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A52807 A compleat history and mystery of the Old and New Testament logically discust and theologically improved : in four volumes ... the like undertaking (in such a manner and method) being never by any author attempted before : yet this is now approved and commended by grave divines, &c. / by Christopher Ness ... Ness, Christopher, 1621-1705. 1696 (1696) Wing N449; ESTC R40047 3,259,554 1,966

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of his youthful Vigour and Vanity Or Naim Hebrew signifies the moving of them for thus the whole City was mightily moved at this mighty Miracle Luke 7.16 The Third Remark is A Young Man may be a Dead-Man This Widow's Son is call'd a Dead-man Luke 7.12 and a Young-man ver 14. assoon goes the Lambs-skin to the Market saith the Proverb as the Old Sheep Senibus mors in Januis Adolescentibus in insidiis Saith B●rnard Death seizeth upon old men yet lyes lurking as in an Ambushment for the youngest As the Old must dye so the Young may Dye Our Drecrepit Age both Expects Death and Sollicits it but Vigorous Youth looks strangely upon that Grim Sergeant sent of God to Arrest it so soon The Fourth Remark is 'T is no new device or novelty to have burying places without the City 't is said here when Christ came to Naim he meets Men with a Dead Man carried out of the City ver 12. for they might not as holding it unhealthful and unwholesome to Bury within the Walls open Graves and Interr Corps in the City Therefore N. B. Note well Let not any Survivers murmur at the Burying of their near and dear Relations in the Suburbs of this City seeing it was so here and the Resurrection will find them any where The Fifth Remark is 'T is no untrodden path for an only Son to dye as well as an only Husband This good Woman as the sequel demonstrates loses first her only Husband therefore is she call'd a Widow and now as if the loss of her Head were not great enough she must lose her only Son who might have been to her what Obed was to Naomai a restorer of her Life and a hourisher of her Old Age Ruth 4.15 This her only Branch must be lopped off from the Tree also then murmur not at such strokes c. The Sixth Remark is Yet Christ's Compassion is toward such as are under such severe strokes 'T is said v. 13. When the Lord saw her he had Compassion on her and said weep not All this and more was done upon Christ's own accord from his Free-Grace and Unrequested This Widow did neither beseech his Bowels to Pity her nor his Power to Raise her Son Christ had and hath still a most tender Heart and will pity and provide more for his Praying People than they ask of him The Seventh Remark is As Christ touched the Bier and spake to the Dead Arise whereby the Dead-man was raised to Life and Restored to his Mother ver 14 15. N. B. Note well So a word of Christ's Mouth and a touch with his Hand shall suffice to revive the Slain Witnesses and to restore them to the Church their Mother Oh that God may thus visit his People and be Glorified as ver 16. However it shall be enough at the last Day to Raise up all the Dead John 5.29 1 Thes 4.13 c. The Eighth Remark is Sometimes Christ commanded secresie in his working Miracles as Mark 5.43 Luke 8.56 but five Persons were Witnesses of Jairus's Daughters being raised to life c. but this and that of Lazarus was done openly in the sight of the multitude without charge of Privacy as in Capernaum where Christ had been laughed to scorn and had newly denounced a Curse against that City but there were no such causes here All is done in open view Solomon saith Every thing is Beautiful in the right Season So are all Christ's Acts doing all well Mark 7.37 CHAP. XV. NOW follow many more matchless Miracles whereby the Lord backed his Divine Oracles and Doctrine of Truth The first and next now to be gloss'd upon is Christ's Casting out of the Deaf and Dumb Devil Mat. 12. from ver 22 to 46. Mark 7.32 with 9.17.11.17 Luke 11. from ver 14 to 27. This is illustrated by many Remarks The First is Both Matthew and Mark do introduce this Miracle by premising a general account of an Ambulatory Hospital following Christ from all parts Great Multitudes followed him from place to place Mat. 12.15 yea some of Esau's Posterity Idumeans as well as Jews throng to touch Christ Mark 3.7 8 9 10. and he healed the Diseases and Plagues of all that came to him and cast out Devils Mat. 8.16 12 1● to which is added When the unclean Spirits saw him they fall down before him crying Thou art the Son of God Mark 3.11 The matter was well amended since Satan's first onset upon Christ in the Wilderness c. Where he then doubted saying If thou be the Son of God Mat. 4.3 6. The same Power can change his note to us The Second Remark is As Devils truckled to Christ's Power in his own Person so they did to that wherewith he impowered his Apostles whom he gradually gathered to be with him to see his Glory John 1.14 39 c. to be Witnesses of his Works Acts 10.39 41. And to learn as his Auditors the Doctrine of the Gospel that they were to Preach N. B. Note well So that the very Apostles themselves did not at their first mission into the Ministry Preach by the Spirit but what they had heard about a Twelve-month from the Mouth of their Master When Christ had Called and Chosen them to the number of twelve answerable to the twelve Tribes of Israel and throughly instructed them both for Praying and Preaching work He gives them not only a free Mission Mark 3.13 but also a free Commission both for curing Diseases and for casting out Devils Mat. 10.1 6 8. Mark 3.14 15. Luke 6.12 c. with 10 17. 9.1 Satan falls as Lightning from Heaven before them Luke 10.18 and that Serpent hurts them not Mark 16.18 Nor can he finally or totally hurt either Christ's Ministers or Believers that are his Members The Third Remark is Simon the Pharisee Invites Christ to a Feast Luke 7.36 It was fit he should feast sometimes that fared so hard mostly He is call'd Simon the Leper Mat. 26.6 Mark 14.3 whom Christ had healed of his Leprosie and who therefore entertains his Healer in way of Thankfulness to a Dinner and Christ's foregoing Words The Son of Man is come Eating and Drinking c. Luke 7.34 might possibly induce him to make this Invitation as haply Christ's others words Come to me all ye that are weary and heavy laden Mat. 11.28 might invite the Woman-Sinner to prostrate her self at Christ's-feet c. leaning on his left Elbow at Meat Luke 7.37 38. This was Mary Magdalen out of whom Christ had cast seven Devils and became a consort with a Court-Lady Joanna c. who had been healed by Christ also Luke 8.2 3. The self same Mary that was Sister to Lazarus John 12.2 3. Mark 15.40 16.1 Luke 24.10 Where we may not imagine Lazarus's Sister must neglect to be about the Burial Seeing Christ foretold that she should do that Office John 12.7 This Mary the Antients say was Married to a Noble Person of
blessed be they that hear their joyful sound Psal 89.15 Elisha hath a Sword as well as Jehu and Hazael 1 Kings 19.17 God how 's down those strong holds by his Prophets Hos 6.5 as the Spettle which comes out of Man's Mouth slays Serpents so that which comes forth from the Mouths of God's faithful Ministers casts out Devils Fourthly Though the Walls of our corruptions stand all the six days of our Lives the Leprosie of Sin being incorporated therein Levit. 14.40 42.45 and though we do our endeavour which God requires by the Spirit of Sanctification that makes a Stone drop down now and then which assures the Victory Esth. 6.13 yet the foundation is not raced till the time of Death that ushers in our Eternal Sabbath then and not before will be the full accomplishment of our thorough Mortification c. Fifthly The grand Jericho Rome Antichristian we may be assured shall surely fall before our Jesus so surely as this antient Jericho did before this Joshua Compare the Literal and Mystical Babylon together as before Jerem. 51.8 63 64. with Revel 14.8 and 18.2.21 and it appears that the fall of the New Babylon shall be far greater than that of the old For in the fall of the old 1. It was but a weak Man that was employed but in the fall of the new a mighty Angel 2. There it was but an ordinary Stone but here 't is a great Mill-stone 3. There 't is only said to sink but here 't is thrown down with great violence 4. There 't is only into the River Euphrates but here 't is into the deep and wide Sea 5. There 't is said only Babylon shall not rise from the evil but here none of her Emoluments no nor her self shall be found any more at all Revel 18.14.21 22 23. a Mill-stone sunk into the bottom of the main Ocean can never be buoyed up again The tenth part of that Papal or Papagan City is fallen already Revel 11.13 a great part of Europe fell from the Pope since our first Reformers Luther Calvin c. were the Rams Horns that then sounded both loudly and lustily The Walls thereof are those Principalities and Powers which stand round about Rome to defend her and to make War with the Lamb for her Rev. 17.13 14. but the Lamb there overcomes them and her Flesh shall be burnt for a Whore when her Walls fall down at the feet of Jesus and yield up their Crowns and Scepters to him The Pope's Supremacy that great Luminary of the World who proudly and presumptuously assumes Authority to himself to Authorize Scriptures Doctrines Worship Government Council c. begins to darken and die it being denied in many Nations of Europe he must die abroad before he die at home and a total Eclipse come upon him He that was an Embryo only in the Apostle's days rose by degrees and the seven Vials of the Wrath of God wastes him by degrees he must die of a Consumption 2 Thess 2.8 and that is a lingring Death The Walls of Jericho did not fall flat down by any of the six days sounding c. but the Seventh Day compleated the fall So the six Vials poured forth upon this Mystical Jericho make her Walls to shake and cause many Stones to drop down out of the Wall The fifth Vial brings a darkness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Scotch Mist upon his Kingdom Rev. 16.10 yet 't is the seventh Vial which cannot be far off that must accomplish its final fall We live upon the six thousand Year of the World a thousand Years are but as one day with God 2 Pet. 3.8 then follows the Seventh or Sabbatical Year the great Jubilee that brings Joy to the Saints in saving Sion and in utter destroying Babylon It shall come to pass that at evening time it shall be light Zach. 14.7 either at the Evening of the World or at the Evening of Antichrist for his Evening will be Christ's Morning as Antipodes c Let Saints be daily walking about Babylon in God's way and diligently waiting yea unanimously patiently constantly and confidently yet silently too as those here Josh 6.10 and praying also fervently for Babylon's Downfal and for more faithful Ministers to blow the Rams Horns of the Gospel that they may sound out a sound of Joy as the Italian Reading here is distinguish'd from the sound of War which God would not have in Jericho's Assault but it must be the Triumph of Faith which is the Victory of the Church A cold Sweat is upon the Limbs of Antichrist already God hath confounded the Language of those Babel Builders so that they are divided among themselves and one Warring against another Locusts last but five Months Rev. 9.15 Oh for an hearty shout of Saints altogether in Christ this made Jericho's Walls tumble down Numb 14.9 Rev. 19.1 2 3 4 5. Sixthly and Lastly As Joshua by a Prophetick Spirit denounced a most Direful Curse upon the Man that durst undertake to Rebuild this cursed Jericho after so signal a destruction Josh 6. yet was there found a Man who durst Rebuild it 1 Kings 16.34 as if he would despitefully spit in the very face of God and even wrestle a fall with the Almighty Caligula that prophane Emperour dared his Jove to a Duel but this Man out did him in challenging the great Jehova This Hiel would do it Al Despito di Dio as that Blasphemous Pope said about having his Peacock in despight of God But did this Man prove too hard for God No. Job 9.4 1 Cor. 10.22 this bold Wretch paid dear for his daring Presumption He was punish'd with the Death of his two Sons the Eldest at laying the foundation and his Youngest at his setting up the Gates which was the last Work Hiel might Rebuild this City to curry favour with King Ahab his Fellow-contemner of God and his Prophets However he sought for a Name of a great Builder and Benefactor in Israel yet left his Name for a Curse as Isa 65.15 and destroy'd his Living House while he was building Dead Houses So our Joshua or Jesus hath a flying Roll that causeth the Curse to take hold of Sinners against both the Tables of the Law of God Zach. 5.3 4. Our own Chronicler Speed tells us How God's Hand was very heavy upon William the Conqueror in his Issue as here which was as he saith not for Rebuilding any Cursed Jericho but for his Depopulations in New Forest But if we descend lower to the two last Reigns 't is easily observable and they that run may read the like heavy hand of God upon the Royal Issue more especially in the latter and not unlike to this of Hiel in the Death of his two Sons which occasion'd that Witty Distich Kendal is gone and Cambridge is Riding Post Victims to Denham's now Revengeful Ghost The Death of the Duke of Kendal the Elder and of the Duke of Cambridge makes it run in Parellel Lines with the Effects
not once questioning their Merits nor upbraiding them with their former failings or present infirmities James 1.5 And tho' his Errand was to heal the Soul of sin and death yet willingly he heals the Body and so he doth now c. The 4th Remark is All sorts of persons rich and poor young and old male and female bond and free out of all kind of places Villages Towns Cities and Countreys must come to Christ as to their common Saviour for safety and Salvation of Soul and Body as the People did here when once they were made sensible of their own wants and weaknesses All must come to him for all are one in him Col. 3.11 The 5th Remark is As Christ comes no where but there he hath an Errand so he send● his Gospel to no place but for some special end some fresh Vein of Election to break forth No Housholder will light up a Candle but when he hath some work to be wrought thereby No Husbandman will send his Servants into the Field with Sithes or Sickles but there is more than Thistles and Nettles to be reaped thereon The Ministry of the Gospel was sent to the Gentiles that the Elect might be gathered Isa 49.6 Acts 13.48 And hence the Apostle gathers an Argument of the Thessalonians Election 1 Thes 1.5 The 6th Remark is Such Souls have a right sense and science both of themselves and of their Saviour that do seek to him and implore his saving help and so imploy him as the Saviour of the World Thus this People do here among whom Christ presently sound some that found him Thus Genezareth became the Garden of a Prince as in Hebrew it signifies or engendring Air to it self as some interpret it from the fresh gales the neighbouring Sea sends to it from its curled Waves and here brought them the sweet gales of the Gospel c. or as others interpret Ge●esar the beginning of Nativity so it became now to the Gentiles to whom Chrise transported over Sea his precious Gospel from the Jews The 7th Remark is Such Souls at know Christ aright will not only seek to him themselves but they will endeavour all they can in their proper stations to bring in to him their Relations and Acquaintance also as this People did Nemo fibi nascitur sed multorum utilitati men are born for the benefit of many Nascitur indigne per quem non nescitur alter He is unworthily born by whom others are not helped to be ●●w horn Charity is no Churl No sooner had Andrew found the Messiah but he calls his Brother Peter John 1.41 and Philip Nathaneel ver 45. Thus Relations brought the Palsey-man upon his Bed to Christ Mark 2.3 Thus the Prophet saith They shall bring their Friends in Litters or Charets upon Mules or Horses Isa 66.20 N.B. Note well We should bring all ours to the Ordinances doing at least the Office of the Sermon Bell call them to Christ and lay them before the Lord for healing we know not what he may do for them There is healing vertue under his Wings Mal. 4.2 When the first Iron Ring of the Chain is drawn by the Loadstone that draws the second and that the third c. till the whole come in we should help our Neighbours to heath and to Heaven c. The 8th Remark is The greater our measure of Faith is the less will be our limiting God to signs Some are satisfied with their Saviouris speaking a word at distance as the Centurion others must have Christ come to their house and lay on his hands as Jairus Here they must only touch the hem of his garment Matters were well mended with these men since their rejecting of Christ and his Gospel Mat. 8.34 now are they Ripe as before Raw so press upon him in crowds as to touch him behind before and on each side and all Touchers were healed The Evangelist John expresly relateth chap 6.22 That the very next morning many of that multitude which Christ had miraculously fed with five Loaves the day before do follow him it Capernaum and find him there asking him Rabbi when camest thou hither ver 24.25 and by what mean● for they ●●mired both the time when and the manner ●ow well knowing the Journey by foot was very long and that he came not along with his Disciples in the Ship when he dismiss'd them over night Christ answers ver 26. not to what the was asked but knowing their hearts admonishes them of their Carnality that they followed him for L●aver more than for Love and as Augustin phraseth it did not love or seek Jesus for Jesus sake This being the very day of the Synagogue Ser●ice in the City of Ca●en●●um ver 59. Christ takes that occasion to Preach that excellent Sermon in the Synagogue to them from ver 16. to the end of the Chapter wherein he reclaims the●● from their expectations of perishing food c. to bused daily 〈◊〉 Miracles as he had done the day before and that for forty years together as Israel was fed by M●le● not with Barley bread but with Manna Angels food c. Christ calls them up to seek the more Spiritual Food that endureth for ever whereof Ma●●● was but the Type and himself was the Antity●● and that they must expect an other food now from him than the ●ating of his Flesh and the drinking of his Blood this ●●●●●ed such a monstrous Doctrine to many of them that they will follow him no more We may nor understand that in ver 60. to he any of the twelve Disciples no now yet of Judas the Devil n●rry● but it was many of those that were more frequent followers than others of him among whom saith Epipha●●● Mark himself became a Deserter stumbling at this seeming inhumane saving of eating Man's flesh but was reclaim'd by Peter After these things saith John 7.1 to wit Christ's Miracle about the Corporal Food feeding 5000 with five Loaves and his Oracle or Sermon about the right Spiritual Food the eating his Flesh and drinking his Blood spiritually by the mouth of Faith he still remained in Galilee where they were not such Zealots for the Law so not such hot Persecutors of Christ and would not walk in Jury or Judea because the Jews sought to kill him being blinded and incensed by Satan as Pharaoh c. were against Moses which made him flee to Midian Exod. 2.15 for now Christ's Fame and Name was mightily spread abroad by his Doctrine and Miracles his Disciples marvelously increased c. therefore the Sanedrim seek to kill him as Herod had done the Baptist Hereupon he declines Jerusalem still because he would not be Assassinated in a clandestine seditious manner which answered not the Father's Appointment and because his hour was not yet come for when that came he did willingly present himself in that City and in the very Temple c. However such was the malice and rage of the Sanedrim against our Saviour that
