayer shall be surely put to death The avēger of the bloud he shal put to death the man-slayer when he meeteth him he shal put him to death And if he thrust him of hatred or have cast upon him by laying of wait and he die Or in enmity smite him with his hand and he die the smiter shall be surely put to death he is a man-slayer the avenger of the bloud shall put to death the man-slayer when he meeteth him But if he thrust him suddenly without enmity or have cast upon him any instrument without laying of wait Or with any stone wherewith he may die without seeing him and hee hath caused it to fall upon him and he die and he was not his enemie nor a seeker of his evill Then the Congregation shall judge betweene the smiter and the avenger of the bloud according to these judgements And the Congregation shall deliver the man-slayer out of the hand of the avenger of the bloud and the Congregation shall restore him unto the citie of his refuge whither hee was fled and hee shall abide in it untill the death of the great Priest which was anointed with the oyle of holinesse And if the man-slayer going shall goe forth out of the border of the citie of his refuge whither hee was fled And the avenger of the bloud finde him without the border of the citie of his refuge and the avenger of the bloud shall slay the man-slayer no bloud shal be unto him Because he should have abidden in the citie of his refuge untill the death of the great Priest and after the death of the great Priest the man-slayer shall returne into the land of his possession And these things shall be unto you for a statute of judgement through-out your generations in all your dwellings Every one that smiteth a soule by the mouth of witnesses the man-slayer shall be slaine but one witnesse shall not answer against a soule to die And ye shall take no ransome for the soule of the man-slayer which is guilty of death but he shall be surely put to death Neither shall yee take ransome for him that is fled unto the citie of his refuge to returne to dwel in the land until the death of the Priest And ye shall not pollute the land wherein yee are for bloud it polluteth the land and for the land there shal be no expiation for the bloud that is shed therein but by the bloud of him that shed it And thou shalt not defile the land which ye inhabit in within which I doe dwell for I Iehovah dwel among the sonnes of Israel Annotations THat they give or and let them give unto the Levites The Lord having given order in Chap. 34. for dividing the land unto Israel commandeth here a portion to bee given out of all their possessions unto him which he bestoweth on his Ministers the Levites for a part of their livelihood The equitie of which law both for honouring the Lord with our substance Prov. 3. 9. and for maintaining his Ministers Gal. 6. 6. is perpetuall Therefore speaking of the Church under the Gospell according to these legall figures hee saith When yee shall divide by lot the land for inheritance yee shall offer an oblation unto the LORD an holy portion of the land c. The holy portion of the land shal be for the Priests the Ministers of the Sanctuary which shall come neere to minister unto the LORD c. Ezek. 45. 1 4 5. and 48. 9 10 13. suburbs to the cities or as the Greeke translateth the suburbs of the cities which suburbs are called in Hebrew Migrash that is a place cast out as lying without the walls of the citie in Chaldee R●v●ch that is a Space in Greeke Proásteia as lying before the citie and in vers 3. Aphorismata as being separated from the citie and in vers 5. homora confines or limits Vers. 3. their goods or their substance their gathered goods see the notes on Gen. 12. 5. it is a generall word and sometime implieth cattell also as 2 Chron. 31. 3. and 32. 29. and 35. 7. beasts in Hebrew Chajah which is a generall name for living things but here translated in Greeke foure-footed beasts And from hence the Hebrews gather that they gave the Levites a place of buriall to every citie without these bounds or suburbs for they buried not their dead in the suburbs of their cities because it is said AND FOR ALL THEIR LIVING THINGS they gave it for the living and not for buriall Maimony Treat of Release and Iubilee chap. 13. sect 3. That they used in Israel to bury their dead without the cities appeareth by Luke 7. 11 12. Vers. 4. a thousand cubits The Greeke saith two thousand cubits as it is in the verse following where the Lord speaketh of two thousand cubits so the thousand cubits here mentioned some thinke to be meant of holy measure double so much as the common measure and that the latter doe expound the former The Hebrewes explaine it thus The suburbs of the cities are expressed in the Law to be three thousand cubits on every side from the wall of the citie and outward Num. 35. 4 5. The first thousand are the suburbs and the two thousand which they measured without the suburbs were for fields and vineyards Maim Treat of the Release and Iubilee chap. 13. sect 2. Vers. 5. without the citie by the citie the Hebrewes understand here the citie with the suburbs that is the thousand cubits forementioned which were for their cattell and these two thousand moe for fields and vineyards as is before noted East side or East quarter in Chaldee East winde See the notes on Numb 34. 3. Sea side that is the West side as the Chaldee saith the West winde Moses useth to call the West the Sea as is noted on Gen. 12. 8. So in Numb 34. 6. Vers. 6. of refuge that citie is called in Hebrew Miklat of gathering because the man-slayer was there gathered and detained in Greeke Phugad●nterion a place of flight and exile in Chaldee Shezabuth of deliverance and preservation The six cities appointed for refuge were these Bezer of the Reubenites country Ramoth in Gilead of the Gadites and Golan in Basan of the Manassites these three Moses separated Deut. 4. 41 43. the other three appointed by Ioshua were Kedesh in Galilee in mount Naphtali Shechem in mount Ephraim and Kirjath-arba which is Hebron in the mount of Iudah Ios. 20. 7. the
