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A86934 A brief exposition of the prophecies of Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk and Zephaniah. By George Hutcheson minister at Edenburgh. Imprimatur, Edm. Calamy Hutcheson, George, 1615-1674. 1654 (1654) Wing H3822; Thomason E1454_1; ESTC R209588 282,367 353

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signifying dust we are to understand either that City in Benjamin Josh 18.23 where the Assyrian was to come and which was far from the Philistines hearing or generally a place brought to the dust and made dusty by affliction who therefore are to roll themselves in the dust in token of great sorrow for their dusty and afflicted condition see Ier. 6.26 Doct. 1. As the children of God by their behaviour in trouble are to give no occasion of reproaching unto enemies so are they before the Lord to evidence that they are sensible of his hand for as they are not to weep at all in Gath or where the Philistines may hear it so are they notwithstanding in the house of Aphrah amongst themselves to expresse their sorrow 2. As great afflictions will be very grievous and bitter making men without any regard to themselves wallow in dust and ashes so the sweet use of trouble is when men stoop to their condition and to what it calls unto while Aphrah made dusty by affliction descends to the dust in the house of Aphrah roll c. 3. Our kindly bed in trouble is dust as being dust by our Original and the end of affliction being to let us know we are such In the house of Aphrah or of dust roll thy self in the dust Ver. 11. Pass ye away thou inhabitant of Saphir having thy shame naked the inhabitant of Zaanan came not forth in the mourning of Beth-ezel he shal receive of you his standing The next place mentioned is Saphir the signification whereof leads to this Interpretation That such as dwelt beautifully and pleasantly for so much doth the inhabitant of Saphir signifie should either flee or be carried into captivity by the enemy in much ignominy and reproach as this manner of speech is used to expresse great ignominy put upon captives by licentious souldiers Isai 20.4 47.3 Ier. 13.22 It teacheth that as pleasures and delectable situation and dwelling will be no guard against God pursuing a controversie for sinne so pleasure abused will be forth-coming for double ignominy and will contribute to imbitter a cup of affliction for the inhabitant of Saphir passeth away having her shame naked her glory keeps her not from ignominy and it is so much the sadder as that she had been a Saphir The next place Zaanan signifying a place of concourse like flocks and Beth-ezel signifying a place that is neer lead us to this exposition of the rest of the verse That a place of great concourse and many people shall not come out to help or comfort when their neerest neighbours are mourning the reason whereof is subjoyned in these words He shall receive of you his standing that is Zaanan shall not appear in Beth-ezels trouble as having their own difficulties and learning by the example of their neighbours that there is no standing out or resisting of the enemy or they dare not express compassion as looking that the enemy will settle his camp among them and take a sore recompence if they make him continue in a siege against them Doct. 1. Humane helps and greatest probabilities will prove but vain in a day of vengeance for a place of repair such as Zaanan will not be able to help no not a place neer unto them whereas either their number or the vicinity of the place afflicted might seem to promise otherwise 2. It is an usual thing in a day of calamity to see men selfish and taken up with their own grievances without regarding others and to see the Lord give every man and place so much to do as shall give him no leasure to look about him Zaanan came not forth in the mourning of Beth-ezel c. See Ier. 47.3 3. Universal discouragement ordinarily goes before an instrument of Gods vengeance especially once prevailing to make way for his further successe one place learning by the example of another that there is no resistance for so much doth the first interpretation of that passage He shall receive of you his standing teach 4. However it be both lawful and necessary for a people to bestir themselves for their own defence in danger yet such is the fierceness of Gods anger pursuing forsin as all opposition made to the instruments thereof doth but tend to the opposers greater disadvantage while as the enemies losse of time means or men is made up by their spoil and further ruine for so much doth the other interpretation of that passage which agrees also with the principal scope import Ver. 12. For the inhabitant of Maroth waited carefully for good but evil