down to the Earth hence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Greek for the body comes of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ligo to bind for the Soul is bound as by the foot in the body so cannot mount up aloft as it doth when Death dissolves the Cord that binds it here below A gracious Soul doth therefore cry out unto the Lord of its own wretchedness herein to wit 1. of the body of sin that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or seed-plot of all sin which is so bred in the bone that it will not out till our bones as Josephs be carried out of the Egypt of this world and 2. of the body of death as it is a receptacle of all Diseases the Soul now dwells in an unwalled unfortifyed City exposed to many Distempers like the Picture of Man in the Almanack that hath rays of Arrows shot against his Head Neck Shoulders Breast Bowels Thighs Legs Feet and all parts which at last ushers in death it self All this makes Paul and every pious heart cry out And if the betrothed Damsel cry out though defiled she shall not dye Deut. 22.27 Bernard calls the body Sperma foetidum stinking seed before birth Saccus stercorum a bag of dung in life Et cibus vermium Meat for worms after death At the best 't is but the living Coffin of the Soul as the Grave is the dead Coffin of the body hence the Greek word for the body is derived of a word that signifies the Grave as before In short the body in the faln estate hath not onely lost its primitive glory whereof so little is left that it serves as Jobs Messengers only to bear testimony of our great loss but 't is also become a great clog to the Soul and an occasion of much sin 't is not onely the Harbour of much natural and corporal but also of much Spiritual corruption and as it was one of the Torments the Tyrants put upon the Primitive Christians to tye a dead body to the living one till the stench of the dead had destroyed the living so 't is no less a torment to a sensible Soul to be tyed to this body of sin and of death the stench whereof makes the Saints cry Oh wretched we c. and we desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 far far far better So much of the whole in general now 2ly of the parts in particular take a prospect how each member of the body is corrupted by the fall The Eye before was a most beautiful window to let in saving light and holy instructions into the Soul The Eye was an Holy and Honourable Member of the Body not only call'd a window but also a Looking-glass because Men learnt by the Eye to make them If the Chrystalline humour were not back'd with a black humour the Eye would give no reflexion so if Glasses were not back'd with Steel or Tin and Silver they would not reflect the Rays A whole bundle of wonders are in the Eye As 1. That it should be a Looking-glass as well as a window 2. That it should be of no colour yet behold all colours no sooner is the Eye coloured yellow with the Jaundise but all colours then seem yellow to it 3. That a Man should have Two Eyes yet receive but One sight at once because the Optick Nerves meet in one Middle 4. That the Eye being so tender a part as not to be jested with should be so strongly guarded with Tunicles especially the Apple of the Eye call'd in Hebrew Ishon the little man of the Eye Ishon and in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the little Girl or Daughter of the Eye as Bath-Gnaijn Hebr. signifies which is the tenderest piece of the tenderest part hence David Psal 17.8 prayeth that God would guard him many ways as the Apple of the Eye is guarded with many even with five Tunicles 5. Naturalists tell us also that whereas all other Creatures have but Four Muscles in their Eye one to turn it downward another to hold it directly forward a third to turn it to the right hand and a fourth to turn it to the left but God hath placed a fith Muscle over and above all those four Muscles aforesaid in Mans Eye that he may turn up his Eye to Heaven which no unreasonable Creature can do in his calling upon God 6. That this little Candle of the Body the Eye should have such a vast Elevation of sight to light us through the void space of all the Regions of the Air and through all the Seven Orbs of the Heaven to the Eighth which is called the Sphere of the fixed Stars and from which if an ascending line could be drawn perpendicularly as some have curiously calculated it would be a Journey of five hundred years long to it 'T is a vast distance betwixt the Eye and the Sun this is Mathematically demonstrated in as much as the Sun is one hundred and sixty times bigger than the Earth yet seems it but a small body to the Eye because of the great Gulf betwixt them and for ought we know the fixed Stars are as high above the Sun as the Sun is above us the least of which Stars are reckoned fifteen times bigger than the Earth and because of that vast distance appear but as spangles yet the Eye can ascend so high and that in a moment in the twinkling of an eye yea and which adds to the wonder without weariness too The Eye is not tired with travelling thither as the feet are with footing but a little way All which shows what a curious Fabrick the Eye is how much more the Eye of Faith to which nothing can be unpassable or impossible that Eye of the Soul will either find or make a way to the highest Heaven through all difficulties But now Alas 't is become a loop-hole of Lust being top-full of Adultery 2 Pet. 2.14 and is indeed the broker 'twixt the Heart and the Object to make up the sinful bargains of all other sins even the breaches of all Gods Commandments Hence God hath given a covering to the eye not only a natural as the eye-lids but also a moral covering Gen. 20.16 It was at this Cinque-port that Satan first entred and conveyed the first sin into the Soul of Eve Gen. 3.6 and by this Casement the Devil let in so much filthy corruption into the old world as no less than an universal Deluge could wash it clean again Gen. 6.2 5 7. and the Tempter finding this Engine so successful both at the beginning and at the ending of the old world did promote his Hellish projects by it ever after as Josh 7.21 c. Many Millions have dyed of the wound in the Eye 't is one of the Devils three grand Instruments as David had his three Chief Worthies to fight his Battels 1 Joh. 2.16 And as it was said of Abishai that he was the chief of the three of Davids Heroes 1 Chron.
sweet Soul However they are call'd the Light of the VVorld Mat. 5.14 As well as the Salt Oh how dark Would the VVorld be in the night of Degeneracy if God had not some Orient Stars sparkling and bespangling the world though not in every part yet in every Zone and Quarter of it Such an one was our Noah here some good men in bad times an Holy remnant kept for a reserve Good Husbands cast not all their Corn into the Oven but reserve some for seed God kept his Mithe-Mispar a small few here to replant the World Add the third 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after what manner it is Ans 'T is as the Chaff is kept from burning while the Corn is amongst it As in all times God hath a few Pearls to preserve the many Pebbles and a few Jewels to preserve the Lumber from being destroyed so the Holy Seed call'd Statumen terrae the Substance of the Earth Isa 6.13 and the Righteous are an Everlasting Foundation Prov. 10.25 They may say with David they bear up the Pillars of the world Psal 75.3 Hence it became a common Proverb in the primitive times Absque Stationibus sanctis non staret mundus But for the Piety Presence and Prayers of the Christians the World could not subsist any longer Hence also Philo draws a good Conclusion Oremus ùt tanquam Columnae vir pius permaneat in domo ad calamitatis Remedium Let us pray that the righteous may remain as Pillars in the house with us and not perish from among us as Isa 57.1 As our blessed preservatives from imminent evils 'T is said Abraham stood yet before the Lord Gen. 18.22 And without such to stand the World could not stand for God saith oft over I will not destroy it for their sake v. 23.24 26 30,30 Lot was saved for Abrahams sake as Sodom was for Lots sake till he was departed out of it Gen. 18.23 with 19 22 and 29. And as God gave Zoar to Lot Gen. 19.21 and all the Souls in the Ship to Paul Acts 27.24 So God gives the rest of mankind to the righteous Job 22.30 Upon this account Tabor and Hermon are accounted for East and VVest Psal 89.12 For God accounts of the VVorld by the Church and upholds the World for the Churches sake And were it not for some Jehosaphats God hath in the World he would say to wicked men as Elisha said to Jehoram that wicked King I would not look towards you nor see you as before If it were not for his Elects sake God would make a short work both in and of the World Rom. 9.28 Were it not for the Elects sake there should no Flesh be saved Mat. 24.22 Neither any Jew nor any Gentile left alive were it not for his Covenant sake and his infinite mercy to his Elect deus vindictae gladium oleo misericordiae semper emollit God ever is softening the Sword of his Justice with the Oil of his mercy and hereby a remnant is reserved both of Jews and Gentiles in the VVorld and the VVorld for the Elects sake When God is most enraged and resolved yet then will he yield something unto the Prayers of his precious Servants as he did to Abraham in his interceeding for Sodom gathering ground of God four times and even then broke he off from Begging before the Lord left off from Bateing Gen. 18.22 to 33. Inference Oh then what sublime fools are wicked men in thrusting out and endeavouring to destroy the righteous from among them What is this but to pull an old house the World upon their own heads As Noah did ransom the old World from ruine for 120 years when God was resolved upon it as well as repented he had made it to see whether men would repent of their sins and seek reconciliation by righteousness and by returning to God as Dan. 4.27 Thus Aaron stood betwixt the Living and the Dead Num. 16.48 And so the Plague was stayed by his offering Incense and many a time would God have destroyed Israel had not Moses c. stood in the Gap Psal 106.23 and 30. Thus Elias prayed Jam. 5.18 And Amos also Amos. 7 5 6. And God removed both those Judgments The very presence as well as Prayers of the Righteous doth ransom places and people from ruine were it not that some Clusters that have blessings in them the Churches of Saints be found upon Englands Vine-tree God would lay his Ax to the Root of it and cut it down never to cumber the ground any more Isa 65.8 Mat. 3.10 no sooner was Lot out of Sodom but God rain'd down Hell out of Heaven upon it no sooner was Augustin departed but Gods Judgments came down upon Hippo as after Luthers departure upon Germany and after Pareus his Death upon Heidelberg no sooner was Josiah dead but Jerusalem was destroyed 'T is not those Elijahs that trouble Israel as wicked Ahab said but 't was he himself and his wicked House 1 Kin. 18.17 18. Those reputed troublers of the City Acts 16.20 do really ransom the City from trouble and such as are accounted to turn the World upside down Acts 17.6 do indeed preserve the World from being so turned Some places indeed are so sinful that God saith If Noah Daniel and Job were in it it should not be ransomed from ruine Ezek. 14.20 Yet commonly such Servants of God save places and people both from Imminent and Incumbent Evils by their Prayers and by their Presence 'T is a sign of high Divine Displeasure when a place is bereaved of the Prayers of Gods people by Gods Command as when God bid Jeremy pray not for this people Jer. 14.11 for their good for God seems to say that he can do nothing against a place while his people pray for it let me alone saith God to Moses that I may destroy them Exod. 32.10 Ligatum habent sancti deum ut non puniat nisi Ipsi permiserint The Saints as it were bind Gods hands to the peace so that he cannot punish unless they permit at the Father glosseth upon that Text which seems to intimate that Moses's Intercession for Israel was through Divine condescension too strong for Gods Indignation against them Yet 't is an higher evidence of Divine Displeasure when a place loseth both the Prayers and Presence of Gods people This was Abrahams argument Wil t thou destroy the Righteous with the wicked That be far from thee c. Gen. 18.23 24 25. And. God grants the cogency of the Argument v. 26. Why are not the Tares now pluckt up 'T is for the Wheat sake though thin sown that is present among them therefore saith Christ Let the Tares alone until the Harvest Mat. 13.28 29 30. Thus the World is preserved for the Elects sake Therefore when the Righteous are taken away 't is a sure sign that some great evil is coming on Isa 57.1 Hence the loss of their presence should be laid to heart When a loving Father removeth his best
Salvation to some but a Savour of Death or Destruction to others 2 Cor. 2.16 Thus God did most graciously give a due warning to an evil World though he needed not to have done so for as men gave God no warning of their sins against him so God might have given as little warning of his Judgments against them but his mercy triumph'd over his Justice Jam. 2.13 and fury or revenge was not in God Isa 27.4 For such who are for revenge are all for surprize but God gives both respite and warning that his Judgments might not come as a thief in the night at unawares upon them And though this race of Rebels improv'd it not but Jeared where they should have Feared Those of Lamechs black line laughed at Noahs daily labour scoffingly asking him whether he meant to Sail upon dry ground and why he expected a wet Winter and whether much holiness had not made him mad Acts 26.24 However Noah took warning himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 moved with fear Heb. 11.7 And gave warning to those that would not take it they cannot all flout him out of his Faith but he Preaches Builds and Finishes and then Enters taking Gods threatning by the right handle he feared the Judgments when the World generally jeared at them Inferences hence are 1. As Noah took the warning well at Gods hand and Feared so ought we to do being warned of God about Judgments impending The word Heb. 11.7 for warn'd of God is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to have dealings with God coming of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 res negotium Noah was a man that did Negotiate with God and was of his Court and Counsel God will not hide what he hath to do from Abraham or Noah his Friend Gen. 18.17 Psal 25.14 Joh. 15.15 Surely the Lord God will do nothing but he revealeth his secrets to his Servants the Prophets Amos. 3.7 Nothing that is hardly any thing such is his Philanthropy or Love to men that he loves to fore-signify and to warn before he wound Even Pharaoh himself had warning of the First and Second Plagues but not of the Third again of the Fourth and Fifth not so of the Sixth yet again of the Seventh and Eighth but not of the Ninth and when neither warning nor no warning would work well then came that Tenth and last sweeping Plague that swept away all the first-born of Egypt As Moses was Gods Herald to warn Egypt so Noah was to warn the old World and Gods Prophets are now no less to warn this present evil World that the goodness of God might lead us to repentance Rom. 2.4 The old World had but one Preacher yet we have many God might deal with us as Absolom did with Amnon whom he designed to destroy in speaking neither good nor evil to him 2 Sam. 13.22 Or he might rush suddenly upon us and by a Thunder-stroke confound us at once as he did the Apostate Angels in the very first Act and Moment of sin No he sendeth his Heralds to proclaim War yet with articles of peace open in their hands So slow to Anger is he and so little desirous of the death of sinners that he who was but six days in making the whole World yet could be seven days in unmaking or destroying that one City Jericho Oh who would not but fear this goodness Hos 3.5 The 2. Inference is seeing God hath foretold us of Evils to come both Particular and the General Judgment we should be moved with fear as Noah was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 handling Gods warning well and making a saving use of these predictions for preventing the danger Especially considering the old World could at first say from a divine warrant that there are yet an hundred and twenty years before the general Judgment by water doth come but we can none of us say that there be yet an hundred and twenty days before the general Judgment by Fire come for of that day and hour knoweth no man Mat. 24.36 Oh God forbid that as it was in the days of Noah it should be so now v. 37. Noahs fear is opposite to the Worlds security Noah was moved with Fear but the wicked world were moved at Gods threatnings no more than a Stone The honest and good heart Luk. 8.15 is like the Pool of Bethesdah Joh. 5.3 4. If the Angel of the Covenant come down into it 't is then moved such was the heart of Daniel Dan. 4.19 And such was the heart of Habakkuk Hab. 3.16 And such was Noahs also in being moved with fear and such ought ours to be also Especially considering special and particular Judgments are Imminent over us if not Incumbent on us besides that general day of Judgment drawing nigh all Preachers of Righteousness as Noah was do tell the World that it shall shortly be destroyed by Fire as Noah did its destruction by water yet where is that Reverence and that fear which doth Spring from Faith as Noahs did Heb. 11.7 That fear which looks only at the Judgment Hell and Damnation is servile only but that which hath an Eye to deliverance also is Filial and of a right Gospel Edition This is a fear of Faith which hath always a Vein of Love running along with it For Faith doth teach to fear God as a most glorious holy God and yet to love him as a loving reconciled Father and faith teacheth also from filial fear as it did Noah here to prepare an Ark to wit Christ Jesus for our deliverance from wrath to come 1 Thes 1.10 By Faith is this Ark prepared The 3. Inference is Now while our days of respire remain as Noah did in the respite of an hundred and twenty years we should prepare an Ark wherein to he saved if we be moved with a fear of Faith then shall we be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 take right measures and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 well busied as the word also signifies in taking right methods Oh how busie should we be in preparing an Ark as Noah was who 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as an Artificer or Carpenter prepared his Faith set him on work fearing the danger for Judgments in Divine Threatnings are Objects of Faith and are to be believed as well as mercies in Divine promises Noah by an Eye of Faith saw that danger approaching which was unseen by the unbelieving World so falls upon this tedious work to prevent the Danger 't was undoubtedly a very strong Faith that bore up Noah to do all according as God had Commanded him Gen. 6. last Unbelief could not chuse but Object sundry carnal Reasonings against Noah's Act of Obedience As 1. May not God save me from the Flood by Translating me out of the World as Enoch was and not put me upon this hard Service of hewing and hammering c. Or 2. If I must be reserv'd in the World for propagation cannot God Build me a Castle upon the highest