of the avenger of bloud Deut. 19. 12. Wherefore the Chaldee in stead of meeteth him saith When he shall be condemned unto him by judgement So in vers 21. Vers. 20. of hatred which is inveterate anger and inward grudge differing from enmitie or open hostility spoken of in v. 21. He that hateth dissembleth with his lips and layeth up deceit within him Prov. 26. 24. The Hebrewes say He that hateth if he kill by errour or unadvisedly he is not kept in the citie of refuge as it is said And he was not his enemy Numb 35. 23. c. And who is he that hateth hee that for enmities sake speaketh not unto him for three dayes space Maim Treat of Murder chap. 6. sect 10. cast upon him to wit any instrument as is expressed in vers 22. and so the Greeke explaineth it here by laying of wait with intent and purpose of evill when occasion is offered so Saul laid wait or hunted for Davids soule 1 Sam. 24. 11. the Iewes for Christ Luke 11. 54. and for Pauls life Act. 23. 21. Vers. 21. enmity or hostility ill will open and professed Vers. 22. suddenly or unawares and as it were by chance Vers. 23. with any stone that is have smitten him with any stone as in vers 17. wherewith he may die in Chaldee which is sufficient that he may die therewith See the notes on vers 18. Vers. 25. of the great Priest a figure of Christ called the great Priest over the house of God Hebr. 10. 21. and the great High-Priest that is passed into the heavens Hebr. 4. 14. who is the Mediator of the new Testament that by meanes of death for the redemption of the transgressions under the first Testament they which are called might receive the promise of the eternall inheritance Heb. 9. 15. As the high Priests whiles they lived by their service and sacrificing made atonement for the sinnes of the people especially one day in the yeare Levit. 16. wherein they figured the worke of Christ for us so at the high Priests death by releasing such as were exiled for unwitting murder there was a shadow of redemption in Israel Vers. 26. going shall goe forth that is shall at any time upon any occasion goe forth So he was not only exiled from his owne citie but confined as a prisoner within the limits of the citie of refuge The Hebrewes say Hee might never goe out of the citie of his refuge no not though it were for a thing commanded as to worship at the solemne feasts or the like or for to beare witnesse whether it were in money matters or to testifie in case of life and death c. Maim Treat of Murder chap. 7. sect 8. Vers. 27. without the border so not the citie onely but the borders and limits of the territories thereof were his refuge Every citie of refuge the borders thereof are a refuge as well as it c. and if the avenger of bloud kill him there he is to be killed for him Notwithstanding though the border be a refuge yet the man-slayer may not dwell in it for it is said in vers 25. AND HE SHALL ABIDE IN IT in it the citie and not in the border of it Maim ibid. chap. 8. sect 11. no bloud shall be unto him that is the avenger shall have no bloud imputed to him or as the Greeke translateth it hee shall not bee guiltie to wit of bloud-shed Vers. 28. into the land of his possession into his owne citie or village that part of the land which he possessed It is holden by the Hebrewes that although by the high Priests death atonement was made for him yet he never returned to the princely state or dignitie that hee had in the citie but was debased from his greatnesse all dis dayes because that great scandall came by his hand Maimon ibid. chap. 7. sect 14. Moreover they say A man-s●ayer upon whom sentence is past that he shall be exi●ed if he die before he go into exile they carry his bones thither And a man-slayer that dieth in the citie of his refuge they bury him there and when the high Priest dieth they carry the man-slayers bones from thence unto the sepulchres of his fathers Ibid. sect 3. Vers. 30. Every one that smiteth a soule that is who so killeth a person to wit him that is a murderer by the mouth that is by the testimony of witnesses which after is explained of two witnesses or three witnesses Deut. 17. 6. and 19. 15. See the Annotations there not answer that is not testifie as the Greeke and Chaldee translate it meaning to have the sentence of death confirmed against him See Deut. 19. 15. to die that is to cause him to die or that he should die See the notes on Gen. 6. 19. Vers. 31. the soule of the man-slayer that is the life of the murderer to redeeme him from death The Iudges are warned that they take no ransome of the murderer and though he could give all the weal●h that is in the world and though the avenger of bloud should be willing to free him for the soule of him that is killed is not the possession of the avenger of bloud but the possession of the holy blessed God Maimon Treat of Murder ch 1. sect 4. guiltie of death Hebr. which is wicked to die that is as the Greeke and Chaldee explaine it guilty or condemned to die According to this phrase David saith When he shall be judged let him goe forth wicked that is condemned Psal. 109. 7. Vers. 32. for him that is fled Hebr. to flee which is explained by Iarchi and others for him that is fled in the land in the land of his possession as in vers 28. Vers. 33. polluteth or impiously staineth foulely deformeth the land This word which Moses here useth of murder and the Prophets after apply unto spirituall whoredome or idolatrie Ierem. 3. 2 9. and ●dolatrous bloud-shed Psal. 106. 38. sheweth the hainousnesse of this sinne that defileth not only him that doth it but the whole land if it be not avenged Hereupon the Hebrewes say Thou hast not any thing concerning which the Law giveth such a charge as for shedding of bloud as it is said in Numb 35. 33. And ye shall not pollute the land c. Maimony Treat of Murder chap. 1. sect 4. the bloud of him that shed it if it were wilfull murder or by the death of the high Priest if it were unwilling man-slaughter Hereupon it is said A man that doth violence to the bloud of any person shall flie to the pit let no man stay him Prov. 28. 17. Vers. 34. I doe dwell the land of Israel was the LORDS land Hos. 9. 3. and by his dwelling there among his people was sanctified and called the holy land Zach. 2. 12. and though he dwelt most specially in his Sanctuary there which afterward was in Ierusalem Psal. 74. 2. and 1 35. 21. yet the whole land was sanctified by