came down from the LORD unto the gates of Jerusalem This verse contains another evidence that there shall bee no standing against that calamity and therefore comes in as a farther clearing of that in the end of the former verse as appears by the Particle for The signification of Maroth which is bitterness and of the Original word rendred waited which signifieth also to be grieved and of the word rendred But which signifies chiefly Because leads to this interpretation of the verse That those whose condition is made bitter by affliction should earnestly expect for some good but in vain they should yet be more grieved for want of it and for disappointment of these expectations and that because the trouble should overspread and reach to the gates of the royal City where the Temple was Whence learn 1. When the Lord ariseth to plead against sinners he can put them in a very disconsolate condition and make all their pleasures end in bitterness for in this calamity there is The inhabitant of Maroth or of Bitternesses even many of them See Ruth 1.20 2 Howsoever afflicted people do usually much look out for some issue yet grief may be oft-times but growing when such as have felt some bitternesse are expecting an end of it for The inhabitant of Maroth was grieved or sick with grief for good which they wanted though they waited carefully for better as the word also signifies See Jer. 14.19 3. Sometime the only comfort left a people in trouble may be this that a greater trouble is coming to shoulder out and make them forget a lesser Evil coming unto Jerusalem to make them forget particular grievances and from the Lord to make them digest the Assyrians fury 4. Afflictions sent from God upon the Church are to be observed and laid to heart as not only sad in themselves but as Presages of great anger to come on the rest of the world beside for they were grieved for good because evil came down from the Lord unto the gate of Jerusalem that added to their grief and was an evidence of their own hopelesse condition Ver. 13. O thou inhabitant of Lachish binde the charet to the swift beast she is the beginning of the sin to the daughter of Zion for the transgressions of Israel were found in thee Lachish a City in the Tribe of Judah Josh 15.21 39. Jer. 34.7 is threatned that they should
instrument of true good to others who yet is not regenerate himself 3. As Ministers need not only furniture of matter but such life and zeale in publishing the Word as becomes the Oracles of God so where the Spirit of the Lord is the furnisher there will be efficacie life and zeale accompanying the doctrine for I am full of power by the Spirit of the Lord saith he 4. A faithfull Minister ought also to be endowed not onely with sufficient knowledge to speake according to the Word and not falsifie the minde of God through ignorance and with prudence to speak it seasonably but with fidelity and streigtnesse in telling the minde of God according to equity and truth without partiality or regard to one or other for so much doth the word judgement import 5. Ministers also stand in need of fortitude and courage to speake out boldly what is the minde of God and constantly adhere to it without feare of any or being blown over with the winde of flattery and this a faithfull Minister must and ought to expect from God onely I am ful of might by the Spirit of the LORD 6. A faithfull Minister lookes on all his endowments as not given to be layd up and contract rest beside him or for himselfe onely but that hee ought to improve them for God and his people in his place and station I am full saith he to declare unto Iacob c. and empty out that goodnesse for their good and behoofe 7. It is an evidence of a faithfull and able Minister to be much in opposition to sin and freely to charge it home and declare transgression and sin to the sinner and not be deceived or blinded with fair titles or shews but to discern and reprove sin even in Iudah and Israel Ver. 9. Hear this I pray you ye heads of the house of Jacob and Princes of the house of Israel that abhor judgement and pervert all equity 10. They build up Zion with blood and Jerusalem with iniquity 11. The heads thereof judge for reward and the Priests thereof teach for hire and the Prophets thereof divine for money yet will they leane upon the LORD and say Is not the LORD among us none evill can come upon us In the second part of the Chapter Micah gives a proofe of what he hath said of his owne fidelity in speaking to all sorts of rulers Civil and Ecclesiastick Ordinary and Extraordinary conjunctly seetting before them their sinne and how they procured Zions ruine he accuseth the Rulers in State that they who ought to have beene patrons of Justice did abhorre and pervert it ver 9. that