Divine Manifestations thus Gods people are call'd on to come out of Egypt and Babylon Mystical and there he will give them his loves Cant. 7.12 and there will he speak comfortably to them even to their Hearts Hos 2.14 Israel never wanted the Urim and Thummim for their Direction and Counsel but in the Babylonish Captivity and though these were not recover'd after their Return thence yet had they their Bath-kol the Daughter of a voice Mat. 3.17 and John 12.28 30. and the Angel's moving the Pool of Bethesdah John 5.2 4. as standing Tokens of his presence with them and of Divine Dealings or Negotiations betwixt them In a word Noah was a perfect Man so call'd because he had 1. A Saving Knowledge of God 2. Continual Counsel from God And 3. Constant Communion with God This must we press too Though it be clear in Scripture that God warned Noah and whereof also to wit of the Worlds Destruction by a Floud and of his Salvation by an Ark yet is it not so clear whereby he was warned It may be said 1. Negatively God did not warn him by a Prophet for we read not of any Prophet in those evil days 2. Yet Positively God warn'd him either by the Ministry of some Angel or by immediate Revelation from himself Now instead of the extraordinary Revelations of Old Testament-Times we have perfect Scripture which they wanted able to make wise to Salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 whereas their Revelations were oft personal and private and not tending directly to Salvation but rather relating to private Persons to particular Families or to publick Kingdoms whereas now our Salvation by Christ is more revealed in the Scriptures than private or particular matters we to us therein 'T is true the Arcana Imperii and the Arcana Ecclesiae the grand Concerns of the World and of the Church in the VVorld are contained in Sacred Writ yet the main Scope thereof is to Teach Salvation by a Saviour ☞ NB. Whatever Revelation may now be pretended concerning this or that Nation concerning future Times following Days or the Full and Final Consummation of the World not drawn out of the Sheath or Quiver of the Holy Scriptures are but the wild Fancies and uncertain Conjectures of Men while the Vail is untaken off while the Smoak of the Bottomless Pit doth darken Truth and while we know but in part and see through a Glass darkly So that to give guesses on such Subjects and not from Scripture is to exercise our selves in matters too high for us Psal 131.1 and to Usurp the use of Gods Key which hangs only at Gods Girdle Acts 1.7 Hence many Conjectures become contrary and contradictory one to another because they are not Discoveries drawn out of the Light and Sunshine of the Infallible Spirit Paul saith I speak by permission not by command in some cases 1 Cor. 7.6 c. After Noah had prepared the Ark according to Gods warning and his own fear of Faith three circumstances are to be well considered 1. Ingress 2. Progress 3. Egress 1. His Ingress or entrance into it 2. His Progress or safe entertainment in it 3. His Egress or joyful departure out of it First of the first of these viz. 1. Noahs Ingress or Entrance the day of the Deluge's coming is come all the Guests invited to this Sanctuary or Ark of safety approach and enter three enquiries arise here The 1. Is When The 2. Who And 3. What. 1. When was this done Ans 1. Negatively Not as the Jewish Doctors say when forced by the Floud This is a slandring both the Holy person Noah and the Holy Text too Which saith otherwise Therefore 2. Positively It was when God commanded him Gen. 7.1 Not when the floud forced him he went into the Ark at Gods Command Gen. 7.1.7 And he went out of the Ark at Gods Command also Gen. 8.15 16 17.18 'T is therefore apparent that the Rabbins revile this good old Preacher in saying of him he came not into the Ark out of any good will but when compell'd thereunto by the Flouds coming NB. 'T is the bad portion of good Preachers to be reviled 'T is probable God commanded Noah to enter the Ark a little after Methuselahs Death he dieth as the name signifies and the dart cometh Then was the floud sent for the righteous must be taken away before the evil come Isa 57.1 Lot must be handed out of Sodom into Zoar before Hell be rain'd out of Heaven upon those wicked Cities Gen. 19.6.22 Jeroboams best Son must die before the Downfal of his Fathers Family 1 Kin. 14.12 13. And Josiah must be removed before the Captivity came and the first destruction of Jerusalem 2 Kin. 22.23 As the Apostle James was before its second destruction Acts 12.2 Many more such instances may be given This holy Patriarch Methuselah had been hitherto a Bulwark and Rampart against the Flood for the World Thus it is with all Gods eminent Servants they stand in the Gap and Stop the Breach to prevent an Inundation Oh then how mad is the World to be so mad against their best benefactors as before The 2. Enquiry is Who entred Ans 1. Noah and his houshold eight persons 1 Pet. 3.20 The great God took his Fann into his hand Mat. 3.12 And Fanned or Winnowed eight Grains of Corn from a whole Barn-floor of Chaff yet one of these eight proved but a slain Wheat-grain C ham became an Hypocrite yet was he saved for Noahs sake but never any righteous destroyed for the wickeds sake Many more hands were employed upon the Ark than the hands of Noah and his Sons yet none were saved in the Ark save those four and their four Wives All the other Carpenters that had wrought and it may be very hard upon the Ark for saving those eight Souls perished in the waters This sheweth 1. that works without Faith cannot save 2. Some may be instrumental for the saving of others yet perish themselves Noahs houshold was a compound of four families They four and their four Wives might make four distinct families yet no Servants are mentioned to enter the Ark with any one of them to be saved with them No men-servants belonging to any of these four Masters no Maid-Servants attending any of these four Mistresses as Psal 123.2 Either we must say 1. That the simplicity of that age was such as required no great attendance but Masters and Mistresses were Servants to themselves and did their own drudgery which is not so probable inasmuch as we find Abraham and Lot had abundance of Servants after the Floud Gen. 13.7 8. And Abraham distinct had three hundred and eighteen Servants Gen. 14.14 And Sarah was Mistress to a Maid-Servant Hagar Gen. 16.3 How many more she might have we know not Or 2. Shall we say though many Servants of both Sexes might belong to those sour families yet this debauched and corrupt age had debauched and corrupted all the Servants so that there was not
nourishment for nourishment to the utmost penny the sweetest years the good old Patriarch had ever seen And this is the more Remarkable that Gods grant of addition to Jacob's Life was two years more than that granted to Hezekiah for that was only for fifteen years 2 Kings 20.6 but this to Jacob was for seventeen Whereas we are wont to reckon seven years for the Life of a Man as God granted more by one year than two lives to Hezekiah so he added to Jacob more than two lives even three years which is almost half of a third life and what it wanted in quantity or number it was supplied in quality or sweetness so God out-bade his hopes desires and deserts as he oft doth ours Gen. 48.11 I had not thought to see thy Face and now I see thy Seed too thus God shews us things not hoped for Isa 64.2 The third Remark is Jacob took care for his Burial and the place of it before his Sickness being sensible of some Summons to Death by the decay of Nature and learning to die daily as 1 Cor. 15.31 yet will not be Buried in Egypt though the Earth be the Lords and the fulness of it Psal 24.1 and though he was then conveniently seated there with his whole Family but Requests he might be Buried in Canaan not from any Superstitious conceit that one Countrey is holier than another and nearer Heaven but upon far graver grounds As 1. To testifie his Faith concerning the promised Land a Type of Heaven and the Doctrine of the Resurrection 2. To confirm his Family in the same Faith that they might live as Strangers in Egypt weaned from its Pleasures and Treasures and wait for their return to Canaan which God had promis'd to give them and which he though dead would not relinquish his right in lest he should seem to distrust God though yet he saw it not fulfilled 3. To declare his love to his Godly Ancestors above all vain Idolaters these latter Jacob never loved while living and therefore will not lye among them when dead But the former he judg'd it his Felicity to have Fellowship with both in Life and Death 4. Because Canaan not Egypt was the Countrey Christ the Worlds Redeemer was to lead his Life receive his Death be raised therein and from thence to Ascend into Heaven Jacob therefore desir'd to be Buried there where the Worlds Redemption was to be transacted where Christ must die and rise again that he might at length rise again with him Hence some of the Antients say that this Jacob and the other Patriarchs did Bodily Rise again with Christ because 't is said Mat. 27.52 53. The Graves were opened and many Bodies of Saints which slept arose c. to wit those Holy Patriarchs who before were kept bound in their Sepulchers till the very Heart-strings of Death now swallow'd up in Victory by Life Essential were quite broken even by the Death and Resurrection of the Lord of Life then were they inlarged to become Witnesses and Attendants of Christs Resurrection and who appearing were known to many in the City as Moses and Elias were known to the three Apostles in the Mount at Christs Transfiguration either by a special Revelation or by that Coelestial Illumination which will be much more in Heaven as Adam knew Eve in his state of Innocency Gen. 2.23 or lastly by the Familiar Conference wherein they might learn who they were betwixt Christ and them Mat. 17.3 But Modern Authors say they were such as were lately dead who were well remembred by those that were living supposed to be Simeon the Just Anna the Prophetess Zacharias Lazarus and others lately dead whose Bodies were not yet consumed as those of the Patriarchs were not only Buried so long before but also so far off as Makpelah Hebr. the double Cave was thirty Miles from Jerusalem We shall therefore leave it undecided whether Jacob requested to lye in that Land because he hoped as Lyranus affirms to be one of those which should Rise out of his Grave at Christs Resurrection and to accompany him in his Ascension into Heaven this seems something too curious though it seem more comely and more glorious both to the Patriarchs and to Christ The Jews add a fifth Reason why Jacob would not be Buried in Egypt because he foresaw the Dust of Egypt would be turned into Lice c. When Jacob did thus give order for his Burial Swearing his Son Joseph to observe the place of it this he did not as if he distrusted Jeseph's naked Promise but he requires an Oath Gen. 47.31 Because 1. He would have them all know it was no trifle he required but a weighty matter and of great moment for fortifying his Families Faith and for obliging them more firmly to expect their Return 2. That Jacob might die in full satisfaction and assurance that this thing he desired would be faithfully done knowing that the Sanction of a Sacred Oath would better outweigh opposition than a bare Promise 3. That Joseph might do it with less offence and envy to the King and his Courtiers for the carrying away of Jacob's Corps did seem to carry a kind of contempt with it The Egyptians might well object Is our Land good enough for you to live in while alive and is it too bad for you to lye in when dead Hereupon Joseph might have been otherwise perswaded and over-ruled by Pharaoh But this Oath answer'd all contrary objections for they that liked not to have their Land under-valued yet allowed that Joseph's holy Oath should be religiously observed therefore Joseph to procure this grant of the King urgeth this Oath which he made to his Father Gen. 50.6 with 4 5. ☞ Whence we learn that Oaths are both lawful and needful for Men are mutable even betwixt these two Holy Patriarchs the Son must be bound by an Oath to the Father though Joseph might otherwise have fulfilled Jacob's will yet was it not judg'd amiss to lay this Sacred Obligation upon him which was so reverenc'd among Heathens How may this condemn Christians both such as allow no Swearing at all though Paul call it the end of strife Heb. 6.16 and especially such as make no Conscience to keep Oaths when Sworn but Sport with them as Children do with their slips or as Monkeys with their Collars who slip them on for their Masters pleasure but off for their own both play at fast and loose according to their liking Pharaoh and the Egyptians will rise up in judgment against such Jesuitical Mock-Christians and God himself will in time take his vengeance upon them Yea and how Pharaoh's approving Joseph's Filial respect and obedience to his Fathers will condemneth such graceless Children who frequently contemn the Authority of their Parents and tear in pieces their last Wills and Testaments 'T is a notorious shame that so many Nominal Christians should be so far out-done by those poor Blind Heathens who had a reverence both for
a peaceable and harmless passage through Edom. N.B. This unkindness of Relations befel Christ himself his Friends laid hold on him looking upon him as a Mad-man Mark 3.21 And if this was done to the green Tree what may the dry expect Hereupon Christ forewarns us of the failure of Friends and not only so but of their opposition also that we may place our hope and trust in him alone Matth. 10.21 22. Psal 2.12 and 73.25 28. The fourth Remark is The unkindness of Friends ought patiently to be endured as passing through Wisdom's hands which appoints Time Place Measure and Manner Thus David still'd himself with this consideration that the hand of the Lord ordered the Tongue of cursing Shimei But more expresly here the Lord had forbad Israel to meddle with Edom Deut. 2.4 5. in which place Targum Jonathan thus paraphraseth Israel was commanded by the word of Heaven that they should not wage War with the Posterity of Esau because the time was not yet come wherein God would execute Vengeance upon Edom by their hands This is mentioned in Obadiah's Prophecy Therefore Israel at this time suffered patiently the unkindness of Edom and obeyed the Lord herein tho' the way which they after went through the Wilderness fetching a compass round about the Land of Edom and Moab to come into Canaan proved exceeding irksome and grievous to them so that their Souls were discouraged not only because of the tedious length of the way but also because of the many wants and woes that they found therein Numb 21.4 5. And Jephtha pleads this to vindicate Israel's Patience and Innocency Judg. 11.18 Hereupon Israel being denied passage through Edom turned away to Mount Hor Numb 20.22 which was their next Resting-place after they came from Kadesh Numb 33.37 which name signifies a Mountain upon a Mountain for Har Hebr. signifies a Mountain and Aaron or Aharon signifies a Man of the Mountain who died now on the top of this Mountain upon a Mountain so died near Heaven Numb 20. v. 24 28. yet leaving an holy Son to succeed him upon Earth The same hands of Moses that had put on his Priestly Garments for Glory and Beauty Exod. 28.2 and Levit. 8.7 8 9. do now pull them off to teach the disanulling of that Priesthood that now had contracted sin Numb 20.12 Deut. 32.50 51. and the bringing in of a better Priesthood by Christ who is the true Eliazar or Hebr. help of God Heb. 7.11 18 26 27 28. and who is a Priest for ever after Melchizedek's order and ever liveth to make Intercession for us c. ver 25. and 9.24 Aaron is said to die gnal pi Jehovah at the mouth of the Lord as if God had taken away his Soul out of his Body sucking it out with a kiss of Love the same is said of Moses Deut. 34.5 Numb 33.38 He died upon Hor hagidgad that is in a hole there of Gidgad or Gudgod Deut. 10.7 on the first day of the fifth month for his sin committed at the Waters of Meribah in Kadesh Numb 20.12 24 26 c. after his Priestly Garments were stripped off from him and put upon Eleazar his Son and then he was lamented by Israel all that whole month for thirty days N.B. Mourning for the Dead is honourable the People mourn for Aaron as after they did for Moses who was now reprieved only till they came to Nebo Deut. 34.1 4. thirty days whom they had dishonoured forty years 'T is the Lot of many of the Servants of God to have more honour after their death than they had in their life The Burial of Aaron tho' omitted here is mentioned Deut. 10.6 Both Aaron's and Moses's sin at Meribah is call'd Rebellion and both were doomed to death for it Numb 20.12 24. The best man's heel hath some Iniquity cleaving to it Psal 49.5 Some dirt sticks to all our feet John 13.7 c. so need washing and the brightest Lamps have need of God's Golden Snuffers at some time or other Israel then marched from Mount Hor to Zalmonah Numb 33.41 call'd so of Zelem an Image for there the Brazen Serpent was set up after Many Remarks more than ordinary are upon this Station Recorded The first is The Canaanites having heard of the overthrow which was given Israel thirty eight years before their coming to this Station Numb 14.45 and of the hand of God against them in their so long wandring in the Wilderness were hardened and emboldened to encounter them again at this time when they heard of their second approach towards Canaan Numb 21.1 and no doubt but the Devil did endeavour by this new Impediment which he stirred up to discourage Israel making them think that as their Fathers were through unbelief affrighted and entred not into the promised Land Deut. 1.27 32 35. so their Children hereby might also be deprived Yea and God for the Chastisement of their sins and for the Exercise of their Faith out of his unsearchable Wisdom suffered those Cursed Canaanites at the first to conquer them and to take some of them Prisoners a sorer affliction than what Job suffered The most wise God permitted this Malady worse than any before to befal them that his People might know when they came indeed to conquer the Land they did not conquer it by their own strength or for their own worthiness Psal 44.3 4. Deut. 9.4 The second Remark is This Malady that was matchless in all their former wanderings put Israel upon seeking out a suitable Remedy Hereupon they vowed a Vow c. ver 2. that if God would grant them Victory they would Anathematize all they conquered reserving nothing for their own use but destroy all as consecrated to God With this Religious Promise they joyned fervent Prayer for God's help which was the most probable way to prevail with God as their great Grand-father Jacob found it Gen. 28.20 36. and who is therefore call'd the Father of Vows Thus they found it also ver 3. where 't is said The Lord received the Prayer of Israel and gave up King Arad and his Canaanites into their hands c. then according to their Vow they devoted the Conquered Persons to death their Cities to be burnt but their Goods confiscate to the Lord were carried into the Lord's Treasury Levit. 27.28 29. as was done to Jericho Josh 6.17 19 21 24. But this Vow of destroying the Canaanite's Cities could not now be performed unless in some as first-fruits offered up to God for they being now far off in the Wilderness could not destroy the Cities lying in Canaan Numb 33.40 into which they came not till after Moses's Death and still Jordan was betwixt them and it 'T is not to be believed that they now entred Canaan and when they had destroyed their Cities returned again into the Wilderness to take that tedious Journey which was so irksom to them after Numb 21.4 Therefore this is spoke by way of Anticipation they now conquered the Canaanites Army