tribe of Levi onely but every particular man of all that come into the world whose spirit maketh him willing and giveth him understanding with knowledge to separate himselfe to stand before the Lord to minister unto him and to serve him to know the Lord and walke aright as God did make him and that he breake from off his necke the yoake of many inventions which the sonnes of Adam have sought out Eccles 7. 29. behold this man sanctifieth himselfe holy of holies and the Lord will be his part and his inheritance for ever and for ever and ever and will vouchsafe unto him in this world the things that shall be sufficient for him even as hee did vouchsafe unto the Priests the Levites Behold David saith in Ps. 16. 5. The LORD is the portion of my part and of my cup thou susteinest my Lot Maimony in the Release and Iubilee ch 13. s. 13. Vers. 3. the Priests due Hebr. the judgment or right of the Priests which the Chaldee expoundeth due unto the Priests and so the word judgment is elsewhere used for dutie Psal. 81. 5. slay a slaughter that is kill any beast for common food The originall word generally signifieth no more than to kill a beast as is noted on Gen. 31. 54. and in speciall to kill for sacrifice unto God But the large meaning is here to be chosen for it agreeth not with the former lawes in Leviticus touching sacrifices that the Priests should have the cheekes c. and the generall exposition of the Hebrewes is that this is meant of common meats oxe or sheepe implying goats also for that is usually comprehended under the name sheepe or lamb that hee or and he that is every one of the people shall give give unto the Priest Hereupon these are called gifts Of them the Hebrewes write It is commanded to give of every cleane beast that is killed unto the Priest the shoulder the two cheekes and the maw Deut. 18. 3. and these in every place are called gifts And this commandement is in use continually whether when there is a Temple or not and in every place whether within the land of Israel or without it and it is to be of common things not of things sanctified If it bee doubtfull whether the beast be a firstling these gifts must be given out of it if it be a firstling that is all the Priests Num. 18. 15. and if it bee not a firstling these gift 〈◊〉 out of it for the Priest Gifts are due of none but cleane beasts onely as it is said WHETHER OXE OR SHEEPE c. whether it bee killed for mans meat or for to feed infidels or dogs or for medicine these gifts are due of it If a Proselyte have a beast killed if it were before he was joyned he is free if after he were joyned hee is bound to give these gifts In a place where no Priests be they may priz● the gifts and eat them and give the price to any Priest that they will If he will give these gifts to one Priest hee may or if he will divide them he may not give halfe the maw to one or halfe the shoulder but the shoulder to one and the maw to another and the cheekes to them both that is to each of them one If a priest will sell his gifts he may or give them to an Infidell c. for there is no holinesse in them at all The Priest may not violently take the gifts nor aske them with his mouth but he receives them when they are given him with honour c. Maimony in Biccurim or first-fruits ch 9. s. 1. c. the shoulder the right shoulder saith Maim ibidem s. 18. and they may not plucke off the wooll or flay them but give them with their skin and with their wooll Vers. 4. The first fruits of these see the Annotations on Exod. 22. 29. and Numb 18. 12. These were called by the Hebrewes the great heave-offering and it was to be given they say to the Priest whether it were cleane or uncleane though the corne or oile were all uncleane before it was separated the owner was bound to separate out of it an heave-offering and give it to the Priest If it were cleane the Priest did eat it if uncleane they used it for burning c. And whosoever separated the great Heave-offering or the heave-offering of the tithe hee blessed God before he separated it after the manner as he used to blesse for doing all the commandements Maim in Trumoth c. 2. s. 14 16. Other things hereabout are noted on Num. 18. and Levit. 22. of the fleece Of this there is no measure set by the Law but by the Hebrew Doctors they might not give lesse than one of sixtie the sixtieth part as of other first-fruits is noted on Exod. 22. 29. And this is not due but in the land of Israel as the first-fruits of the corne and of common beasts not of holy And of sheepe onely male and female for their wooll is meet for cloathing He that separateth the first of his fleece and it be lost is indebted for afterward untill he give it unto the priest He that saith all my fleece be first-fruits his words must be confirmed Who so hath many fleeces of first-fruits and would divide them among the priests hee may not give lesse to every one than the weight of five shekels of white wooll enough for a little coat Maim in Biccurim c. 10. Vers. 5. to stand to minister in the name c. the Greeke interpreteth it to stand before the Lord thy God to minister and to blesse in the name of the Lord. This sheweth a reason of the former duty because God had called the Priests from worldly affaires to serve him and to minister and sow unto his people spirituall things therefore they should reape the peoples carnall things as 1 Cor. 9. 11 13. By standing is noted their manner of service as is observed on Deut. 10. 8. and their continuance in the same as Psal. 119. 91. Vers. 6. a Levite This is spoken generally and so implieth either Priest or ordinary Levite who served by their courses but might at other times come up and serve voluntarily have their portion with their brethren of thy gates that is as the Greeke and Chaldee doe translate of thy cities For the Levites dwelt dispersed in the tribes of Israel Ios. 21. he sojourned his dwelling in the cities is called a sojourning as a stranger for that the priests had no inheritance with Israel v. 1. but the Israelites gave them of their inheritance cities to dwell in and the suburbs for their cattell Num. 35. 2 3. shall chuse to have his Tabernacle or Temple and publike worship there see Deut. 16. 2. and 12. 5. Vers. 7. shall minister Although the Priests and Levites ministred in their courses whereinto they were distributed and unto which they were bound 1 Chron. 24. and 25. yet if any would