in stead of adorning the holy city with justice and judgement their care was set upon stately buildings and they gathered means for that end by cruel oppression ver 10. And generally he accuseth all of them that justice was perverted through briberie and covetuousnesse and that their Church-men were mercenary and made their calling of ordinary teaching and extraordinary divining subservient to their gain and yet all of them were carnally confident and presumptuous of Gods favour and presence among them and of exemptions from judgments ver 11. Doct. 1. Persons in eminency especially being accustomed to sinne are usually deafe to what the Lord saith and therefore must be often called to heare as here they are after that former call vers 1. 2. The messengers of the Lord must not give over when their message is not received but must cry till either they get audience or have delivered their soules for Micah repeats Heare I pray you 3. It is the duty of faithful Ministers in reproving the faults of Rulers to give evidence they doe not condemne their Authority when they reprove their faults and not to be wanting in any respective carriage which is due unto them therefore doth Micah give them their titles and againe intreat Heare I pray you yee heads of the house of Jacob and Princes of the house of Israel Where the Princes of Judah to whom this was spoken Jer. 26.18 are called Rulers in Jacob and Israel not only because the house of David had still a right to governe all Israel and therefore such a title seemeth to be given to Jehoshaphat 2 Chro● 2.2 or because their carriage was more like Israel then Judah and therefore it is given to Ahaz 2 Chron. 28.12 Gr. because there was no more left of all Jacobs race after the Captivity of the ten tribes which was in Hezekiah's dayes but only Judah to governe but because they were Rulers of a people that came of the stock of Jacob otherwise called Israel 4. The Lords quarrel against men is not so much for sinnes of ignorance and infirmity as for such as flowe from a perverse disposition going wrong because they love to doe so and do hate what is right therefore are they againe challenged that they abhorre judgment and so pervert all equity 5. The Lord will admit of no faire precences to palliate any sinful deed for it is no excuse that they build Zion if it be done by blood and iniquity or with goods taken by bloody oppression from the poor but on the contrary as it is incident to all pretences that they prove snow-water and defile that the more which they endeavour to cleanse so it is the matter of a sadder quarrel that they should build the holy City by such meanes They build up Zion with blood and Jerusalem with iniquity 6. Those are unsurely built houses and estates at the way of raising whereof and gathering means for that end God is angry for it is a quarrel against them and the house which they build with blood and iniquity See Hab. 2.12 7. Howsoever the Lord allow lawful maintenance to such as are publickly employed in Church and State yet to receive hire or gifts so as to judge partially because of the gifts received is grosse iniquity for it is a quarrel here The heads thereof judg for reward c. See Exod. 18.21 8. When bribes are received by men in office either in Church or State it is an evidence they will not do their duty faithfully and in singlenesse for judging for reward teaching for hire and divining for money is all one with false judgment and erroneous teaching and divination for true is he who said A gift blindeth the wise c. Exod. 23.8 9. Presumption will feed up men with delusion under very grosse sins and when a stroak is near for Yet will they lean on the Lord c. 10. External priviledges of the Church and external reformation of Worship are ordinarily turned by secure sinners into a snare or plague to themselves making them dream of Gods favour and of peace when wrath is upon them and trouble at hand Such a snare was Gods presence in his Temple and Hezekiah's reformation to these profane rulers Is not the Lord among us c. 11. External priviledges will not exempt prophane sinners from deserved judgement nor