he had not Some hope in his Death as Solomon saith concerning the Righteous Prov. 14.32 The Third Part is How Achan was punish'd for his Sins Remarks upon this are First The Place and the Name of it ver 24. the place of the Punishment was the Valley of Achor which signifies Trouble so called by Anticipation because not only all Israel was troubled here for Achan's Sacriledge but also himself and all his were troubled here with a double trouble expressed ver 15. and 25. this Valley was nigh to Jericho and was fertile fat and full of Vines Isa 65.10 'T is thought to be the same with Engedi oft mentioned in the Canticles and it was an Inlet into Canaan call'd therefore a door of Hope Hos 2.15 because here Israel began to eat first the fruits of the Promised Land whereof this Valley was a Pledge and Earnest assoon as they had removed the Accursed thing from them c. Accordingly the first fruits and earnest of the Spirit given to us breedeth an assured hope of the Harvest of Happiness and of the whole bargain of Salvation by Christ This Valley of trouble is not a place to abide long in but is an Inlet to Mercy and Hope sets us upon Pisgah giving a prospect of Heaven as Moses had of Canaan as it is the evidence of things not seen Hebr. 11.1 The Second Remark is The Punishment it self which is double 1. To be stoned with Stones And 2. To be burned with Fire ver 15. and 25. First Stoning with Stones was the Punishment appointed for Presumptuous Offenders and for Blasphemers by the Law Levit. 24.14 Numb 15.30.35 every Presumptuous Sinner is a kind of a Blasphemer Ezek. 20.27 whose Sin is not to be expiated by Sacrifice And Secondly Burning with Fire the Law likewise appointed for those Persons and things that were Accursed Gen. 38.24 Levit. 21.9 Deut. 13.16 and so notorious was Achan's sin that it seems here to be doomed to a double Death therefore is it aggravated as folly in Israel ver 15. So Sin is oft called in Scripture Gen. 34.7 Judg. 20.6 and 2 Sam. 13.12 all intimating that Sin is the basest most senceless and foolish Deed it is folly in the Abstract as it is a turning from God the greatest Good and a turning to that which is the greatest evil and that in Israel too among the People of God who had such excellent Laws to direct them and such an All-sufficient God to provide for them as he had done for Achan to whom the Lord had given Sons and Daughters Oxen Asses and Sheep together with a well furnish'd Tent ver 24. therefore having no colour of necessity to induce him unto this folly a double Doom is upon him The Third Remark is The Persons and Things thus doomed and executed were 1. Achan and his Accomplices that is his Sons and Daughters which were part of his Goods together with 2. all his other Goods Animate and Inanimate both those that God had given him by his Providence and those that he had taken to himself by a Sacrilegious stealth even he and all that he had ver 15.24 Objection 1. But this Doom seems hard and unjust if not absurd as it is doubled no person could be both Stoned to death and Burnt to death too Answ 1. There is no doubt concerning Achan's deserving this double Doom for he committed his Sacriledge most probably upon the Sabbath-Day which was the Seventh Day wherein Israel compass'd Jericho seven times and took the City so he was a Sabbath breaker and therefore to be stoned Numb 15.32.36 and God doom'd him to be burnt because he was a Sacrilegious sinner stealing things from God himself as they were devoted to God by a Curse and all Accursed things were doomed to be burned Deut. 13.16 This was God's Doom upon Achan Josh 7.15 and executed by Joshua ver 25. yet may not we suppose that he was burnt alive but it was only his Carcase after he had been stoned for that was a burning in common with all the Goods he had both stoln and unstoln which were lifeless things Or he might as some say be first burnt alive and then said to be stoned when the People raised over his Ashes a great heap of Stones as 't is said ver 26. as was done upon the King of Ai Josh 8.29 and upon Absolom 2 Sam. 18.17 Answ 2. The doubt is greater about the Justice and equity of this Doom than is about the Absurdity of it because his Sons and his Daughters die with him for his Sin which is contrary to that Law Children shall not be put to Death for their Fathers sin c. Deut. 24.16 But we must consider First That Law was given to Man and not to God who certainly hath a greater Soveraignty and a more absolute power over Men than one Man hath over another There can be no Injustice in God whose Will is not only Recta but Regula both right and the Rule of Right He punishes the Iniquity of Fathers upon their Children Exod. 20.5 He may do what he will with his own Matth. 20.15 he is not bound to give an Account to us for his doings Job 33.13 none may say to God What dost thou Much less than to a King Eccles 8 4. 't is not safe for silly Man of a shallow Mind to reprehend the Works of God which he cannot comprehend c. Secondly 'T is not improbable but those Sons and Daughters were Accessories as Achan was principal in the sin for Achan being now old as being the fifth from Judah see ver 1. his Sons and Daughters must likely be grown up and so capable of knowing and concealing or revealing this Fact they living in the same Tent with their Father nor are they call'd Children much less Infants nor doth it follow that they were not guilty because it is not said so For divers Circumstances are omitted in Scripture-History which sometimes are supplyed from other places Hereunto add the Rabbi-Talmudists do rationally affirm that they must be conscious of their Fathers Fact for he could not dig and hide those Accursed things in the Tent wherein they dwelt but most easily must they know of it Thirdly consider These Sons and Daughters might not die simply for their Father's sins but only paid that Debt of Nature and of their own sins which Debt God the Supream Lord might require when and how he pleased and now they died honourably thus far that this severity upon them at the beginning of this new erected Empire might be so in terrorem to after Ages as to prevent the Death of Millions that would beware of such pernicious Practices by their dreadful Example whom if the fear of God did not yet the love of their own Lives and of their dear Childrens Lives would powerfully restrain them Aliorum perditio posterorum fiat cautio Their direful Woe was a warning to Posterity Objection 2. As to the things 2dly that perished with
for the City Timnath-Serah which he chose call'd Timnath heres which signifies the Picture of the Sun which was there worship'd Judg. 2.9 in detestation whereof the Name was altered by tranposition of Letters Here 's for Serah was on old ruinous City which he was forced to repair before he could inhabit it and Masius tells a Story of Paula whom Jerom writes to how she went to visit Joshua's Sepulchre in this City Josh 24.30 and there wondered that he who was the principal Divider of that fruitful Land to others should set out for himself no richer Revenues but the meanest and barrenest part thereof as the Hebrew word Bethubem here signifieth yet lower nor still was this the whole of Joshua's Condescension for he receiv'd this poor pittance not by Lot as the Tribes did their Lands but by Gift The Children of Israel gave an Inheritance to Joshua ver 49. and 50. He acknowledged it a Gift to him from the People over whom God had placed him their Governour and General though it was only the People's free Assent unto the Lord's Promise or Precept for undoubtedly the Lord said the same to Moses concerning Joshua as well as Caleb Josh 14.6 seeing Joshua had shewed the same Courage and Faithfulness in espying out the Land of Canaan which Caleb did Numb 14.6.30 therefore must receive the same equal encouragement and comfort from God at that time namely to have such parts of the Land when it was Conquered as they desired Oh sweet Spirited Modest Humble Low-condescending Joshua in all these aforementioned Particulars But all this was done that there might be the greater Congruity betwixt Joshua the Type and our blessed Jesus the Antitype who did Exouthenize or empty'd himself condescending to come in the form of a Servant to his Redeemed People to whom he saith concerning the work of my hands command ye me Isa 45.11 Christ indeed became poor to make us rich 2 Cor. 8.9 was born lived and died poor c. CHAP. XX. JOshua the Twentieth appointeth the Cities of Refuge according to God's Command Exod. 21.13 Numb 35.6.11.14 c. Deut. 19.2.9 The Remarks upon it are principally Three The First Remark is The end why God appointed those Cities of Refuge was for the preservation of the Life of Man so tender is the Lord of the Effusion of Bloud that he provides six Sanctuaries here to save Mans Life from the Avenger of Bloud least he should take his private revenge while his Bloud waxed hot within him for the loss of some near Kinsman Deut. 19.5 6. Well doth Job Characterize God The Preserver of Men Job 7.20 and well doth the Apostle Adore God's Philanthropy or Love to Mankind Tit. 3 4. So precious is the Bloud not only of his Saints though that be chiefly but of all his Reasonable Creatures in the sight of God Ps 72.14 and 116.15 compared with this care of God to Man in general Here therefore all those Cities of Refuge were placed in open view and as some say paved all the way as a Mark of Direction yea and situated at a just distance that the Innocent Party might repair from all parts in due time without enquiring the way thither least the Pursuer thereby overtake the pursued The Second Remark is The Form or priviledge of this Asylum or Sanctuary teaching 1. Who were capable of it not the wilful Murderer such saith God shall be Haled from the Horns of the Altar Exod. 21.14 as Joab was 1 Kings 2.31.34 but only Casual Manslayers without any premeditated Malice the Lord acting by them as meer Instruments in his hand without any purpose or intention on their part Exod. 21.13 2. What was this Priviledge namely security from the Avenger and a safe Judiciary Tryal if his Slaughter be found Chance-Medley The practice of Princes in protecting wilful Murderers is quite contrary to this Law of God much more the Pope's dispensing with such as if wiser than Solomon who saith A Man that doth Violence to the Bloud of any Person shall flee to the Pit let no Man stay him Prov. 28.17 God's Law is Draw such from the Altar to the Halter least the Land be Defiled with Bloud The Third Remark is How long they were to stay in those Cities and that was to the Death of the High-Priest Numb 35.25 Josh 20.6 then had he a Release after a long confinement which was his punishment for his carelesness c. because the High-Priest was a Type of Christ and so this Release was a shadow of our Redemption by the Death of Christ who was also Typed out by all those six Cities of Refuge 3 on this side Jordan and 3 on that if we run to this Rock for our Refuge we are safe Prov. 18.10 and none can pull us out of his and his Fathers hands Joh. 10.28 29. He is our best Sanctuary when pursued at the Heels by the Avenger of Blood Divine Justice and by the Guilt of our own Evil Consciences c. If we be in Christ the Rock Temptations and Oppositions do as the Waves dash upon us indeed but 't is to break themselves all asunder c. CHAP. XXI JOshua the Twenty first Is a Narrative of the Cities divided and given by Lot unto the Priests and Levites from ver 1. to ver 43. Hence the Remarks are First The Fathers of the Order of Aaron come and make their claim v. 1 2. when the whole Land was now distributed among the several Tribes which they could not do sooner for they were not forgotten in the foregoing division because they were to have their Cities and Inheritances out of the other several Tribes amongst whom they were to be dispers'd according to Jacob's Prophecy Gen. 49.7 that they might the more easily frequently and effectually as they were obliged teach Israel Gods Judgments Deut. 33.10 and that the People might upon all occasions resort to them for learning the sense of the Law of God Mal. 2.7 and they do not here refer themselves to the Charity and Devotion of the People for their Mantenance out of any free Gifts but they ground their claim upon the Command of God to Moses Numb 35.2 nor was this a General Command only of Cities and Suburbs to be given to them and the rest to be referr'd to the pleasure of the People but the number of those Cities are expresly named to be forty eight Cities and their Lands and Suburbs are exactly measured in their extent belonging to the Levites not for Tillage for the Levites were to have no such Employment Numb 18.20.24 but for Pasture Pleasure and other Country Commodities Besides all other means of their maintenance are precisely prescribed as being the portion which God had appropriated to himself and bestowed upon them as his Ministers that administred unto him that so they might not stand to the courtesie of the People but acknowledge the Lord alone to be their only Benefactor The Second Remark is The Children of Israel's readiness to
Plantation and therefore they removed saith the Rabbie Omnia Vasa Mobilia all their Moveable Goods out of their Hous●s they had in the Southern part of Canaan where their first lot fell into the most remote Northern part thereof and that which made those Men thus bold and daring was chiefly the Oracle in Micah's Idol-Chappel had assured them of Success No doubt but when they found themselves so successful in their Exploit and found their Conquest so easie they hugely hugged Micah's Mawmets and thought they had wrought a Work of Supererogation in stealing them from him and therefore resolved to make the best Improvement of them for the future N. B. In order hereunto when they had taken and burnt Laish in part only to strike a Terrour into the Inhabitants and Rebuilt it for themselves they set up the Graven Image c. constitute Jonathan as a True Prophet to them in this Expedition to be their Priest whose Sons succeeded him in that Tribe secretly lurking in private Idolatrous Families all David and Solomon's time and so successively until the Grand Captivity as it is called the Captivity 1 Chron. 5.22 by way of Eminency whereas Micah's Graven Image was not permitted to be in so publick a place and manner for so long a time therefore its continuance is restrained to a shorter Date namely while the Ark continued in Shilo only N. B. Here we may learn three great Lessons First That Men may bless themselves for a long time by the Idols set up in their Hearts Ezek. 14.4 promising great happiness to themselves by them as the Danites do here and as Micah had done before them Judg. 17.13 but they little consider how there will be Bitterness at the latter end 2 Sam. 2.26 Jer. 2.19 Secondly God oft punisheth the wicked by the wicked as he did here those wicked Inhabitants of Laish by those Wicked Idolaters the Danites here Clodius accusat Maechos Vice Corrected Sin But when God hath worn this Rod of the Wicked to the Stumps he then casts it into the fire Thirdly Security is a sad Symptome of Approaching Destruction this Character of Security in those Inhabitants of Laish is oft repeated here ver 10. and ver 27. God bless us from such a fearless stupid careless secure frame of Spirit If we cry Peace then comes sudden Destruction 1 Thess 5.3 Philosophers say before a cold Snow the Weather will be warmish When the Wind lies the great Rain falls and the Air is most quiet when suddenly there will be an Earthquake The Thief surprizeth in the Night and giveth no warning of his coming c. CHAP. XIX of Judges THE Nineteenth Chapter holds forth the most horrible and prodigious Lasciviousness found of Gibeah in Benjamin whose Last was of such a Monstrous Nature that they forced the Levites Concubine to Death This most hainous Sin is described 1. By its Antecedents 2. By its Concomitants And 3. By its Consequents First The Antecedents relate the Causes and Occasions of this Horrid Impiety to wit the Anarchy in Israel ver 1. this was the Remote cause but the causae proxima was the Levite's fetching back his Fugitive Concubine from ver 2. unto ver 21. Secondly The Concomitants of the Sin together with the Sin it self are declared from ver 22. to ver 25. at large Then Thirdly The Consequents thereof which were the Concubines Death the Levites dividing her Dead Body into Twelve pieces and sending them to the Twelve Tribes and the Twelve Tribes Astonishment at such an Unparallel'd Action are set down from ver 26. to ver 30. The Remarks upon the first part namely the Antecedents are First The time when this foul Fact was committed It came to pass in those Days saith ver 1. when there was no publick Magistrate to restrain private Vice This is oft repeated not only here but Chap. 17.6 and 18.1 and 21.25 to denote that all those Stories were Contiguous and Contemporary For Israel never stirreth themselves up to punish either Micah or the Danites for their Idolatry but rather tolerateth it in them this Toleration breedeth all manner of Iniquity insomuch that Gibeah a City of Israel becometh as abominable as Sodom Thus the Prophet sheweth where there is no Ruler to be an Healer of Disorders their Ruine rusheth in and all manner of Confusion to provoke the Eyes of the Lord's Glory against them Isa 3.6 7 8. look what a Ship is without a Pilot or Steersman what a Flock of Sheep is without a Shepheard what a great Family is without the Father of the Family or what a numerous School without a School-master Such is a State without some Supream Government This present Anarchy begat a General Ataxy an Universal Disorder though Israel now lived in God's good Land Hos 9.3 yet did they not live according to God's good Law Quod sibi placebat id solebat facere Every Man did that which was right in his own Eyes Judg. 17.6 And again Chap. 21.25 not at all doing what pleased the Lord but what pleased their own Lusts. The time of these Transactions is well supposed to be soon after the Death of Joshua c. for then began Israel to decline from God and to incline unto all manner of Ungodliness yea before Othniel became Judge and seeing Jerusalem the Vpper was at this time Inhabited by the Jebusites and this very Levite calls it a City of Strangers ver 11. and 12. here Hence some suppose that those Stories did happen while Caleb was Living However this is certain this matter did fall out while Phinehas was alive as above Judg. 20.28 and not after Samson's Death as 't is set down in this Book c. The Second Remark from the Antecedents is A Levite takes a Concubine to be his Secondary Wife for she was Contracted to him though not Solemnly Married which differ'd her from common Concubines and otherwise she could not have been charged to break her Faith with him as she is against him ver 2. and hereupon she is call'd his Wife and her Father is call'd his Father-in-Law ver 3 4 5 6 7 9. and he is call'd her Lord ver 26 27. because he was her Husband as 1 Pet. 3.6 so Judg. 20.4 calls him This Concubine played the Whore ver 2. Josephus saith she was a fair Woman and not affecting her Husband as she ought but lingring after other Lovers great strife grew betwixt them whereupon as he saith she went away to her Parents within four Months after Marriage The Scripture tells us that she went away from him to her Father's House who like a Fond Father entertained her whereas instead of countenancing her in her Sin he should rather have Rebuked or Punished her and sent her Home again to her Husband and not to have received and retained her four Months Her Kind-hearted Husband goes to her when he saw she would not come to him whereas she should have sought to him first being the peccant Party and