divide into three because the land was much more long than broad therefore the cities of refuge were in three places equally distant and so commodious for men to flee unto Vers. 4. the case Heb● the word in Greeke the ordinance of the man-slayer or murderer and live or that he may live From these words the Hebrew Doctors teach that a Scholer exiled to the cities of refuge his Master also goeth with him as it is written AND LIVE But the life of them that love and seeke after wisdome is without the doctrine of the Law counted as death And so the Master that is exiled his schoole goeth with him c. Maim treat of Murder chap. 7. sect 1. smiteth meaning to death as the Chaldee translateth killeth So he smote 2 King 14. 5. is expounded he killed in 2 Chron. 25. 3. unwittingly or ignorantly unawares Heb. without knowledge the Greke saith unwillingly hated him not for hee that was his enemie though hee killed him unawares might not have the benefit of the citie of refuge as is noted on Numb 35. 20. And who is he that hateth He that for enmitie sake speaketh not unto him for three dayes Maim treat of Murder chap. 6. sect 10. in time past Hebr. and Greeke from yesterday and the third day so in vers 6. Vers. 5. As when he commeth or And he that shall come and thus the Greeke translateth it a wood or forrest This is a similitude for all like places and cases but hence the Hebrewes gather Who so commeth into a mans yard without his leavs of the man of that house kill him by errour he is free from being exiled into the cities of refuge for it is said INTO A WOOD. What is that wood A place which the slaine person hath libertie to come into And so all other the like Maim treat of Murder chap. 6. sect 11. the wood that is the helve of the 〈◊〉 findeth that is hitteth or lighteth upon and live within his citie of refuge where hee must abide untill the death of the high Priest Num. 35. 25. See the annotations there Vers. 6. avenger or neare kinsman who is by dutie to avenge see the notes on Num. 35 12. 〈◊〉 heart is hot inflamed with anger griefe and desire of revenge in such heat of minde the affections of men are overcaried to speake or doe that which is not meet So in Psal. 39. 4. Mine heart was 〈◊〉 within me because or as the Greeke translateth if the way belong Hebr. much in soule or in life that is mortally deadly which the Greeke translateth smite his soule and for smite the Chaldee saith kill So in vers 11. judgement that is guilt as the Chaldee explaines it that is hee was not worthy of death O● judgement that is sentence of death by the Magistrate Vers. 8. all the land from the river of Egypt unto the great river the river Euphrates Gen. 15. 18. Verse 9. this commandement in Greeke these commandements This condition being legall and unpossible for man to fulfill had not therefore the accomplishment outwardly for the inlarging of their coast or for adding of three cities moe for ought that is knowne either by the Scriptures or Iewish records and is therefore to be referred unto Christ spiritually The Iewes themselves referre it unto Christs dayes but carnally as after followeth in his wayes the Greeke addeth in all his wayes the Chaldee in the wayes that are right before him adde three cities of this the Hebrewes say In the dayes of the King Christ they shall adde three other cities unto these sin Deut. 19. 9. And whence shall they adde them Of the cities of the Kenizites and the Kenites and the Kadmonites concerning whom a covenant was made with Abraham our father Gen. 15. 18 19. and hitherto they have not beene subdued and of them it is said in the Law If the Lord thy God inlarge thy coast Maim treat of Murder chap. 8. sect 4. And in another place the same man saith in treat of Kings chap. 11. sect 2. Of the cities of refuge he saith If the Lord thy God shall inlarge thy coast then thou shalt adde three cities moe c. But this thing hath never beene done and the holy blessed God hath not commanded it in vaine But the Law is not in vaine though it bee not literally fulfilled in all the precepts For what the Law could not doe in that it was weake through the flesh God hath done sending his owne Son c. Rom. 8. 3. by him wee have strong consolation who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us Heb. 6. 18. Vers. 10. That innocent bloud be not or as the Greeke translateth And innocent bloud shall not be shed meaning the bloud of the unwilling man-slayer who is not worthy of death v. 6. and blouds be that is the guilt of bloudshed as the Chaldee expoundeth it the guilt of the judgement of murder The Greeke translateth and there shall not bee in thee a man guiltie of bloud Vers. 11. smite him in soule Greeke smite his soule that is as the Chaldee saith kill him as vers 6. Vers. 12. the Elders in Greeke the Senate thence from the citie of refuge yea or from the Altar of the Lord Exod. 21. 14. for a man that doth violence to the bloud of any person shall flee to the pi● let no man stay him Prov. 28. 17. See more in the annotations on Num. 35. Vers. 13. put away innocent bloud that is as the Chaldee explaineth it him that shed innocent bloud and it shall goe well or that it may bee well with thee or and good shall be unto thee Vers. 14. limit or bound border land-marke whereby every mans inheritance in the land was limited A sinne great in all places Iob 24. 2. but greatest in the land of Israel Gods holy limit or border Psal. 78. 54. which was parted by lot of the Lord Num. 26. 53. 56. and figured the spirituall inheritance which the Saints have in the Church all the limits whereof are of pleasant stones Esay 54. 12. and whereof Canaan was a type as is noted on Gen. 12. 5. Therefore among the curses pronounced against the breakers of the Law this is the third Cursed bee he that removeth his neighbours land-marke or limit and all the people shall say Amen Deut. 27. 17. the first fathers Eleazar the Priest Iosua the son of Nun and the heads of the fathers of the tribes of the sonnes of Israel Ios. 14. 1. The word fathers I supply from Prov. 22. 28. where it is said Remove not the ancient limit which thy fathers have set and so the Greeke translateth here the limits which thy fathers have set in Chaldee the ancients in the land of Israel the holy land Zach. 2. 12. the Lords land Hos. 9. 3. where this sinne was sacrilegious The Hebrewes say Hee that removeth his neighbours land-marke and taketh of his neighbours limit into his owne