back to obey the will of God is to bee acknowledged as a mercy and matter of praise for such is the subject of Jonah's song compared with the former verse he will blesse the Lord not onely for deliverance but that though to his own cost he had not been permitted to prosper in a wrong way 3. Praise is that true sacrifice pointed at in the law by the thanksgiving-offerings in the Temple therefore doth hee give unto praise the name of what shadowed it out I will sacrifice with the voice of thanksgiving See Hebrews 13.15 4. The truly godly under the law were taught of God not to rest upon these outward performances and offerings but to presse and seek after the spiritual duty and substance and to make use of Christ in whom alone even our best morall actions are accepted therefore doth hee hold forth that the voice of thanksgiving or affectionate praise was the sacrifice indeed See Psal 69.30 31. Hos 14.2 And withall the joyning of sacrifice with the voice of thanksgiving sheweth that his praise was offered up in and by that true sacrifice 5. The Lords people in their afflictions and deliverances will be made to see great necessity of making vowes and binding themselves more firmely to their duty for Jonah in his trouble had vowed that that I have vowed which was a binding of himselfe with his owne consent more accurately to observe and follow the will and Commandements of the Lord the reason of which ingagement is because they will find when it comes to strait much short comming and little fervour in their ordinary walking which needs upstirring they will find also much obligation layd upon them by the Lords mercifull remembring of them in trouble voluntarily to take on his yoke and much sense of their owne instability needing such bonds and tyes 6. It is the duty of the Lords children being delivered not to forget their condition in trouble nor their resolutions and obligations following thereupon as if once being out of trouble they were out of Gods reverence but to study to walk answerably in their calme day to that they resolved upon in greatest extremity therefore saith Jonah I will pay that that I have vowed 7. Salvation and deliverance of all kindes is Gods perogative royal none can save or give peace when hee commands trouble and he hath the prererogative to save and deliver when reason probability the sentence of the law and all things else have condemned and given over for lost and in despite of all opposition whatsoever And it is the duty of such as have had any experience of this to cleave to it as an undeniable truth in al following extremities For Jonah having found this in his present case layes it down as a fixed ground of faith in all extremities that salvation is of the Lord the force of the Hebrew word comprehending salvation both temporal and eternal Vers 10. And the LORD spake unto the fish and it vomited out Jonah upon the dry land In the last part of the Chapter Jonah after his miraculous support by faith rehearseth the way of his deliverance that the Lord by his effectual providence as by a commanding speech made the fish to vomit him out upon the Land Whence learn 1. The Lord by the afflictions of his people is but schooling and bettering them and not seeking to destroy them whereof he can give proofe in setting them in freedome and safety from deadly dangers and extremities For Jonah being humbled The Lord spake to the fish and it vomited out Jonah c. 2. The most insensible of creatures have an ear to their Makers speech and do at least by obediential subjection obey his will and will not hinder but help forward his purposes of love towards his people for The Lord spake unto the fish and it vomited out Jonah upon the dry Land 3. In the ordinary paths and motions of creatures God may be bringing about especial purposes and providences as this fish is made to vomit out and deliver Jonah when it is minding no such thing but tumbling to and again much more may it be so in the ordinary wayes of men as in Ioseph's going to Bethlehem Luke 2.4 5 6 compared with Mat. 2.5 6. CHAP. III. IN this Chapter we have first Jonah's second calling to go to Nineveh and his obedience in going thither and denouncing Gods judgement against them to verse 5. 2. The successe of his preaching there appearing in a general and solemn Humiliation countenanced and enjoyned by authority to vers 13. 3. The Lords acceptance hereof and revoking of the sentence given out against them vers 12. Ver. 1. ANd the word of the LORD came unto Jonah the second time saying 2. Arise go unto Nineveh that great city and preach unto it the preaching that I bid thee JOnah being now humbled for his rebellion and delivered from his affliction is again called to go and preach against Nineveh it being needful to have his calling repeated lest if he had gone on the first call which he had disobeyed it might have tared with him as with Israel who resenting their own disobedience would go up to the Land but without the Lord Num. 14.40 41. Doct. 1. As sin doth justly deprive men of all their priviledges which they enjoy of Gods free favour so a true penitent will not only obtain pardon but may also be restored to his former forefaulted dignities for Jonah is not deprived of his Prophetick office of which he was so carelesse Chap. 1.3 but the word of the Lord came unto him 2. No endeavours or struglings of men will free them