The same God who had wrought a double Miracle 1. By it as an Instrument wherewith to slay a Thousand Philistines And 2. Vpon it in turning it into a Fountain to quench Samson's Thirst might add one Circumstance more namely to fix it so in the Ground as to make it unremoveable And 3. The words unto this Day is understood only until Samuel's time who is thought to be the Author of this Book of Judges and it might well enough remain so long being less than an Hundred Years yet Hierom saith it remained till his time as a Testimony to Posterity of the truth of this Glorious Work c. The Third Consequent is Though the Israelites had dealt unkindly with Samson before yet now after this Victory they publickly own'd and acknowledg'd him as their General Judge ver 29. pleading their Causes and avenging their Wrongs against the Philistines who at this time Tyrannized over Israel for Twenty Years for Samson did but begin to deliver Israel Judg 13.5 Their compleat Deliverance was reserved for David and this clause of his Judgeship Twenty Years while the Philistines had Dominion over them clears up this truth that the times of Israel's Judges and of their Oppressions are included as Contemporary which justifies the Account of time given in 1 Kings 6.1 Judges CHAP. XVI JVdges the Sixteenth declareth the last concerns of Samson's Life Death and Burial Where we have first the Remarks upon the last Actions of his Life As First His going down to Gaza ver 1. a chief City of the Philistines Two things may justly be marvell'd at N. B. First How he durst go so soon thither after his late Slaughter of such a Multitude of their Men And Secondly How he could be suffer'd to enter a fenced City N. B. To these two Questions it is thus Answered First He might go thither upon some weighty occasion which is not here expressed Secondly To make some new Attempt upon them whom he feared not either in their Camps or in their Cities after such large experience both of his own Strength and of God's Assistance Thirdly It appeareth not that he was sent by God thither but went of his own Mind presuming upon former Successes and therefore deserted and ensnared Fourthly He might go thither Incognito by Night unknown and unobserved till afterwards Fifthly He went into a Publick House of Entertainment to refresh himself in contempt of his Enemies Sixthly He went not to seek see and have this Harlot for his Carnal Service that had been to make Provision for the Flesh c. Rom. 13.14 And this is scarcely consistent with Saving Grace in a true Believer so deliberately to contrive an Act of sin N. B. Therefore 't is said he there saw an Harlot that is Accidentally and giving way to Lustful Looks he was overtaken to commit Filthiness with her Here another Mars Videt hanc Visamque Cupit potiturque Cupitâ This Martial Man more like Mars than Pan was Overcome by a Wicked Woman who had Overcome a Lyon Loenam non potuit potuit Superare Leoenam Quem fera non potuit Vincere Vicit Hera This Strong Man being forsaken of God as one out of God's Precincts and so out of God's Protection and being left to his own Humane Infirmity forgeteth himself that he was not only God's Servant as he stil'd himself Judg. 15.18 and called of God to be an Holy Nazarite Judg. 13.5 7. but also that he was both Judex and Senex a publick Judge and an Old Man and notwithstanding all this he falleth into that foul Sin of Fornication having no Wife c. He should have pray'd with David Lord turn away mine Eyes from beholding Vanity c. Psal 119.37 The Second Remark is The eminent danger that Samson plung'd himself into by this Iniquity The Gazites got notice compassed him in but as God ordered it in tenderness to his sinful and secure Servant 1 Tim. 1.14 it was hid from them in what House he was harbour'd N. B. Had they known they might have seiz'd upon him in his Bed by Night therefore not knowing they set a strong Watch at the City Gate to surprize him at his Departure in the Morning ver 2. expecting that by Light they might better direct their Weapons to kill him forgetting how well he had used them when a great Host of them were gathered together in Arms against him yet a Thousand Men were slain by Samson c. but now wary Samson when he had satisfied his Lust was watchful against danger and rose up at Midnight and took the Doors of the City-Gate and the two Posts and carried them up to the top of an Hill c. ver 3. wherein he was a Type of Christ in his Glorious Resurrection as afterwards N. B. It may well be wondred at First That Samson should awake so soon seeing post Venerem Somnum Venery makes Men sleepy but it is supposed by some that God awaked him by a Dream and warned him both of his Sin and Danger not dealing with him according to his Demerit knowing the Root of the matter was in him so the Spirit did not yet loath his Lodging though he had just cause to do so N. B. Secondly 'T is a Wonder what was become of the strong Watch at the City-gate that they opposed not Samson in his pulling down the Posts and Door As to this 't is supposed Samson's coming upon them so unexpectedly at Midnight whom they expected not until Morning and accordingly were but preparing to make resistance this put them into such a frightful Astonishment that they all very stoutly betake themselves to their Heels and leaves the Gate to guard it self against Samson N. B. Thirdly 'T is a Wonder that Samson's foul sin had not provoked God t● withdraw his strength from him as his sin with Delilah did after when she rob'd him of his Hair Answer But this Harlot prevail'd not so far with him he retains his Hair and so his Strength still besides his Strength was not a Grace but a Gift which might be naturally in a Graceless Man and therefore might continue in a Gracious Person notwithstanding his heinous sin but it must farther be supposed That upon the Divine Warning in a Dream God brought and wrought Samson into a Repentance for his sin at which the Lord pitty'd and pardon'd him and likewise preserv'd him and his strength in him to work his own Deliverance by pulling up the Posts Bars and Wicket-Door c. whereby he made his Escape N. B. Fourthly 'T is a Wonder they did not pursue him seeing as some say the Watch-men were asleep while Samson did this Feat in the dead of the Night the noise of pulling up and falling down of the City-Gate could not but awake them and Samson could not flee fast away but very slowly with so much lumber upon his Shoulders To which may be Answered Their Courage might well fail them for a Pursuit because they knew that Samson only
Bowels and so he Died even in a Damnable state Exit Tyrannus N. B. Note well First Josephus and the Rabbins make Saul a Martyr in Dying thus Valourously by his own Hands to avoid disgrace c. But surely he Dyed the Devil's Martyr not God's whose express command is Thou shalt not kill Secondly Saul had spared Agag contrary to God's command and now from a Righteous Judgement of God he will not spare himself but is Felo de se a Self-murderer destroying God's Image in himself Thirdly He Dyed in his Sin Joh. 8.21 and in the worst sort of sin the sin of Witchcraft whereof he was guilty in Consulting with a Witch c. A Man had better Die in a Ditch or in a Dungeon than Die in Sin Unrepented of or Unpardoned Fourthly Not one hint have we of his Repentance but 't is said the Lord slew him for his Sins 1 Chron. 10.14 The Second part of this Chapter is what happened after Saul's Death The Remarks hereupon are First If Saul's Armour-Bearer were Doeg following his Master 's Evil Example of Self-Murther when he saw his Master Dead whom he would not over-live because of his over-love as Brethren in Iniquity Hereby God justly Revenged upon him the Blood of the Lord's Priests which he had slain in his being his own Executioner The Second Remark is Saul's Death and his Army Routed put the Parts Adjacent to the Valley of Jezreel the place of this Defeat into such a Consternation that they fled from their Cities and the Philistines came and dwelt in them v. 7. Thus the Philistines prudently pursued their Victory and had not God raised up David at this time to put a stop to their Proceedings in all likelihood Israel had lost Canaan hereby The Third Remark is The Philistines Triumph over Slain Saul ver 8 9 10. All Saul's care was for his Body that it might not be Abused ver 4. but no care he took for his Soul and his Body was abused nevertheless They cut off his Head as David had done to Goliah and devoted it to Dagon for this Victory His Armour they Dedicated to Ashtaroth another Idol And they Hung up his Carcase as on a Gibbet in Bethshan for scorn The Fourth Remark is The Men of Jabesh-Gilead hearing of it and remembring the old kindness Saul had done them Chap. 11.11 Marched all Night as he had done for their Deliverance Though they were far Remote beyond Jordan yet they Zealously Marched thither and took down the Bodies of Saul and his Sons now Putrified by Hanging so long in the Sun and Wind by stealth carried them away Burnt their Flesh and Buried their Bones under an Oak in Jabesh for a Monument thereof v. 11 12. and then Lamented the Publick Calamity with Fasting and Prayer for Seven Days which was the very Term of Truce Nahash had given them in chap. 11.3 So long here v. 13. they seek God's Love of Israel The Second Book of SAMUEL Which in the general Prospect of it is an History of the Kingdom of David holding forth his whole Life as First His Inauguration to the Throne of Israel 1. By one Tribe only Chap. 1 2 3 4. and 2. By all the Tribes Chap. the 5th Secondly His Royal Actions in his Regal Government as first those that were laudable Chapters 6 7 8 9 10. and secondly those that were culpable Chapters 11. 12. Thirdly His Checker'd State of Life partly in Adversity both as to his private Capacity by his two bad Sons 1. Amnon Chap. 13. and 2. Absalon Chap. 14. and as to his Publick Condition First by Sedition which was 1. Domestick moved by Absalon Chapters 15 16 17 18 19. and 2. Extrinsick by Sheba Chap. 20. Secondly by Famine Chap. 21. and Thirdly by Plague Chap. 24. and partly in Prosperity which David Celebrates Chapters 22 23. After this Recapitulation of the whole Book in General Now the particular prospect of each Chapter is to be considered 2 Sam. CHAP. I. WHICH declares the state of Israel after this their direful defeat by the Philistines the Tidings whereof David received with deep deploration yea the Death of Saul tho' he was his Capital Enemy yet he profoundly bewail'd it Remarks hereupon are First The Messenger of those sad Tidings is described by sundry Circumstances As 1. When he came to David it was three days after David had return'd from the slaughter of the Amalekites v. 1. And 2. Whither he came to wit unto Ziklag for it was not so burnt but David and his Men might refresh themselves in it after so long an harrase until God provided them better Quarters 3. Who he was an Amalekite v. 8. the Son of a Stranger v. 13. 4. In what posture he came pretending sorrow for the loss of God's People with his Cloaths rent and earth upon his head and falling down at David's feet to humour and honour the Rising-Sun v. 2. and 5. He is described by his Age he was a young Man v. 5 13. The Second Remark is This Amalekite's Narrative of the effect of the Fight of the Philistines against Israel wherein he gives David a distinct Account upon David's diligent Enquiry v. 4 5 6 7 8 9 10. wherein Observe First He declares to David the flight of Israel the slaughter of the Army and the death of Saul and Jonathan v. 4. Secondly To confirm his Story of Saul's death which mostly concerned David he confesseth himself to be the Author thereof by a Casualty of coming to the place where he was v. 6. and Thirdly To qualifie his Crime he saith Saul call'd me v. 7. chose me v. 8. and requested me to be his Executioner v. 9. He adds Fourthly a comparing Saul's desperate Case saying as Josephus and others do relate Saul said to me I am sorely wounded by the Arrows of the Archers and by my own Weapon I have faln upon yet am I not likely to die of those wounds nor would I be willing to live with them until the Philistines overtake me and put me to some shameful and more painful death and seeing my Coat of Mail will not suffer my Lance to pierce deep enough to dispatch me do thou lean upon me with the whole weight of thy body that the Weapon may pass through me and outright kill me to quit me of my dolorous pain Fifthly Hereupon saith he when I saw he could not live both for anguish of Mind and pain of Body I thought it an Act of Charity to do for him what he desired of me to dispatch him out of his misery and to dye by my hands rather than by his cruel Conquerors then took I the Crown from off his head and the Bracelet that was upon his arm and have brought them to my Lord v. 10. The Third Remark is a Scrutiny touching the veracity of this Amalekite's long Harangue Tho' I find some Learned Men Patronizing this Amalekite and purging him from lying to David saying his Story was a Real
World abounds with Courtesies that be no better than Cruelties Remark the Second This proud and prophane Captain with his fifty Elijah destroys by Fire from Heaven as 1 Kings 18.38 which was his Ninth Miracle ver 10. Vatablus saith here Thou thinks me not a man of God but scornfully calls me so yet God will prove me to be so by Fire from Heaven This Judgment was the greater wherein not one of the one and fifty were spared N. B. Nor did the Prophet pray for it out of any Carnal and Revengeful Passion but from a pure Zeal to vindicate God's Name and Glory which was so notoriously dishonoured and from a motion of God's Spirit whereof God gave his Approbation in a miraculous Answer to his Prayer Therefore Christ doth not condemn this Fact of Elijah saith Peter Martyr when he reproved his Disciples for desiring such a Deed from private Revenge and not from a divine Impulse nor suitable to a Gospel-Spirit much differing from Elijah's Severity Luke 9.54 55. Remark the Third Neither Oracles nor Miracles can mend this mad King though he lay on his Death-bed yet is nothing moved saith Peter Martyr at the loss of his Subjects by so dreadful a Judgment as Sodom was destroyed with Gen. 19.24 the whole World will be so 2 Pet. 3.7 yea and the Torments of Hell are resembled by it Mark 9.43 Notwithstanding Ahaziah in his Phrenzy exposes one Company after another and this second Captain was more impudent than the first saying Come down quickly ver 11. as if he had said or I will fetch thee down with a Vengeance therefore did Elijah most justly fetch down Fire upon him and his with a Vengeance and worthily made him an Example to his Successor who would not take the Example of his Predecessor to beware c. ver 12. This was Elijah's Tenth Miracle Remark the Fourth This frantick King doth desperately expose a Third Captain and his Company ver 13 14. Ahaziah c. could not be ignorant how Elijah had made fire fall down to consume the Sacrifice at Carmel 1 Kings 18.38 so powerful was this Prophet's Prayer James 5.17 and now again he had done the like twice to lick up the two Bands of Soldiers at Carmel also yet the King in despight of God and his Prophet sends a Third Captain with his Company This Captain took caution and considered what a sorry thing Man is in the Hands of his Maker who by a flash of Lightning had lick'd up two Captains with their Companies therefore he prostrates himself before God's miraculously protected Prophet expressing a Reverence to his Person and a belief of his Power with a dread of God's Wrath. N. B. Hereupon some think it was good Obadiah who the King knew could best prevail with the Prophet to come along with him to the Court He saw nothing could be got by strong hand so tries what might be done by Suit and he sues more for own Life than for Elijah's Company God and not he must direct him therein He saw the Mad King incapable of Admonition but fears not to find Elijah inexorable Remark the Fifth God commands Elijah by his Angel to go without fear ver 15. What could he expect at Court from a raging King a Jezebel at his Elbow c. but such hot service as the Captains had found in coming to summon and apprehend him N. B. Yet having the Angels Protection as well as Warrant his Faith was grown above his former fear when he fled from the face of Jezebel 1 Kings 19.3 He comes confidently into the King's Bed-chamber ver 16. tells the King to his Face his whole errand not abating a Word The King as daunted with the Prophet's presence and message is strangely manucled and muzzl'd he neither speaks nor acts against him N.B. The stoutest and stubbornest Stomachs must stoop when God takes them to task Prov. 16.1 and 21.1 Ahaziah died away ver 17. undoubtedly so affrighted with Elijah's Words as it hastened his Death whereas he might have recovered as did Hezekiah had he sought to God and not to the Devil Now dies he childless and leaves his Throne to his Brother Jehoram c. 2 Kings CHAP. II. THIS Chapter treats first upon Elijah's Translation and secondly upon the Miracles wrought by Elisha his Successor As to the first Part namely Elijah's Rapture the Antecedents the Concomitants and the Consequents are considerable Remarks upon the Antecedents of his Rapture are First Before Elijah left this lower World he resolves to visit the Schools of the Prophets that he might strengthen their Hands and Hearts in God's Work and bestow his last farewel upon them on Earth before his Chariot of Triumph came to fetch him home to Heaven This last Journey of his Peter Martyr saith was Circular after a sort for He went from Gilgal near Jordan thence to Bethel and Jericho and then returned to Jordan again from ver 1 to the 8. Remark the Second 'T is a marvelous good Providence of God saith Peter Martyr that any true Prophets should be preserved in those places when Idolatry abounded and the false Prophets of Baal were so Triumphant yea and Jezebel her self who persecuted them to Death was alive And though Obadiah had hid an hundred in Caves yet now to find open Schools of them especially in Bethel where one of Jeroboam's Golden Calves was set up yea and in that cursed City Jericho is matter of great Admiration N.B. Yet God over-ruled Matters to preserve them to a Prodigy lest his People should wholly want the Light of his Word Remark the Third This is no less marvelous that the two Prophets of the ten Tribes Elijah and Elisha did far outshine all those Prophets that belong'd to the two Tribes in their manifold Miracles the Reasons are supposed 1. Because Idolatry was more grievous in the former than in the latter and where Sin did most abound there God gave the greater Grace to stop the Inundation of it And 2. The truly pious Israeli es were more grievously tempted to forsake God than the Jews were c. Remark the Fourth Elijah bids Elisha three Times do that which he deny'd to do First He bids him carry at Gilgal Secondly At Bethel And Thirdly At Jericho but Elisha gave Elijah three Denials to His command and not barely in Negatives but each time He confirms his Denial with an Oath also Though this may seem strange that so good a Servant dare thus peremptorily disobey the Commands of so good a Master Yet was this an Holy and Zealous Disobedience for Lavater Vatablus Peter Martyr Piscator c. Say 1. That God had revealed to Elisha the Rapture of Elijah as well as to the Sons of the Prophets ver 3 5. 2. He knew that his Master did bid him tarry only to try the Truth of his Love whether He would leave him or no. 3. And that it was rather to kindle in him a more ardent Affection to cleave close to him