trees and the singular is oft used for the plurall as is noted on Genes 3. 2. And under the name of trees all other things also needfull for mans life seeme here to be reserved from destruction The Hebrewes explaine it thus They may not cut downe the Trees for meat that are without the citie nor with-hold from them the water-courses that they may wither as it is written THOV SHALT NOT CORRVPT THE TREES and who so cutteth any downe is to be beaten And not in the siege onely but in any place whosoever cutteth downe a tree that is for meat by way of corrupting is to be beaten But they may cut them downe if they hurt other trees or hurt the field c. the Law forbiddeth not but by way of corruption Every tree that beares not fruit it is lawfull to cut it downe although a man have no need of it and likewise a fruit-tree that doth hurt or yeeldeth but a little and is not worth the labour about it it is lawfull to cut it downe And what quantity may that be An olive tree if it yeeld the fourth part of a Kab of olives that is a Log wherof see the notes on Exod. 30. 24. they may not cut it downe and a Date tree which yeeldeth a Kab of dates they cut not downe And not trees onely but who so breaketh vessels or rendeth garments or pulleth downe buildings or stoppeth wells or destroyeth meats by way of corrupting transgresseth this law THOV SHALT NOT CORRVPT yet is he not to be beaten therefore but by the doctrine of the Scribes he is to be chastised Maimony treat of Kings chap. 6. sect 8 9. By this prohibition God restraineth the waste and spoile which Souldiers usually make in warres and teacheth mercy towards his good creatures and that which serveth for mans life therefore Christ would have nothing lost of the broken meats that were le●t Ioh. 6. 12. And as in figure men are likened to trees so such onely as bring forth no good fruit are cut downe Matth. 3. 10. See also Luke 13. 6 7 c. Rev. 9. 4. for thou maist or as the Greeke translateth but thou shalt eat thereof for is the tree c. or for are the trees c that is the trees of the field are not as men either to come out against thee or to flee from thee into the bulwarke This interpretation agreeth with the Greeke Is the tree that is in the wood a man to goe in from thy face into the bulwarke The Chaldee in like sense explaineth it by a deniall For the tree of the field is not as a man to goe c. Otherwise it may also be translated Though the trees of the field are mans that is serve for mans use yet spare such as beare fruit Or according to that which went before For the tree of the field is mans to wit his food or life of man as in 2 Kings 18. 31. eat ye every man his owne vine that is the fruit of his vine into the bulwarke or in the siege Vers. 20. sub dued or come downe which the Greeke translateth untill it be delivered CHAP. XXI 1 The expiation of murder done by an unknowne person that the Elders of the next citie should kill an heiffer and wash their hands over it so clearing themselves and asking mercy of God 10 The usage of a captive taken to wife 15 The first-borne is not to be disinherited upon private affection 18 A stubborne rebellious sonne is by his Parents to be brought forth unto judgement and stoned to death 22 The malefactor must not hang all night on a tree IF one be found slaine in the land which Iehovah thy God giveth unto thee to possesse it fallen in the field and it be not knowne who hath smitten him Then thy Elders and thy Iudges shall come forth and they shall measure unto the cities which are round about him that is slaine And it shall be that the citie which is next unto the slaine 〈◊〉 even the Elders of that citie shall take an heiffer of the herd which hath not beene wrought with which hath not drawne in the yoke And the Elders of that citie shall bring downe the Heiffer unto a rough valley which shall not be tilled nor sowen and shall strike off the Heiffers necke there in the valley And the Priests the sonnes of Levi shall come neere for them Iehovah thy God hath chosen to minister unto him and to blesse in the name of Iehovah and by their mouth shall be every controversie and every stroke And all the Elders of that citie that are next unto the slaine man shall wash their hands over the Heiffer that is beheaded in the valley And they shall answer and say Our hands have not shed this bloud and our eyes have not seene it Make expiation for thy people Israel whom thou hast redeemed O Iehovah and lay not innocent bloud in the middest of thy people Israel and the bloud shall be expiated for them And thou shalt put away innocent bloud from the middest of thee when thou shalt doe that which is right in the eyes of Iehovah 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 When thou goest forth to battell against thine enemies and Iehovah thy God hath delivered them into thine hands and thou hast taken captive a captivity of them And thou seest in the captivity a woman of a beautifull forme and hast a desire unto her and wouldest take her unto thee to wise Then thou shalt bring her home to thy house and she shall shave her head and doe her nailes And she shall put off the raiment of her captivity from upon her and shal remaine in thine house shall weep for her father and her mother a moneth of daies and after that thou shalt goe in unto her and be her husband and she shall be unto thee to wife And it shall be if thou have no delight in her then thou shalt send her away whither she will but selling thou shalt not sell her for money thou shalt not make a gaine to thy selfe of her because thou hast humbled her If a man have two wives one beloved and another hated and they have borne him sonnes the beloved and the hated and if the first-borne sonne be hers that was hated Then it shall be in the day that he maketh his sonnes to inherit that which he hath he may not make the sonne of the beloved first-borne before the sonne of the hated which is the first-borne But the first-born the sonne of the hated shall he acknowledge by giving to him a double portion of all that is ●ound his for he is the beginning of his strength the right of the first birth-right is his If a man have a sonne stubborne and rebellious which obeyeth not the voice of his father and the voice of his mother and they have chastned him he will not hearken unto them Then shal his father and his mother lay hold on him and