from such services and lots as God hath to imploy them in and exercise them withal for Jonah resisting the first call is brought to obey on his own charges The word of the Lord came unto Jonah the second time and his duty which he had refused is enjoyned him again 3. The servants of the Lord ought to stick close by their commission and faithfully to publish it without adding or diminishing for so is Ionah commanded Go unto that great city and preach the preaching that I bid thee Vers 3. So Jonah arose and went unto Nineveh according to the word of the LORD now Nineveh was an exceeding great City of three dayes journey Ver. 4. And Jonah began to enter into the city a dayes journey and he cryed and said Yet forty dayes and Nineveh shal be overthrown In the next place we have Ionah's obedience wherein also is recorded a description of the greatnesse of Nineveh which was of three dayes journey in circuite or if one would go through all the streets of it and a brief sum of his preaching which for a whole day going from place to place as God directed him or going through a third of the City it being in whole three dayes journey he proclaimed whereby we are neither to understand that he preached no more of the causes procuring this judgment or of
See John 8.56 Luke 10.23 24. 4. As no vicissitude of dispensations hath buried in oblivion that Covenant made with Jacob and his seed so the Catholick Church of Believers of all Nations have right to the spiritual promises made to Jacob and his seed for these to whom the promises are made are called Jacob and Israel to shew unto the seed of Israel that he would assemble them being mindful of his Covenant and to confirm all his Elect that by believing in Christ they are made his Israel and heirs to Israels promises 5. Christ the great shepherd will want none of his chosen ones howsoever scattered dispersed and far from him but will have them all gathered and brought in to the fold of his Church I wil surely assemble Jacob all of thee I will surely gather the remnant of Israel saith the Lord to scattered Israel and to his scattered Elect through the world See John 10.16 6. Christ having gathered his people as in one flock will do the duty of a faithful shepherd in feeding and securing of them from dangers I will put them together as the sheep of Bozrah a place in Edom or Moab where there were many flocks and good pasture 1 Chron. 1.43 44. Jer. 48.24 and 2 Kings 3.4 as the flock in the midst of their fold 7. The Lord who of remnants can make multitudes will in his own time blesse his Church with increase and multiplication of Converts and hereby will make up the loss of their scatterings and sufferings The remnant shal make a noise by reason of the multitude of men See Isai 49.20 21. 8. Howsoever there may be many difficulties in the wayes of God which his people are to follow yet a people waiting upon him shall find impediments removed to their hand and that they have nothing to do but go on till they dip their feet in Jordans brink and he will make it dry for the breaker is come up before them they have broken up and have passed through the gate and are gone out by it The speech alludes to the custome of armies who usually send some before to prepare the way and break through stait passages that the army may march without trouble Passes being opened in all places See Isai 57.14 and 62.10 9. Christs Church doth not want a King to go out and in before her to protect defend and guide her in her way and as a General to fight her battels for Their King shal pass before them and the Lord in the head of them 10. There is none to be acknowledged as having kingly power in or over the Church as she is a Church but he who it the Lord JEHOVAH for their King passing before them is JEHOVAH in the head of them that is their General in the forefront of them as the word is translated 2 Chr. 20.27 See Hos 1.11 Is 52.12 CHAP. III. THe Prophet having hitherto faithfully discovered the sins of the body of this people and denounced Gods judgments because of sin he comes more particularly to tax the Rulers both in Church and State especially in Judah and to threaten them for their sins and this he doth 1. Severally in relation to their own particular punishments The Princes for that they ought to know right and wrong and walk accordingly and yet were most perverse and inhumane in oppression v. 1 2 3. are threatned that in their strait they shall not be owned of God ver 4. The false Prophets who deluded the people and preached so as might be most subservient to their base ends ver 5. are threatned with such confusion as should make them ashamed of their trade ver 6 7. whereas he a faithful man should bear out in his duty ver 8. 