32.23 the King will punish us if we stay till Morning light if we hide these glad Tidings from the City half dead with Famine Mark 6. They go to the Watchmen at the Gates tell them the Coast was clear all were gone yet Tents left furnished with Beds Meat Drink and all other Furniture these Watch-men hasten first to tell the King ver 10 11. as was fit that he might order all for the best Remark the Second Hereupon the King more fearful than was fit and suspecting this flight of the Syrians to be a Strategem only to Decoy the Hungry Samaritans out of their Gates to plunder their Camp politickly left full fraught with plenty of all things that while the half-famished Souldiers and Citizens were falling upon the Spoil in a confused way then the Syrians would turn short upon them and destroy them as oft hath fallen out in Strategems of War ver 12. This was King Joram's Worldly Wisdom but his Fear in suspecting more than was meet was above his Faith in the Promise made him by the Prophet he neither believed God nor his Prophet saith Peter Martyr but rather put his trust in two forlorn Scouts sent out to see ver 13. 'T was first proposed by one of the King's Councellers that allathe five Horses which the Famine had left uneaten should be sent out with Riders to make Discovery but the Council concluded two were sufficient ver 14. Those two Horse-men find no lurking Syrians betwixt Samaria and Jordan but all the way scattered Garments c. whatever might hinder their hasty heels in the flight these fall not on plundering for themselves as the Lepers did ver 8. but presently brought word to the King that the Lepers had told him the truth ver 15. The Second Part is the Accomplishment of Elisha's Oracle Remark the First 'T was Accomplish'd in the Plenty of Provision that Elisha foretold ver 1.16 As that hurrying Noise made probably by the Angels those Horses and Chariots of fire Chap. 6.17 which frighted away the Syrians from the Siege of Samaria was a miraculous Answer to Elisha's Prayer as he sat in his House Chap. 6.32 and made the Prophet's Eighteenth Miracle so this sudden change of extream Scarcity into such abundant Plenty and dearness of Food into such cheapness so that a Measure of fine Flour to day was far lower rated than of Dove's Dung yesterday This was a miraculous Effect of Elisha's Prayer as well as of his Prophecy whereby was made up his Nineteenth Miracle Behold and wonder how the half-starved Samaritans now dare venture forth to take the Spoil of the Syrian Camp as if the Lord had brought the Syrians thither not so much to famish as to enrich them Now they find Granaries Ward-robes Treasures saith Dr. Hall and whatever was for either Vse or Honour as Scarcity had bred Dearth so God's Plenty now produced Cheapness c. Remark the Second Elisha's Oracle was also accomplish'd in the Death of that prophane Prince that had scoffed at his Prophecy of Plenty ver 17 18 19 20. Mark 1. The marvelous Providence of God that this same Prince must be made Lord Keeper of the City Gate toward the Syrian Camp to suppress Tumults saith Sanctius as well as to secure the City from the feared lurking Syrians God ordered it so saith Grotius to fulfil his Decree Mark 2. This Vnbelieving Peer saw the foretold Plenty brought in at the Gate though the Windows of Heaven were not opened ver 2. He beholds the Infallibility of God's Promise to the People and now feels he the Infallibility of God's Threatning to himself Mark 3. He had trampled on the People by Oppression saith Peter Martyr but undoubtedly he had shamefully trodden under foot the Honour of God's Power wherefore he was worthily trampled upon by the hungry People says Lavater whose Bellys had no Ears their Hunger breaks through stone-walls and bears him down by their tumultuous pressing through the narrow Gates not regarding his Authority Mark 4. This punishment being according to the Prophet's Prediction and probably his Prayer was miraculous and so reckoned his twentieth Miracle N. B. 1. Learn from the Syrians in their flight to cast off every weight in our Race of Religion Heb 12.1 And 2. From Samaritans in their Hunger to press through the strait Gate for the Bread of Life Luke 13.24 2 Kings CHAP. VIII THIS Chapter contains Three more Oracles of Elisha The first concerns his foretelling of seven years Famine from v. 1 to 6. The second the Death of Benhadad from v. 7 to 10. The third the Reign of Hazael in his room from ver 11 to 14. This is the first part of it the second part returns to Jehoram and Ahaziah from ver 16 to 29. Remarks upon the first part and first Oracle are First He foretells the Shunamite that God had call'd for a seven years Famine Kara Hebr. signifies invited so Junius intimating by this Metaphor that N. B. Such publick Calamities are God's Invited Guests they come at his Call and Command Psal 105.16 Jer. 25.29 Hag. 1.11 The Centurion acknowledg'd as much of Christ's Power over Diseases Matth. 8.9 This Famine God call'd for to last seven years because saith P. Martyr the Famine in Elijah's time which lasted but half so long Luke 4.25 James 5.17 had not Reclaimed Israel from their Idolatry c. but continued obstinate and incorrigible under the powerful Ministry of Elisha who confirmed his Doctrine by so many even twenty Miracles therefore is this Famine most justly doubled to that former under Elijah for doubling their sins Remark the Second Elisha shews kindness to this Shunamite for her shewing so much kindness to him chap. 4.8 c. He had done much for her before yet saith P. Martyr he still proceeds to do more N. B. A truly grateful person can never satisfie himself in requiting former favours Hence Elisha bids her enquire of a place where she might purchase Provision for that could not be done in her own Country ver 1. therefore at the Prophet's word she went and sojourned in the Land of the Philistines ver 2. where the Famine was not N. B. For God saith Peter Martyr begins his Judgments at the House of God 1 Pet. 4.17 God will bear with the Philistines Carting the Ark of God because they had not God's Law and knew no better but if Israel do so who had more means of Grace and Light of Knowledge then comes the Perez-Vzzah God makes a brea●h upon them 1 Sam. 6 7 10 11 c. with 2 Sam. 6.3 6 8. So here the Israelites were by a special hand of God punished for their Idolatry when the Philistines escaped having no Elisha's to instruct them 'T was lawful for pious persons saith P. Martyr to sojourn there for Isaac had done the like upon the like occasion of necessity Gen. 26.1 So David did upon another occasion 1 Sam. 27.1 2. and Joseph Matth. 2.14 Here she stayed seven
from Megiddo to Jerusalem where his Palace was and where he might meet with the best means for his Cure and if he died there did he chuse to die and he did so not desiring to die at Megiddo that was in the Tribe of Manasseh Josh 17.11 where he would have stop'd Necho from passing his Country Remark the Sixth Tho' this good King got his Death's wound at Megiddo yet he died not till he came to Jerusalem 2 Chron. 35.23 24. Notwithstanding it is not to be doubted by the common Rules of just Charity but that Josiah in his passage between these two Places finding himself without hope of Recovery and before his last Agony of Death did really Repent of his Rashness and was by his most Gracius God most perfectly pardoned N. B. for two Reasons 1. Seeing it was only a Sin of Ignorance not knowing God had spoke this to Necho but he had more cause to suspect than to believe his Testimony 2. Because God had promised he should die in peace 2 Kings 22.20 that is in favour with God tho' he died in War Undoubtedly he died not in his Sin as Joh. 8.21 tho' he died for his Sin c. for he had led an Holy Life in the whole course of his Conversation The Third Part is the Consequences of Josiah's Death Remark the First Josiah this good King dies and all the felicity of the whole State of Israel dieth with him for thenceforth it was never known but as Thebes was after the death of famous Epaminondas by its Calamities only therefore both City and Country had good cause to Mourn for him 2 Chron. 35.24 which was the greatest Mourning we read of and to which the Prophet alludeth in Zech. 12.10 11. N. B. 'T was a most ●lamentable loss whether we consider 1. the Personal goodness of this Man the Island of one innocent Person is deliver'd by the pureness of his hands Job 22.29 whereas one Sinner destroyeth much good Eccles 9.18 2. Or the manifold good he acted in his Life-time as a King he might say with David I hear up the Pillars of it Psal 75.3 as a true Atlas that upheld the State Isa 6.13 Or 3. The most miserable Calamities that befell that Kingdom after his death c. Remark the Second The Prophet Jeremiah was the chief of those Mourners saith Grotius being much moved at the loss of him whose worth he had fully known and by his Prophetic Spirit foreknew that Josiah's Death did draw up the Sluce to let in an Inundation of all manner of Miseries 2 Chron. 35.25 yea and all the Singing-men and Singing Women lamented this loss N.B. It was the Jews manner to have Mourners at the death of Worthy Persons Eccles 12.5 Jer. 9.17 in which Mournings they made mention of the Party deceased with a mournful Note how much more for Josiah here which became an Ordinance in Israel a constant Custom in all their following Funerals still to bewail the death of Josiah which began all their publick Calamities upon City and Country and this their common Mourners observed in all succeeding Generations N.B. That Lamentation for the loss of Josiah is lost and not the same saith Grotius with that Recorded in Sacred Writ that being made for the fall of Jerusalem N. B. How dark and deep sometimes are Divine Dispensations that so good a King thus dies when wicked Kings are let to live Who can be God's Counsellour Rom 11.34 Remark the Third When the People of the Land had bury'd Josiah in his own Sepulchre 2 Kings 23.30 which he had in his Life-time prepared especially for himself among the Sepulchres of his Fathers 2 Chron. 35.24 then they all with an unanimous consent took his Son Jehoahaz and Anointed him King 2 Kings 23.30 to settle him more surely in the Kingdom tho' he was younger than his Brother Jehoiakim ver 36. yet because he was a more stern and stout Man more forward and better able to withstand Pharaoh-Necho than Jehoiakim was therefore by a Popular Faction he got the Kingdom and it succeeded accordingly This is the judgment of Mastus Sanctius and Lavater and Menochius addeth That Jehoiakim was timorous and fearing Pharaoh declined the Crown so Jehoahaz being more Valorous was set up lest Pharaoh finding the Throne empty should seize it as his Wafe But oh what a sad Change was here from one that did right into one that did evil ver 31 32 Nor did he prove so fierce against Pharaoh saith Sanctius as against his Subjects and therefore is he call'd a Lion Ezek. 19.2 3. a very Cannibal to his own Country c. 2 Chron. CHAP. XXXVI THIS Chapter gives a brief Account First How Unhappy good Josiah was in his four bad Sons from ver 1 to ver 14. And Secondly Of the Desolation and Dissolution of the Kingdom of Judah from ver 14 to ver 20 And Thirdly and lastly Of the Jews final Deportation into the Babylonish Captivity from ver 20 to ver 23. all which are Amplify'd upon in the 2d of Kings 23.24 25. Chapters Remarks upon the First Part to wit Josiah's bad Sons are 1. Jehoahaz whom a Popular Faction made King as is abovesaid lest Pharaoh-Necho upon his return should make a Seizure saith Masius upon the Vacant Kingdom This Man proved a Degenerate Plant from so Pious a Father following Amon and Manasseh more than Josiah restoring that Idolatry his Father had destroyed saith Menochius partly to gratifie the People that had promoted him which still hankered after Superstition even in Josiah's time and partly to Dulcifie the King of Egypt who was a Worshipper of Idols Yet all this would not avail for Necho in three Months time returns and Conquers him 2 Kin. 23.33 but not without a great slaughter saith Sanctius from Ezek. 19.4 The Son endeavour'd say Munster and Lavater with an Army to avenge his Father's death therefore Necho did not only Depose him because he had taken the Kingdom without his leave and to shew he had Power to dispose of the Kingdom but also took him Prisoner and carry'd him down to Egypt where he died 2 Kin. 23. ver 34. as Jeremy had foretold Jer. 22.11 12. where he is call'd Shallum and 1 Chron. 3.15 Remark the Second Necho sets up Eliakim his Brother who was put beside the Crown by the Factious People being Elder than Jehoahaz 2 Kin. 23. ver 31 and 36. compared together and chang'd his Name into Jehoiakim to shew his Soveraignty over him as Dan. 1.7 both which Names signifie God shall Arise This obsequious King carefully pays the Tribute Necho laid upon the Land namely 100 Talents of Silver which amounted to Thirty seven Thousand and five Hundred pound Sterling and a Talent of Gold which was Three Thousand seven Hundred and Fifty Pound more This large Mulct Jehoiakim levy'd upon his People ver 35. from whom likely he received no less summs of Curses than of Coin However hereby he bought his Peace with
of their Killing of the Messiah and the Wrath of God lying so severely upon them for that wicked Act Acts a. 23. that it not only confutes their Vnbelief and confirms our Faith in Christ but also it hath convinced sundry of the Jew-Doctors who by the clear Evidence of this Text have been compell'd to confess That the True Messiah is already come and that he was that Jesus whom their Fore-fathers Crucified as R. Samuel acknowledges in his Epistle to R. Isaac related by Dionys-Carthur's Comment on this Text and Rab. Hosea in his Lamentation for this Inexpiable Guilt of the Jewish Nation Recorded by Galatinus lib. 4 cap. 18. N. B. 2. Jerome well observeth That all those sad Occurrences contained in the Seventy Weeks or Ten Jubilees which make up 490 Years were Determined even until the Consummation so were all the effects of a Divine Decree and therefore Irrevocable and Irresistible And the precise periods of Time wherein each particular would be performed is expresly Revealed in this Prophetical Prediction the like whereunto is not to be found in any other of the Prophets namely the Time of the Life and Death of the Lord Jesus of burning the City that Slaughter-house of the Saints and of the Sanctuary that Den of Thieves and likewise how long their Desolation should last even until the end determined by God's Decree And therefore tho' the Jews have oft attempted yet could never to this Day Recover their own Land nor are ever like to do until they be made willing to say Blessed is He that cometh in the Name of the Lord Matth. 23. 38 39. This Scripture and Rom. 11.25 26. give hopes saith Graserus of an End of that Flood of God's Wrath which flowed in upon the Jews and so overfloweth as Noah's Flood had done and so●ept them all away out of their own Country Mark 4. But above all Daniel hath a most distinct Revelation concerning the Condition of the Jews under their many powerful Adversaries till the Madness of Antiochus Epiphanes was over in his three last Chapters all which look more like an History than a Prophecy from the Third Year of Cyrus to the period of Antiochus's Persecution First Daniel the 10th Chapter is but a Prologue to the main Prophecy wherein some things are premised as Preparatory to it Secondly The 12th Chapter is the Epilogue Annexed wherein the Pious are comforted with Promises both of Protection and of Deliverance Thirdly But the main Body of the Prophecy or rather History is revealed in the 11th Chapter which reacheth to the Jews raising out of the Dust of their Dispersion c. wherein the State of the Church of the Jews saith Brand Mullerus is Described under a double Respect N. B. 1. It was very Miserable in respect of the bloody Wars between the Lagidae the King of Egypt and the Seleucidae the Kings of Syria for Judea having Egypt on the South and Syria on the North lay as Corn betwixt two Mill-stones and was miserebly grinded to powder by their frequent Incursions of their Armies commonly marching through the bowels of Judea and wasted it The 2d Respect was Antiochus's Persecutions especially at three times 1. When he returned from Egypt in his second Expedition Dan. 11.28 2d In his third Expedition thither ver 30. And 3dly In his fourth ver 41 c. N. B. 1. Daniel Mourning for the sad Estate of the Jews in Judea hath this Vision vouchsafed to him to Relieve him against his great fright and fainting by being informed of the Affairs of both the Persian and Grecian Empires the Disasters whereof relating to the Church of the Jews put good Daniel into his Dumps Dan. 10.2.3 till comforted by Gabriel ver 12. yet not all at once but by four Degrees was Daniel raised 1. He is set upon his Knees and upon the palms of his Hands ver 10. after his three Weeks Mourning c. this posture was an Emblem of Prayer 2. He is caused to stand upon his Feet tho' trembling and silent ver 11 15. 3ly His Mouth is opened to speak but with much weakness fears and sorrows ver 17. And 4thly He is fully strengthened ver 18. N.B. God gives his Answers of Peace to the Prayers of his People not all at once but gradually for he is a God of Judgment and blessed are they that wait on him Isa 30.18 The Angel comforts Daniel with this That the Persians shall be Diverted by the Grecians under Great Alexander so that they shall have little leisure or mind to meddle with the Jews for Michael or Christ stood up for his Church in the want of all Humane Helps ver 19 20 21. so that the Devil cannot prevail Matth. 16.18 N. B. 2. Gabriel gives a more particular Exposition of the Visions Chap. 7. and 8. This latter Explanation in Chap. 11. being more plain than the former before for in Chap. 11. the Angel with the greatest clearness declares in particular the several Kings of Persia and of Grecia more especially the sundry Passages of those Divided Kings one against another especially relating to the Jews the other two Kings of the East and of the West being of a lesser figure than the other two of the North and South all four Successors of Alexander and not meddling with the Church of the Jews therefore the Angels meddleth not with them in this Historical Prophecy But of the Northern Kings of Syria and of the Southern Kings of Egypt Gabriel giveth an Account of seven several Wars between them in this 11th Chapter As 1. Between Ptolomeus Lagus of Egypt who was a great Enemy to the Jews saith Josephus and Seleucus Nicanor of Syria stronger than Ptolomy Chap. 11. ver 5. the poor Jews that lay betwixt these two Potent Princes were beaten on both sides 2. Between Ptolomeus Philadelphus so call'd because he Marry'd his own Sister yet was a Learned King and being a great lover of Learning he Founded that famous Library wherein were two hundred Thousand Books and among them the Septuagint which he caused to be composed by 72 Rabbins and Antiochus Theos or God as his Parasites styled him These two Kings made a Marriage out of Sinful Politicks to compose all their Controversies by a Confederacy ver 6. Antiochus Marrys Ptolomy's Daughter for confirming the Concord Berenice which signifies a Daughter of Innocency but not right named saith Junius because he Marry'd his own Sister Nor could this Berenice cause these two Kingdoms cleave together as was foretold Dan. 2.43 but they brake out again into open War and this fond God Antiochus was poisoned by his Wife a just Judgment from a jealous God that he should die by jealous Laodice 3ly Between Ptolomeus Evergetes and Saleucus Callinicus was the third War Dan. 11.7 8 9. Antiochus after a while put away Berenice who long retain'd not the power of her Arm ver 6. that is her Interest in her Husband her Queendom and her Life were soon after lost