David Davids jewell or not able song Cethem is fine glistering gold Psal. 45. 10. of that this Michtam may be derived for a golden jewel and so note the excellency of this Psalme The like title is before the 56. 57. 58. 59. and 60. Psalmes Preserve me O God Christ speaketh this Psalme by David his figure as we are taught in the new Testament Act. 2. 25 31. and 13. 35. and here is handled his mediatorship death resurrection and ascension in thee Chaldee in thy word Vers. 2. Thou hast said he speaketh this to him-selfe Thou ô my soule sayest so the Chaldee Paraphrase explaineth it and the Greeke to make it plainer translateth I have said Or it may be spoken to the Spouse or Church of Christ. my good not unto thee understand extendeth not or pertaineth not to thee or is not for thee which the Greeke expoundeth thus of my goods thou hast no need For if man be just what giveth he to God or what receiveth he at his hand Iob 35. 7. The Chaldee saith my good is not given but of thee Vers. 3. To the Saints to wit my good extendeth as else-where Christ saith for their sakes sanctifie I my selfe that they also may be sanctified through the truth Ioh. 17. 19. are in earth such is the meaning of the Hebrew phrase in earth they the relative being put for the verbe which sometime the Hebrew it selfe explaineth as he not the King of Israel 1 King 22. 33. for it was not the King 2 Chro. 18. 32. so he overseer 2 King 25. 19. for was over-seer Ier. 52. 25. and sundrie the like excellent or noble glorious wonderfull an honourable title givē to Christiās See Ps. 8. 2. The Chaldee addeth excellent in good works all my delight in them or in whom all my pleasure is Heb. Chephtsibam that is my pleasure in them so in Esay 62. 4. the Church is called Chephtsi-bah that is my pleasure in her Vers. 4. Their sorrowes shall be multiplied This is meant of Idolaters who hastily endow that is offer sacrifice to another God and so increase their griefes which may be understood of afflictions or of grievous idols for the Hebrew ghnatsabim sorrowes is often used for idols as in Psal. 115. 4. and so the Chaldee Paraphrast taketh it here saying the wicked multiply their idols and after they hasten to offer their gifts Accordingly the sense may be this They whose grievous idols are multiplied they that endow another God I will not powre out their oblations that is I will not partake with them or be a mediatour for them endow another or hasten to another A similitude from dowries given in mariages meaning gifts and oblations hastily brought for divine worship powred out oblations or shed-offerings effusions properly put by figure of speech for effused or powred out liquour commonly called Drinke-offerings which were wont to bee powred out upon the sacrifices and by Gods law were to be of wine or Shecar Numb 15. 5 7 10. and 28. 7. but among idolaters were of bloud The Chaldee giveth this sense I will not receive with favour their drinke-offerings nor the bloud of their sacrifices take up their names that is not mention or speake of them according to the law Exod. 23. 13. Ios. 23. 7. Vers. 5. of my part or of my partage that is of the inheritance parted shared and diealt unto me So the Greeke turneth it of mine nheritance The word is generally used for lands cities goods spoiles c. that are shared out And this here hath reference to the law of the Priests which had no part among the people for that the Lord was their part and inheritance Numb 18. 20. The Lord is his peoples part Ier. 10. 16. and 51. 19. and againe his people are called his part Deut. 32. 9. my cup that is measure and portion of joyes or afflictions Psal. 23. 5. and 11. 6. my lot this also is used for an inheritance obtained by lot Ios. 18. 11. Iudg. 1. 3. The Apostle calleth Christs Church by this name 1 Pet. 5. 3. The Greeke translateth thou art he that restorest mine inheritance to me Vers. 6. The lines or Cords such were used in measuring of lands or heritages Psal. 105. 11. and 78. 55. 2 Sam. 8. 2. and figuratively a line is put for the portion measured Jos. 17. 5 14. 〈◊〉 is faire for me or which is faire unto mee that is which pleaseth me well Vers. 7. counselled me given me counsell by his word and Spirit touching my sufferings and the glory that shall follow 1 Pet. 1. 11. Luke 24. 25 26. God is wonderfull in counsell and excellent in worke Esay 28. 29. Vers. 8. I have proposed or equally set the Greeke which the Apostle followeth saith I beheld before Act. 1. 25. he is at my right hand The word is is supplied Act. 2. 25. For God to be at the right hand is powerfully to assist and comfort as on the contrary for Satan to be there is greatly to resist and annoy Psal. 109. 6. Zech. 3. 1. I shall not be moved or that I be not moved Act. 2. 25. Vers. 9. my glory This by the Apostle is applied to the tongue Act. 2. 26. which is the instrument wherewith we glorifie God See Psalm 30. 13. and 57. 9. Gen. 49. 6. dwell in confidence or abide with hope that is boldly safely and securely meaning that his flesh his body should abide or rest in the grave with sure hope of rising againe from death the third day Vers. 10. my soule The Hebrew Nephesh and Greeke Psuchee which we call soule hath the name of breathing or respiring and is therefore sometime used for the breath Iob 41. 12. it is the vitall spirit that al quick things move by therfore beasts birds fish and creeping things are called in Scripture living soules Gen. 1. 20. 24. And this soule is sometime called the bloud Gen. 9. 4. because it is in the bloud of all quick things Lev. 17. 11. it is often put for the life of creatures as keepe his soule Job 2. 6. that is spare his life a righteous man regardeth the soule of his beast Prov. 12. 10. that is the life so to seeke the soule is to seeke ones life to take it away Psal. 54. 5. Mat. 2. 20. It is also many times used for ones selfe as Iob justified his soule that is himselfe Iob 32. 2. Take heed to your soules that is to your selves Deut. 4. 15. so Gen. 19. 20. Luke 12. 19. And thus it is put for the person or whole man as give me the soules that is the persons Gen. 14. 21. so an hungrie soule Psal. 107. 9. a full soule Prov. 27. 7. a wearie soule Prov. 25. 25. eight soules 1 Pet. 3. 20. seventie five soules Act. 7. 14. and many the like It is used also for the lust will or desire as Psal. 41. 3. Exod. 15. 9. for the affections of the heart Psal. 25. 1. for the body of