2 He deals with them conjunctly in relation to the judgement which they by their sin procured to come on the Church of God whereas the Rulers perverted Justice ver 9. and built the holy City with goods taken by oppression ver 10. and generally both Rulers and Teachers were corrupted with bribes and love to gain and yet would presumptuously rely on God ver 11. therefore he threatens that for their sake Sion should be laid desolate v. 12. Ver. 1. ANd I said Hear I pray you O heads of Jacob and ye princes of the house of Israel is it not for you to know judgement HEre he challengeth the Rulers in peace and War for affected ignorance of the Law of God and layeth a ground for aggreaging their wickedness in that it concerned them to be better acquainted with the Will of God in the matter of Justice and equity then others and so ought to be exemplary in their knowledg and obedience knowledge including consequent affection and practice whereas they in their practise proved themselves ignorant or despisers of the Law Wee need not curiously enqure whether by Jacob the Kingdome of Judah be understood as by Israel the ten tribes seeing the latter part at least of the threatnings in this Chapter is especially directed against Judah Ier. 26.18 but by these names we are generally to understand that people which were come of Iudah otherwise called Israel Doct. 1. When a land in general is culpable of defection rulers in Church and State have their owne eminent guilt in it This is imported in the Prophets scope while as having reproved the whole body of the people he now comes to challenge the rulers in an especial manner Hear O heads of Iacob 2. Faithful Ministers ought not only to inveigh against sinne in general or of the commonalty only but in particular ought to reprehend the sins of every ranke even of Rulers for so doth Micah's practice teach 3. Men in greatest eminency are bound to heare God speaking by his messengers and to receive what messages are sent unto them as being under the law as well as others Heare O beads of Iacob and ye Princes of the house of Israel 4. As Rulers especially are unwilling to be brought to an account for their wayes by the Ministry of the Word so Ministers are bound to omit no point of discretion and tender insinuation which may consist with their fidelity and zeale against sin and which may be instrumental to make the word take and not to be stumbled at for so doth Micab's way of intreaty teach Hear I pray you which imports both the Rulers aversenesse to heare and his tender condescendence that they may heare 5. Whatever may be the success of a faithful Minister in the discharge of his duty yet his faithfulnesse and diligence will be matter of peace to him when the conscience reflecteth upon it as here Micah gives a comfortable account of his pains I said Hear c. 6. Beside the general obligation lying upon all men especially within the visible Church to know and obey the will of God it is especially incumbent to rulers and great ones among the Lords people so to do as being by reason of their education means encouragements
his anger is little seen or laid to heart till it appear in sad calamities therefore is that day called a day of wrath 3. In a time when God is pursuing a land for sin none are to expect case but in some measure or other to be put to it and to taste of calamities for that day will be a day of trouble and distresse a day of wastenesse and desolation to persons and places 4. As judgements inflicted for sin or sin and wrath for sin meeting together will make a black representation of affaires will hold out the judgement in its saddest colours and discover many clouds betwixt the sinner and Gods countenance so it is the capestone of a calamity when spiritual comfort or some favour from God is denyed or hid under it when he smites and hides himself it speaks wrath indeed for this makes the day terrible that when all this is on it is withal a day of darknesse and gloominesse a day of clouds and thick darknesse Ver. 16. A day of the trumpet and alarum against the fenced cities and against the high towers A third instance that wrath pursuing them for sin should make the alarme given to stir up souldiers against them terrible and make their enemies successefull against their most fortified places Whence learn As the alarmes and calamities of War cannot but be affrightful and sad to the most godly Jer. 4.19 So it is a great addition to its terrour when guilt makes men read Gods wrath in it especially when wrath from the Lord lets it not prove a false alarme but makes the enemy so successeful as nothing stands in his way nor can pursued sinners finde any place of safety or shelter for being a day of wrath ver 15. this adds to the terrour that it is a day of the trumpet and alarm against