  19   462 6 9   537 ACTS Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page 5 29   544 12 21 22   383 ROMANS Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page 8 13   374 1 CORINTHIANS Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page 9 11   541 14 20   491 2 CORINTHIANS Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page GALATIANS Chap. Verse Vol. 2. Page 1 8   477 EPHESIANS Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page PHILIPPIANS Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page COLOSSIANS Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page 1 THESSALONIANS Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page 2 THESSALONIANS Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page 1 TIMOTHY Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page 2 TIMOTHY Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page TITVS Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page PHILEMON Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page HEBREWS Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page JAMES Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page 1 PETER Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page 2 PETER Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page 1 JOHN Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page 5 19   558 2 JOHN Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page 3 JOHN Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page JVDE   Verse Vol. 3. Page REVELATION Chap. Verse Vol. 3. Page 2 20   487   24   551 An ANIMADVERTISEMENT THAT all my Candid and Courteous Readers may have the more ample and abundant Satisfaction both for their Expences in Purchasing and for their better Improvement in Reading all my three Volumes Purchased which do contain the Cream and Quintessence of the best Authors I have again by the helping hand of my Heavenly Father made a new and another most prodigious Essay and a most painful Travel through that golden Field of the whole Old-Testament for drawing forth three distinct Index's and Alphabetical Tables to all the three Folio's that so both the Holy Scriptures of every Book where Explained and the several Subjects common place wise where treated upon might the more easily with one Glance of the Eye be found out for present perusal How exceeding Elaborate this additional undertaking hath been to me may apparently be understood by all who are wise-hearted because this Work could not possibly be accomplish'd but by a serious Review of every single Page in all the three distinct Volumes Yet may all my Labours come in the fulness of the Blessing of Christ to his Church and may also Advance in any Measure his Kingdom and Glory I shall not Grudge or Regret at any Part of my greatest Pains Soli Deo Gloria AN Alphabetical TABLE OF THE Principal Matters contain'd in the Third Volume of the Old Testament A ACcepts God doth of a little where much cannot be had Vol. 3. Page 723. Affliction may oft be renewed p. 409 410. The Cause of it must be enquired after p. 413. If sanctified it saves the Soul p. 549 550. It is as the Bellows to blow up Devotion p. 565. It whip'd Manasseh home to God p. 613. Angels even good are destroying Angels p. 424. Of Gabriel p. 649. Answer of God to Man's Prayer p. 649. How to answer Satan distracting us in Prayer p. 713. Antinomian Notion Confuted God is Angry with his own Children p. 467 468. Yea for but one Sin p. 478. Antiochus and Antichrist several Sentiments of Authors about them p. 745. Antiochus's wicked Life and woful Death p. 746 752. Antiquity an uncertain Guide p. 656. Apocrypha how distinguish'd from Canonical p. 614. That History is carry'd on by the help of Dan. 9.10.11 and 12. and by Luke 3. and by Gen. 49.10 from 735. to the end Arminians divide Salvation 'twixt the Free Grace of God and Free Will of Man p. 439. B. Babylon's fatal Fall p. 642. Blessings God knows how to make them doubly welcome to us p. 537. C. Captivity of Israel the first Time p. 593. And the Last p. 629. How three in all p. 632. see Deliver Ceremonies when abused may be abolished p. 596. Chemarims explained Vol. 3. Page 618. Children may not blaze Parents failings p. 442. They should be at Gods Worship Why p. 518. Parents punish'd in their Miscarriage p. 529. Mostly learn from their Mother p. 732. Christ is Typified by the Temple and all its Furniture p. 442 to 458. Christ's last coming when p. 462. How he appear'd to Daniel p. 660. Church Militant and Triumphant Typified by David and Solomon's Reigns p. 430. Built of growing Stones and green Timber p. 443. Compar'd to a Travelling Woman p. 603. To a weak Virgin p. 606. She must be kept clean p. 727 729 730. Cold Palsie how qualified if not cured p. 428. Company the Evil of being with the Evil p. 569. Conference that is godly pleaseth God p. 526. Conspiracy may be Lawful p. 561. Constant in good p. 614. Content is most found in a middle Estate p. 533. Covenant must be kept though won by a wile p. 414. Oft renew it with God p. 617. How it was sealed to p. 721. By Women and Children p. 722. Counsels of Men are ordered by the Counsel of God p. 396. Evil Counsel is worst to the Counsellor p. 399. How God's Counsel is without Repentance p. 424. Countrey every Man loves his Native Soil p. 728. D. Daniel in the Den of Lions p. 644. How delivered p. 645 646. But his Foes were devoured p. 647. Death is terrible p 608. See Dye Josiah died in Peace though he died in War p. 617. His Death was sad to the Church p. 625. Dedication of the Temple at large p. 458 to 462. Of the City Walls p. 725. Delay God doth sometimes to Answer Prayer p. 631. Deliver God help his Servants with low Means and little helps p. 397. He Works great Matters by weak Means p. 412. We must bless God for delivering us from an Egypt of Sin p. 460. Jews deliverance from Babylon p. 651. Despise not a Day of small things p. 655. Devil God makes use of to deceive the Wicked p. 513. God overshoots him in his own Bow p. 560. Dreams of sundry sorts p. 436. Drinking none to be forced to it p. 663. Drunkenness is a Noon-day Devil p. 487. Dye the Words of dying Men are living Oracles p. 430 431. God's darlings oft dye betimes p. 480 Some dye suddenly as others lingringly p. 567. E. Education helps somewhat though it heal not throughly p. 562 563. Elisha's Death p. 567. Enemy one that is once foiled ought not to be contemned p. 506. Kindness to such may prove kindness to our selves p. 545. Evil how it is from God p. 418. And how from the Devil p. 419. Ezra the Writer of both the Books of the Chronicles p. 516 517. F. Faith a special means to obtain God's Promise Vol. 3. p. 519. False Prophets to be rejected p. 715. Famine makes Mothers unnatural p. 546. It and other Judgments come at God's Call p. 549. Fast prepares for Prayer p. 518. That of Ezra p. 698. And his Prayer p. 700. Father some are while Young p. 594. Fear of God must Master the fear of Man p. 494. Felicity that is earthly is never durable p. 466. Flattery is hurtful to Kings p. 564. Force in matters of worship who was the first
in the form of a Servant to come down to this sick Servant's Pallet N. B. Note well O what a mercy it is that the Lord himself should come down from Heaven to be amongst men on earth as he did when he came in the flesh and doth still come to us in the spirit and causing our spirits to leap levalto's within us as the Babe leaped then in his mothers Belly more like a suckling at the Breast as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies 1 Pet. 2.2 than an Embryo in the Womb. The Eighth Remark is The same Soul may be high in Faith and low in Humility so was this Centurion saying but speak the Word only c. Math. 8 8 9. T is much that he being no Jew nor conversant in the Prophet's writings should be so lofty in his believing as well as so lowly in his humblings through the cloud of his own weakness and unworthiness his eye of faith espyed the worth of Christ's Omnipotency calling him a Captain to command all Diseases for comming and going and saying I am a Man and under Authority yet can do these things how much more thou that art God and under no Authority canst do any thing thou art all-sufficient in thy self to effect what thou wilt N. B. Note well The Centurion makes a Comparison betwixt himself and his Saviour both in respect of his Person and of his Power as of the lesser with the greater saying as it were thus 1. As to my Person I am but a Man a meer Man but thou art God also very God 2. As to my Power tho' I be subject to another yet have I Souldiers under me at my beck and check how much more hast thou who hast a Soveragnity over all created Beings an absolute power over Sickness and Death and can heal this Palsey or Epilepsy as some say though it be sudden hidden and for the most part incurable by men The Ninth Remark is There is a marvellous beauty in Grace especially in great Grace as here in great Faith as well as great Humility This put Christ here to the marvel Mat. 8.10 as before he had been ravished with his Spouses single eye and with one single Chain of her Neck Cant. 4.9 how much more where he beholds a beautiful concatenation of all Gospel-Graces Hereat 't is said Christ marvelled and what can be so great a marvel as to hear that he marvelleth Who was it that wondred at this man's Grace no other but he that wrought all this Faith and Humility in him If any other hand had wrought this Grace in this Captain why should Christ who knew all things ab Aeterno Joh. 21.17 wonder at it Christ wondreth at his own work in this man as he had done before in Nathaniel John 1.47 and at his own love to Mankind when he calls himself wonderful c. Isa 9.6 He wondereth here not as it was a sign of any motion of a troubled mind in him as it is in us but as the grand Doctor of the Church teaching us hereby what we ought to wonder at Christ did not wonder at the Magnificence of the Temple as his Disciples did Mat. 24.1 nor was he at all ravished with the glittering glories of the World with its Beauty and Bravery represented as in a Land-skip by the Devil before his Eyes Mat. 4.8 9.10 as he was with the Spouses Grace and at this Centurion's Faith he much marvelled it being the Work of his own Almighty Power Eph. 1.19 and this his Power Christ never putteth forth but for mighty purposes The Tenth Remark is Christ extolleth as well as admireth his own Grace in this Gentile-Proselyte above all that he found in those that are call'd his own People The multitude wondred at his powerful Teaching Luke 4.22 yet are they not praised the Leper believed Christ's Power to Cure him Mat. 8.2 and was therefore healed but not Praised Martha could say I know If thou ask my Brothers Life it shall be granted John 11.22 yet was she rather reproved than praised ver 39 40. The same may be said of many other Instances in the New-Testament Behold the Lamb of God c. John 1.36 40. So was Peter by Andrew ver 41. and Philip by reading Moses c v. 45. They all believed yet not Praised because they were helped Indeed Nathaniel is praised v. 47. yet believed he not till he saw first a fi●● of Christ's Deity v. 48 49. but this Centurion is praised and preferred above all not only because he believed without all helps and means to bring him into Faith but also because he made such an high profession of the power of Christ's word to heal at distance beyond any natural operation The Ruler of the Synagogue cry'd come quickly c. Mat. 9.18 but this man believed Christ's presence was not necessary his word tho' absent was enough therefore he and Cornelius Acts 10. be the Sundard bearers of Gentile Proselytes Christ extolling him not above Patriarchs and Prophets but above those now to be cast into Hell as is foretold Mat 8.11 12. Lastly Faith hath an happy hand for help from Heaven may have what it will as having the Key of God's treasury Christ saith to the Woman be it unto thee even as thou wilt Mat. 15.28 and to this man as thou believest so be it unto thee Mat. 8.13 Faith always speeds in one kind or in another never fails in having its desire either in Money or in Money-worth 't is said of Luther Iste vir potuit quod voluit might have any mercy that he desired The Second Miracle wherewith Christ confirm'd his Oracles was the Raising to Life the Dead Son of the Widow at Naim Luke 7.11 to 17. Wherein are these Remarks First As to the Time When. It was the very day after he had healed the Centurion's Servant v. 11. as Christ cured one Sick unto Death grievously tormented with a Palsey or Epilepsey which is the Falling-Sickness Mat. 8.6 Just a dying and falling into a state of Death upon the Day before so now the very next Day he raised this Young-Man who was altogether Dead To shew that he was according to the Centurion's Character of him the Great Centurion both of Sickness and of Death giving them both their Commands and Commissions both of coming to us and of going from us when this great Captain pleaseth c. The Second Remark is relating to the place where it w●● done at Naim a City that lay forty eight Miles North from Jerusalem upon the edge of Samaria in the way as the Galileans pass'd to Jerusalem whither probably Christ was now going to the Pentecost Feast Naim Hebrew signifies Beautiful Fruitful Fair and Pleasant an Emblem of the World wherein the Children thereof live in all delights never dreaming of Death till it suddenly seize upon them and spoil all their Pleasures as it did in this Young-Man yet a Dead-Man in the Flower of his Age and in the midst
Son of the King of Heaven as God so was free from Taxes but also usurps Caesars power under pretence of being Christs Vicar in demanding many undue payments c. to himself N. B. Note well hereby Christ Teaches 1. That the Gospel Abolishes not civil Polity and 2. that we must pay Cesar his due 3. 'T is better to part with our Priviledges than give Offence and Scandal to the Gospel 4. Christ though poor here hath a power in his Abasement to impose upon Brutes to supply the needs of Him and His. When Christ had paid his Church-Duties for his own House in Capernaum and for Peter who was in the same Town the other Disciples paying in the places of their several Habitations the half Shekel according to the Law Exod. 30.13 their Redemption-Money for Temple-Service though now turned by Caesar into a Tribute c. while Christ was in the House Mar. 9.33 He Catechizeth his Disciples concerning their Contests in the way about Primacy supposed to arise from his taking Peter James and John into the Mount with him apart from the rest or from his paying Tribute for himself and Peter only c. This Itch of Ambition did brake out three times 1. Here hearing of his Death they must needs know which of them should be his Successour in his Malkuth Hashamaijm the Kingdom of the Messiab vainly dreaming of a Distribution of Honours and Offices as once in the days of David and Solomon 2. it broke out again when Christ had been Discoursing of his Death again Mat. 20.21 and 3. after he had Administred the Lords Supper c. Luke 22.24 25. Christ cureth this Canker of Corruption the first time by placing a little Child in the midst of them Mat. 18.1 2. and Mar. 9.36 and Luke 9.47 This little Child whom Christ took in his Arms who neither thought great things of himself nor sought great things for himself did most rightly and really Rebuke their Praeposterous Ambition and tho' but a Dumb sign in it self their proud Affectation of Primacy While Christ was Discoursing of Humility of Offenders and the Offended of severity to our selves not sparing either the right Eye or the right Hand and yet of gentleness to others c. John Interrupts him being soon Satiated with his Saviours sadning Discourse begins another a Relation of another business little to the purpose Mar. 9.38 Luke 9.49 to which Christ Answers forbid him not c. 't is probable this caster out of Devils was one of the Baptists Disciples believing in the Messiah to come and from the full Table of Gifts furnished for the Masters followers his Children this Man had gathered up some fallen crums thereof so would not forbear unless Christ himself would forbid him which Christ refused to do for Reasons mentioned Teaching us as before to avoid Ambition Envy and Revenge N. B. Note well to be Charitable in our Censures where no Evidence is to the contrary Though such as are luke-warm be neithr friends nor foes yet none must be Reputed foes but such as declare themselves to be so Much less such as give a Cup of cold Water to Christ in his Members least of all such as cast out Devils in Christs Name and out of love to him for advancing the Gospel N. B Note well Matth. 12.30 Speaks of mens Minds but here of Mens Actions c. After these things Christ goeth to the Feast of Tabernacles for though there be a Transition of about half a years story in silence in Mat. 19.1 and in Mark 10.1 where both those Evangelists bring Jesus out of Galilee beyond Jordan and presently back to Jerusalem to his last Passover and Passion Yet both Luke and John do concur in mentioning that in this half years space passed over by the other Christ went twice to Jerusalem before his last going to Dye there the first was his going through Samaria to the Feast of Tabernacles Luke 9.51 c. John 7.2 10. The second was his going out of Galilee to the Feast of Dedication Luke 13.22 John 10.22 and his third going to Jerusalem to his last Passover and Passion is distinctly related Luke 17.11 John 10.40 Upon the tidings of his friend Lazarus's sickness John 11. from ver 1 to 8. Thus the Spirit of God guided those four Evangelists hands that what some of them omitted was supplied by others as before and so not without the comparing of them altogether and being all conjoined a full and compleat History of Christ's Life is composed Concerning Christ's first going to Jerusalem after he had ended all those sayings aforesaid Mat. 19.1 Mark 10.1 mentioned only John 7.2 to 10. Luke 9.51 c. we find these Remarks The 1st Remark is When the Time drew nigh that he must be lifted up upon the Cross to be Crucified John 3.14 8.28 12.32 to wit within half a year of his time of Suffering Death He resolved to be more constant at Jerusalem than he had been having left the City and Country once and again because the Jews sought to kill him John 5.16 18 c. This Christ foreknew would follow yet forbore not N.B. Note well In discharge of Duties rightly regulated we must pass on through perils do them zealously leaving the Issue of all to God Thus Christ was said here to Steel his Forehead with Fortitude and his whole Face with Courage in this his Journey to Jerusalem against all Discouragements Luke 9.51 no sign of fear was to be seen in his Face c. N.B. Note well This Courage in Christians their Persecutors call obstinacy not knowing the Power of the Spirit and the privy Armour of Proof wherewith God fortifies their Hearts The 2d Remark is Christ's Kinsmen being Gallileans and allied to his Mother urge him to go up to the Feast of Tabernacles celebrated in September at Jerusalem Lev. 23.39 43. That his Disciples in Judea might see his Miracles there and not work them all in Galilee which was but an obscure place compared with the Metropolitan City that stood in the very Center of their Country John 7.3 5 c. His Kinsmen were carnal and believed not because they saw not the Pomp of their expected Messiah in Him whose privacy they thought could not comport with a King Thus their Vanity appeared in pressing him to pursue publick Honour c. as also did Christ's Humility appear in affecting obscurity and avoiding applause until his fit Season came They prompt him to go and commence Doctor at the Sanhedrim in the Capital City Christ Answers Ye that seek Worldly honour have your Time always at hand for the World hates you not as it doth me c. but I observe my fit moments of manifesting my self the Messiah according to my own free-will and wisdom c. Hereupon as they took their own time so Christ took his of going up Christ will not be confined to time by the Creature So John 2.4 22. Mine hour is