which proceedeth from thy salvation and deliverance of me from sinne a free spirit a voluntary free willing spirit or a princely ruling spirit as the Greeke turneth it See this word Psal. 47. 10. by a free or princely spirit he meaneth a spirit not in bondage to sinne called elsewhere the spirit of adoption Rom. 8. 15 16. whereby a man is made willing to obey the Lord as Exod. 35. 21. Vers. 16. from blouds that is from the guilt of my murder in shedding the bloud of Vriah as the Chaldee saith from the judgement of murder or from my native corruption See the note on Isal. 5. 7. shall shout or shrill sing joyfully and proclaime thy justice such as Paul speaketh of Phil. 3. 9. Vers. 17. shalt open my lips shalt give me occasion to speake freely and boldly the Chaldee addeth in thy law This phrase is used Iob 11. 5. and 32. 20. Vers. 18. else I would give it or for else I would give it as the Greeke turneth it if thou wouldest sacrifice I had given it Vers. 19. The sacrifices of God that is which please God or as the Chaldee saith holy to God So the workes of God Ioh. 6. 28. heart broken to wit with sorrow for sinne So Isa. 61. 1. Luke 4. 18. Compare with this Rom. 12. 1. also Isa. 57. 15. and 66. 2. Vers. 20. Doe well or Doe good deale bounteously it comprehendeth all things needfull for profit or pleasure unto Sion the Church and place of publike worship See Psal. 2. 6. walls of Ierusalem or of Ierushalaim as the Hebrew writeth it in the duall forme as it were the double Ierusalem to wit the higher and the lower from which the Apostle gathereth an allegorie Gal. 4. 25 26. This citie was first called Salem that is Peace where Melchisedek was King Gen. 14. 18. Heb. 7. 2. It was named also Iebus Iudg. 19. 10. of one Iebusi son of Canaan Gen. 10. 16. and was possessed by his seed the Iebusites who held therein the fort of Sion till David wanne it from them 1 Chron. 11. 4 5 7. Here also was the mount Morijah whereon Solomon built the Temple 2 Chron. 3. 1. where Abraham offered his sonne Isaak Gen. 22. 2. And because there Gods providence was seene he named the place Iehovah-jireh Gen. 22. 14. which Iireh put to the former name Salem maketh it Ierusalem where Peace is seene and as the citie was inlarged by taking in mount Iireh or Morijah so is the name yet sometime though very rare it is called by the first name Salem as Psal. 76. 3. This citie God chose to be the place of his publike worship and there to dwell 2 Chron. 7. 12. Psal. 132. 13 14. and honourable things are spoken of this citie Psal. 87. 3. and of the wals thereof which in the Ierusalem from above are of Iasper stone with 12 foundations garnished with all manner precious stones and having the names of the Lambes 12 Apostles Rev. 21. 10. 14 18 19. c. the wals are called Salvation and the gates Praise and they are ever in Gods sight Isa. 60. 18. and 49. 16. For the building up of these doth David here pray Vers. 21. Then shalt thou accept when the place is builded which thou hast chosen for be for bade his people to offer in every place Levit. 17. 5 8 9. Deut. 12. 11 13. and promised to accept their sacrifices on his holy mountaine Ezek. 20. 40. Therefore Israel was in great affliction and reproach when the wals of Ierusalem were unbuilded Neb. 1. 3. and the peoples negligence in building Gods house was sharply blamed Hag. 1. 2 4 8 9. and 2. 15. c. of justice that is sacrifices offered in faith and according to the will of God See Psal. 4. 6. the whole oblation the Calil a kinde of oblation that was wholly and every whit given up in fire unto God and differed from the Gnolah or Burnt-offering which was only of beasts or birds Lev. 1. whereas the Calil was also of flower called the Meat-offering but burned all together which the common Meat-offerings were not Lev. 6. 20 22 23. It was also of beasts 1 Sam. 7. 9. PSAL. LII David condemning the shightfulnesse of Doeg prophesieth his destruction 8 at which the just shall rejoyce 10 David upon confidence of Gods mercy giveth thanks To the master of the musicke an instructing Psalme of David When Doeg the Adomite came and shewed to Saul and said to him David came unto the house of Achimelech WHy boastest thou in evill O mighty man the mercie of God endureth all the day Thy tongue thinketh wofull evils as a sharpe rasour doing deceit Thou lovest evill more than good falshood more than to speake justice Selah Thou lovest all words of swallowing the tongue of deceit Also God will destroy thee to perpetuitie hee will pull thee away and plucke thee out of the tent and will root thee up out of the land of the living Selah And the just shall see and feare and shall laugh at him Behold the man that put not God for his strength but trusted in the multitude of his riches hee was strong in his wofull evill But I as a greene Olive in the house of God I trust in the mercy of God ever and aye I will confesse thee for ever for thou hast done this and will patiently expect thy name for it is good before thy gracious Saints Annotations DOeg a servant of King Saul and master of his herdmen 1 Sam. 21. 7. the Adomite that is an Aedomite or Idumean as the Greeke here translateth or a man of Adamah a citie of the tribe of Naphtali Ios. 19. 36. of Acbimelech David flying from Sauls tyranny came for comfort to the house of God in Nob where Achimelech the Priest administred He gave unto David and his company the showbread ●o 〈◊〉 armed him with the sword of Goljath the Philistian and asked counsell of the Lord for him Doēg saw this and told King Saul and after when no other man would himselfe at the Kings commandement ran upon Achimelech and the Priests and killed 85 persons and Nob the citie of the Priests he smote with the edge of the sword both man woman childe and beast But Abj●thar Achimelechs sonne escaped unto David and told him who there upon made this Psalme See 1 Sam. 21. and 22. Matth. 12. 3 4. Vers. 3. in evill the Chaldee expounds it in an evill tongue O mighty man or Potentate Doëg is thus named for his chiefe place over King Sauls herdmen 1 Sam. 21. 7 and his killing of so many Priests of the Lord 1 Sam. 22. 18. 19. in which mischievous prowesse he vaunted himselfe Vers. 4. thinketh or understand Why thinketh thy tongue that is uttereth the evils thought and premeditated doing deceit that is as a rasour which in stead of cutting the haire cutteth the throat Or it may be referred to the man O doer of deceit as the Greeke saith thou hast done