the fenced cities and high towers Ver. 17. And I will bring distress upon men that they shall walke like blinde men because they have sinned against the LORD and their blood shall be poured out as dust and their flesh as the dung A fourth and fifth instance is that the distresse shall be so great because of sin as to leave them destitute of all counsel not knowing what to do more then blind men know whether to walk and that they shall be cut off with the sword their blood poured out in as great abundance with as little regard as the dust they tread upon and their carcasses left like dung on the ground Doct. 1. As it is a dreadful condition in a day of strait to be void of light to direct men what to do so howsoever finful men trust much to their own policy in a calm day yet a day of wrath will overturn all their designs leave them destitnte of counsel for I will bring distresse upon men that they shall walke like blinde men 2. When judgements are accompanied with darkness and perplexity Gods hand is to be eminently seen in that stroak and he is to be justified by our reading the bitter fruit of sinne in it for saith the Lord I will bring distresse that they shall walke like blinde men and that because they have sinned against the Lord. 3. It is just with God when he hath pursued sinners with judgements in this life to cut them off also in their iniquity and send them out of the world to receive their full reward yea and to testifie his displeasure on their very dead bodies for so it is threatned their blood shall be poured out as dust and their flesh as dung 4. The gredinesse and cerriblenesse of divine wrath against sin may be read in the measure of a calamity in the ignominy of a stroak and in Gods not owning nor evidencing that he pitties in affliction for all these are in this stroak to be matter of terrour to them their blood shall be poured out as dust and their flesh as dung Ver. 18. Neither their silver nor their gold shall be able to deliver them in the day of the LORDS wrath but the whole land shall be devoured by the fire of his jealousie for he shall make even a speedy riddance of all them that dwell in the land The terriblenesse of this day doth appear further in this that all helps shall prove vain and their riches wherein they trusted or whereby they might think to ransome their lives should not be able to deliver them from wrath nor hinder the Lord in his kindled jealou●●e to make short work in wasting the land and consuming the Inhabitants Doct. 1. Many are the false confidences whereby men think to secure themselves against a day of vengeance which it is no easie work to refine that wrath may be seen in its terriblenesse for after all their imaginations that this evil day was far off that it should be light that their fenced Cities would shelter them c. which have been declared uselesse in the former purpose there remaineth yet their riches to be declared vaine 2. The wrath of God pursuing sin is so dreadful as no riches or treasures wherein men trust can ward off the stroak nor any thing else save the blood of Christ fled unto by the selfe-condemned sinner for neither their silver nor their gold shall be able to deliver them in the day of the Lords wrath See Prov. 11.4 Ezek. 7.19 3. When Gods love toward his people is provoked unto jealousie by their breach of mariage-duty and embracing strange lovers it produceth most sharp and violent judgements and acts as a fire which speedily consumeth all before it and with which no paction or treaty can be made for the whole land shall be devoured by the fire of his jealousie for he shall make even a speedy riddance of all them that dwell in the Land CHAP. II. THE Lord having thus threatned his sinful people comes now to exhort them to make right use thereof by inviting the body of the land to repent before the sentence were executed vers 1 2. and the godly remnant to seek God and follow their duty in hope of favour when the evil day should come v. 3. and that these exhortations may be more effectual he sets before them the sad judgements that were to come upon the Nations round about such as the Philistins vers 4 5 6 7. Moabites and Ammonites vers 8.9.10.11 the Ethiopians vers 12. and the Assyrians with their chiefe City vers 13 14 15. Vers 1. GAther your selves together yea gather together O Nation not desired 2. Before the decree bring forth before the day past as the chaff before the fierce anger of the LORD come upon you before the day of the LORDS anger come upon you The sum of the first exhortation directed to the impenitent body of the Nation is that no wever they were not a people de●irous of their own good nor worthy of any favour yet the Lord would make offer of it and therefore invites them to make a serious