The Watchmen or The Keepers Warders These signifie the officers or Ministers of the Church and Citie of God for the Priests and Levi●es kept of old the watch for charge of the Lord Numb 3. 7. 8. So in Esay 62. 6 it is said I have set watchmen upon thy wals 〈◊〉 Ierusalem which shall never hold their peace day nor night c. found me It is not said thee sought th●m but they found her which phrase signifieth diligence rather on their part and 〈◊〉 thing unlooked for on hers So God is said to find his people in the wildernesse Deut. 32. 10. and afflictions doe find men as Psal. 116. 3. and 18. And this accordeth with the Watch-mens dutie to find out such as wander about the city in the nights After shee sp●aketh of the like and more that the Watchmen found her and smo●e her c. Song 5. 7. Saw ye him She inquireth of them for Christ but here is no mention of any thing they said to her before nor of any answer they gave to her demand after It is problable by this their silence and her words following that they told her no tidings of her beloved Whether the fault were in them that they were such as are spoken of in Esa. 56. 10. blind watchmen dumbe dogs that could not barke or in her selfe that could not by the doctrine of the Ministers apprehend apply Christ unto her conscience and comfort Ver. 4. but a little or a very little meaning either time or distance of place passed from them so she stayed not with them because her beloved was not among them but continued seeking otherwhere For neither the society of brethren or Church or Ministers can comfort the afflicted conscience unlesse Christ himself be apprehended by faith but I found or untill I found here after much seeking without fainting or discouragement when meanes faile she findeth Christ to the Comfort of her conscience Thus the promise is fulfilled Seeke and yee shall find Mat. 7. 7. not let him goe or not leave him shewing herein Iakobs faith when he wrastled with the Angel Gen. 32. 26. I will not let thee go except thou blesse me This is done when the doctrines promises of the Gospel are by faith retained as it is said Take fast hold of instruction let her not goe Pro. 4. 13. my mothers house Hereby any chiefe City Politie or solemne place of assembly is signified 2 Sam. 20. 19. Esay 50. 1. Ier. 50. 12. Ezek. 19. 10. The mother is Ierusalem which is above the mother of us all which is figured by Sarah the Freewoman and signifieth the new Testament or covenant of Grace Gal. 4. 24. 26. The house and chamber wherein she conceiveth us by the preaching of the Gospell is outwardly the Church 1 Tim. 3. 5. inwardly the hart and conscience where faith dwelleth Rom. 10. 16. Gal. 4. 19. Thus by the Spirit she getteth unto her selfe more constant assurance of her election and salvation by Christ and by his presence through his Word Ordinances her state Church politie is set up and stablished So after in Song 8. 2. Vers. 5. I adjure you c. She having obtained Christ againe with constant purpose of heart to retaine him reneweth her contestation and charge of sanctification of life such as becommeth the Gospell and of patient suffering adversitie for his name that Christ bee not provoked by ●inne to leave his people For as Moses said unto Israel If ye turne away from after him hee will yet againe leave them in the wildernesse and yee shall destroy all this people Num. 32. 15. See the annotations on Song 2. 7. where this charge was first given in these same words Ver. 6. Who is this this woman speaking of the Church by the example of Israel who went up frō the wildernesse unto Canaan the promised inheritance Num. 10. 33. c. This seemeth to imply a new company o● state of a Church rising up in the world or it is the speech of strangers admiring the glory of the Spouse of Christ who was seene before of Christ by her faith and is now beholden of others by her order the two things most respected in the Church of God Collossians 2. 5. in which she marcheth through the widernesse of this world towards her heavenly rest So when Christ came riding into Ierusalem all the Citie was moved saying Who is this Mat. 21. 10. commeth up or ascendeth as the going into Aegypt is called a descending or going downe Genesis 42. 2. and 46. 3. 4. so the going out from thence is called ascending or going up Exod. 13. 18. and 33. 3. Deut. 9. 23. The way of life is above to the wise that he may depart from hell beneath Pro. 15. 24. from the wildernesse the wildernesse of the land of Aegypt was a figure of the world as the Prophet teacheth us when he mentioneth the wildernesse of peoples Ezek. 20. 35. 36. So Christians are not of the world but he hath chosen them out of the world Ioh. 15. 19. pillars of smoake or vapours of smoake as the Holy Ghost translateth it in Greeke Act. 2. 19. from Iocl 2. 30. In Hebrew it hath the name of Palme trees such as the stature of the Church is likened unto in Song 7. 7. which are upright and tall like pillars and smoky vapours mounting upright are so called by similitude The Spouse of Christ is here likened to pillars of smoake because her journey tendeth right upward to heaven moved by the fire of Gods spirit And whereas in Ioel 2. 30. and Act. 2. 19. blood and fire and pillars of smoake are signes of Gods wrath against the contemners of his word and Church and smoke in the Scriptures is usually a signe of anger here also the like may bee implyed Againe as smoake is darke and hindereth from seeing and the cloudy pillar was darke to the Aegyptians Exo. 14. 20. so is the Church and glory thereof obscure unto the world by reason of her afflictions in this life which were resembled unto Abraham by a smoaking oven Gen. 15. 17. But chiefly this seemeth to denote the sanctification of the Church who as a spirituall sacrifice ascendeth upto God on the Altar Christ by the fire of the spirit resolving the earthly matter to ashes remaining beneath and the other unto smoake mounting up unto God perfumed or becensed with Myrrh the Church is perfumed and made of sweet odout by Christ 〈◊〉 agge of myrrh that lodgeth betweene 〈◊〉 b●●sts Song 1. ●3 whose death was like myrrh bi●ter in tast lot of sweet smell with this she was perfumed by knowing him and the power of his resurrection the fellowship of his suffrings being made conformable unto his death Phil. 3. 10. And with the odour of this incense she is comforted according to the Proverbe Ointment and perfume rejoyce the heart Prov. 27. 9. and frankincense Myrrh was used in the holy anointing oile and frankincense in the