B. Note well Christ will look on those that look for him and will meet those that endeavour to meet him Jam. 4.8 We all are low in our Spiritual Stature as he in Corporal therefore stand we need of all Gospel Institutions to advance us toward a better prospect of Christ and we are hindred with the press as he was from seeing Jesus ver 3. There is the press both of wicked Men without and of Worldly cares Carnal Cogitations within to hinder our beholding Christ and drawing nigh to him N. B. Note well Oh! That we could climb up the Cross of Christ as he did this Sycomore Tree this would help us to a fuller view of Christ c. And N. B. Note Well Oh! That we could hasten as his name signifies and his posture was not only in running faster than others to meet Jesus ver 4. But also in making hast and coming down at Christs call to entertain him v. 5 6. Heaven is a matter of greatest hast and ought not to be adjourned till to Morrow we should hasten to cast away our Pride and come down to Christ by Humility Oh! the Marvelous vouchsafement of Christ to Zacheus here 1. He Honours this Rich Publican with a Name because his Name was writ in Heaven Luke 10.20 Whereas the Rich Glutton Luke 16. Hath no Name vouchsafed him as poor yet pious Lazarus had there ver 19 20.2 When this Publican had not Confidence in himself to invite Christ then Christ prevented him and not only invites but even obtrudes himself as it were upon Zacheus whose mind Christ knew was willing enough to invite him had not the Sense of his Sins and the publick Odium of his being a Publican yea a Master of them hindered him N. B. Note well we read not that Christ went to any House uninvited save to this Modest Man's 3. Christ left his own House and his glory in Heaven John 17.5 yet is willing not only to come to but also to take up his Abode in this Publicans House Luke 19.5 This also he vouchsafes to do in our Hearts John 14.23 N. B. Note well Assuredly that House had need to be clean swept and well garnished wherein the King of glory Psal 24.7 9. whom neither Heaven nor Earth can contain 1 Kin. 8.27 c. Comes as a guest No wonder then if this Penitent Publican received him with joy ver 5. Though the Malignant Pharisees murmured at this Publicans Priviledge as the Jews did when Christ left their House Desolate Matth. 23.38 And pressed himself into the House of the Gentiles whereof this Publicans was a Type They call Zacheus a sinner who was now none but a Justified Penitent willing to make a four fold Restitution for all his frauds c. ver 8. Standing undaunted at ther Murmuring whereby they would have hurt the green thing in him Exod. 10.15 But Christ will not let those Locusts do so Revel 9.4 And they also Calumniate Christ but he vindicates himself ver 10. Shewing how lost Publicans may be Abrahams Children found by Faith Now when Christ had spoke that he came to save Abrahams Seed the Apostles thence Conjectured that he would at this Journey to Jerusalem begin his Glorious Temporal Kingdom Luke 19.11 as was promised Isa 9.7 And knowing that Daniels seventy weeks were now Elapsed hereupon Christ to undeceive them Preaches the Parable of the pounds Luke 19. ver 12 to 29. Wherein he declareth that a Kingdom was indeed due to him not over the Jews only but over the Gentiles also as all the Prophets Prophesied concerning the Messiah but before the full Accomplishment of this he tells them tacitely of his own Sufferings and of the Jews Contumacy against his Kingdom in this Parable The Scope whereof is 1. That Christ is this Noble-Man that must take his Journey out of this lower World to receive his Kingdom in a better World with a Resolve in due time to Return and Reign gloriously c. 2. The Administration of his Spiritual Kingdom is in his Absence committed to Believers especially to Pastors who are all to Trade with their Talents and to Occupy and Improve their Gifts untill he come ver 13.3 The Pounds and Talents they are betrusted to Trade withal are the gifts God gives them whereby to promote Gods glory and the Churches good and though that Parable Matth. 25.15 Holds out how God giveth not the like Measure of gifts unto all but to every one according to their Capacity c. Yet here is an equal Portion one pound to each of the Ten is given to wit so much Knowledge Faith c. as are necessary to Salvation are equally given to all Christians 4. The Citizens that will not have this King to Reign over them are both Jews and Gentiles that Act Rebelliosly against him Psal 2.1 2 c. The Jews Conspire to kill Christ by a gentile power even that of the Romans instead of sending a Lamb to him Isa 16.1 They sent the Message of Rebels ver 14.5 Then this Great King Returns and Reckons with his Servants c. Christ Traveled at his personal Ascension from which time his Servants Tradeth untill his Return at the General Resurrection 6. Some Servants are found Faithful in their Reckoning saying not my pains but thy pound Lord hath gained ten pounds c. ver 16 18. Attributing the glory of the Gain not to the free will of Man but to the free grace of God as 1 Cor. 15.10 Yet some are found unfaithfull making false and frivolous excuses for their Reckoning and the Lord himself must bear the blame of their unfaithfullness ver 20 21. Matth. 25.24 25. Fretting against the Lord when his own foolishness had perverted his way Prov. 19.3 as fallen Adam did Gen. 3.12 saying in effect Had not God given me a Woman I had not Transgressed against him 7. The Judge passeth Sentence upon the good Servants who are both Highly Commended and Richly Rewarded ver 17 19. and upon the bad notwithstanding his plausible Apology that he had done his Lord no wrong in returning his own again and Translating the Servants fault upon the Masters Austerity ver 21. His Crime is retorted upon himself ver 22 23. And he is Judged out of his own Mouth his common grace was taken from him for he certainly wanted the Oyl of Special Grace seeing his Lips like Doors upon rusty Hinges move not without Murmuring and Male-contendedness and was doomed according to the proverbial Sentence by the Lords Liberality ver 24 25 26. Lastly The Lord having Reckoned with his Servants and Rewarded them according to their Works doth then Revenge himself upon the Rebels ver 27. And when Christ had ended this Parable he went before his Company as the Captain of Salvation towards Jerusalem as Daring to meet Death in the face out of his Matchless Magnanimity ver 28. And thus he is come from beyond Jordan to Jericho Zacheus's City and from thence to Bethany Luke
still sufficient without Miracles to save our Souls N.B. Note well the Sufferings of Christ were Three fold 1. He suffered from God both in his Agony in the Garden where he drank of the Cup of Gods Curse that made his Soul exceeding sorrowfull Matth 26.38 And turned his whole Body into Rivers of Blood Luke 22.44 and in his Desertions on the Cross when he was not only forsaken of his Fathers Favour but also was Roasted as the true Paschal Lamb in the fire of his Fathers Wrath till he cryed out of Dryness Matth. 27.46 48. The sufferings of his Body were but the body of his sufferings The Soul of his sufferings were the sufferings of his Soul Then did the Sorrows of Hell surround him Psal 18.5 N. B. Note well The pains of Hell he certainly suffered non specie loco Sed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 something Answerable thereunto and altogether unspeakable hence the Greek Litany calls them unknown Sufferings 2. He suffer'd from Devils when Tempted forty days in the Wilderness and on the Cross In the three Hours Darkness Christ was assuredly set upon by all the powers of Darkness Assaulting him with their utmost Might and Malice Christs third sort of Sufferings were from Men yet Acting all by the Determinate Counsel of God whereof there be four parts 1. Christ's Apprehension 2. His Arraignment 3. His Condemnation and 4. His Execution N. B. Note well was there therefore ever any Sorrow like to his Sorrows Who had Gods Wrath laying load ugon his back c. And as if this had not been enough all the Devils in Hell must at that Juncture make Batteries against him yea and Men are Acting all these four forementioned Evils upon him also First For his Apprehension therein there be four Remarks 1. The place where 2. The time when 3. His preparation for it and 4. The means and manner of it 1. The place where Christ was Apprehended he made choice of a Garden because N. B. Note well As the first Adam began his sinning in a Garden so the Second Adam will begin his suffering in a Garden also that where the Malady began there the Remedy might begin accordingly This Garden stood by Mount Oliver and was a Solitary place so became Christs Oratory or usual place for his Prayer and Meditation Happy is that Christian whom Death apprehends in so doing He withdrew not himself out of the City into this Garden to hide himself from the Jews for Judas the Traitor knew the place because oftentimes he Resorted thither John 18.2 Luke 22.39 He betakes not himself to any obscure or unknown place for escaping Death but voluntarily resorts to his usual Oratory where his Foes might easily find him and in this Garden began his Passion for the Expiation of the first sin that began in a Garden this place is called Gethsemane which signifies a Valley of Fatness made so by his sweating drops of blood in it 2. The time when he was Apprehended it was when his hour was come the Jews had made many Violent Attempts upon Jesus to Stone him c. as above but were always Disappointed and the reason hereof is rendred often because his hour was not yet come but now it was come Matth. 26.45 The Determined time of his Captivity and Death which he calls his Adversaries hour and the power of Darkness Luke 22.53 N. B. Note well How Comfortable is it for a Christian to consider that though he be in Perils often as Paul was yet no Enemy can touch him or take away life from him till the very time appointed of God do come my Times saith David are in Gods Hands Ps 31.15 Not in my Enemies Hands Angry Men and inraged Devils cannot hurt us before that hour 3. Christs preparation for his Apprehension this he did by Prayer and Meditation As he voluntarily so he holily Addresses himself to his suffering work N. B. Note well This should teach us due preparation for our Deaths c. If Christ who was strong and who knew the time when the place where and the manner how he should dye did so How much more we who are weak and know none of those Circumstances ought to strengthen our Souls against our time of Death Seeing Christ who was without sin and had the Spirit without Measure thus prepared himself by Sweating in Prayer c. Oh! How earnestly should we pray in preparing for Tryals and the dangers of Imminent Death since we are laden with sin having little of the Spirit therefore stand we in need of a Thousand Preparations more than he did 4. The Means and manner of Christs Apprehension how it was both which have respect to Judas the Jews and the Gentiles who came all in a Company to Attack Christ Matth. 26.47 Luke 22.47 John 18.3 and Mar. 14.43 Some of this great Multitude were Gentiles the Soldiers of Pilate others were Jews the Servants of the High Priests Scribes and Pharisees and some of themselves mixed among them for the better managing of the Attackment Luke 22.22 and Judas the Ringleader of this Rabble N. B. Note well where note though these Heterogeneous pieces did notoriously hate each other yet the Devil made them to patch together Homogeneously in conspireing against Christ as he did Herod and Pilate Luke 23.12 The Dogs that are at Discord among themselves and possibly fighting one with anonother can easily agree to pursue the Hare that passeth by N. B. Note well All sorts of wicked Men have the like Enmity to Christ and Christianity which is flatly opposit to their corrupt Dispositions however contrarily carry'd out one to another as light is to darkness c. more particularly 1. Judas was the principal means of Apprehending Christ though he was one of the twelve Apostles the Highest Office in Ecclesiastick callings whom Christ had Nourished in his own Bosom fed at his own Table made him his Treasurer and Steward of his Houshold and so was of some Account in his Masters Family notwithstanding all this he did more mischief to his Master than did Pilate and his Soldiers or the High-Priest and his Servants for he brought them to the place where they might take him and the manner of his betraying him there was by a Kiss as the Token whereby the Soldiers and Servants who knew him not especially in the Night might not be mistaken This Traitor presented his most pestilent Poison in this Golden Dish of a pretended Kiss while he intended to Kill consigning his Treachery under so sweet a Symbol of Love and Peace No wonder then that Christ had called him a Devil John 6.70 Whose Insatiable desire of Worldly Wealth being nourished in his wicked Heart made him Degenerate into an Apostate a Traitor and an Incarnate Devil hence Christ complains more of him than of his other Enemies N. B. Note well Corruptio optimi est pessima sweetest Wine maketh the sowrest Vinegar That Salt which loseth its Savour is good for nothing but
Lips should preserve Knowledge Mal. 2.7 to pour out their foul Invectives against him and this Slander of Seducing cast upon our Saviour by them was 2. The worse and the more abominable because Christ had publickly taught and told them in his famous Sermon upon the Mount that he came not to destroy the Law but to fulfil it Mat. 5.17 c. and though Pilate here said Hearest thou not what these say c. Mat. 27.12 13 14. Yet Christ hearing well enough Answered Nothing because they Alledged nothing but notorious Lies known to be so in the Consciences of his chief Accusers But principally because he had put himself in our room and was though Innocent yet willing to be condemned as Guilty in this Humane Court that we might be Acquitted at God's Tribunal He Answered Nothing because he would not hinder the work of Redemption which he had then in hand therefore patience and silence were his best Apology to those Calumniators as it had been in his Type Isaac to Ishinael nor was his silence any consent to his guilt for he was foretold to be the Dumb-Lamb Isa 53.7 never any Man more Innocent yet more willing to be Condemned Insomuch that Pilate marvelled greatly thingking possibly Christ betrayed his own Cause by his over wilful silence not knowing how he stood in sinful Man's stead as guilty of our faults so loved our Justification more than his own Reputation Pilate had more cause to marvel at the Impudence of the Priests pressing such palpable slanders against Christ such as the Pagan Judge himself could not but easily perceive what probability could there be that a poor Plebeian one of the ordinary sort of People as our Lord appeared to be having no Armies Armed Guards or Strong Garrisons nor so much as an Hole or House of his own where to lay his Head Mat. 8.21 should any way attempt a Treasonable Invasion of Caesar's Jurisdiction The bare Relation of such an Abominable Lye was a sufficient Refutation to it self and would clear Christ of all suspicion of Treason And there is no doubt but so much Sagacity Pilate had as did discover and see through so thin a Lye Tenue Mendacium pellucet Therefore did Pilate try so many Politick Tricks to Absolve our Lord whereof this was the first of Pilate's Politicks His Second was by sending him to Herod taking an occasion to do so from a Word drop'd by the Priests that Christ was of Galilee which was Herod's Tetrarchy and Jurisdiction Luke 3.1 therefore he partly to Court Herod who was then at Jerusalem for reconciling some old Heart-burnings betwixt them about Pilate's Murdering those Men of Galilee Luke 13.1 Over whom he had no Authority and partly or principally because he could be content to quit his hands from condemning the Innocent which he might well hope Herod would not do because he was so long desirous to see Jesus Luke 23.8 and therefore may find some Favour or Friendship or at least Justice from him He might hope likewise that the Accusers would not follow him so far seeing himself had so disappointed them but their Malice made them mad to leave no Stone unturned N. B. Note well Now Jesus sees that Monster which had Murthered his Fore-runner John Baptist and Herod was exceeding glad to see Jesus looking upon him as some cunning Inchanter or nimble Juggler who would shew him some fine Tricks for his Court-diversion and for feeding his Phancy with Phantastick Feats but Christ would not gratifie him with either Deed or Word for God is not so profuse of his Power as to condescend at all times to humane curiosity 'T is a great matter that must occasion him to force Nature beyond its Bounds Christ would not Exert his Power of Miracles upon every trifling and frivolous occasion Not to satisfie the curiosity of any nor for his own Vain-Glory much less for hindering his determined Death Least of all before Herod that Fox who had sought to Kill him before Luke 13.31 32. and who would not stir out of Doors to hear Christ's Word while he Preached in his Territory in the Cities of Galilee yet now having him in his Hand le ts him go though Christ would not vouchsafe him either a Word or a Work because Herod had heard the Baptist gladly yet put him to Death for crossing his carnal Corruptions Mark 6.20 21 c. and though the chief Priests did most vehemently accuse Christ before him both with Extention of Speech Intention of Spi●it and Contention of the most Hellish Spitefulness Luke 23.10 Herod only made no body of Christ Exoutheniz'd him ver 11. as the Greek Word is who is our All in all Col. 3.11 because he would shew him no Jugling Tricks upon his Stage and his Guard abused him putting on him a White Robe which the Jewish Nobility most affected as Pilate's after did cloth him in Purple a colour most affected by the Romans both in mockage and contempt of Christ representing him as an Histrionical King Luke 23.11 So sent him back to Pilate not so much because he could be content that Christ should escape his hands as appears from Acts 4.27 but because he would have Pilate who was only the Roman President to Court him again who was call'd the King and who promised the half of his Kingdom to the dancing Damosel Mark 6.22 23. Mat. 14.9 and therefore must have more reverence than the President from whence we have these few Notes N. B. Note well 1 Many desire to see Jesus not for Jesus sake but for some sinister by-respects for profit or pleasure as Herod did here Many as he would see the Works of Christ but love not to hear the Word of Christ especially that which crosseth their carnality as he did the Baptist till it came to that cutting point c. N. B. 2. Because Galilee was the place of Christ's Breeding Birth and his first Miracle c. Therefore Pilate shew'd himself so far a Just Judge in remitting Jesus to Herod whose Jurisdiction Galilee did belong to Luke 3.1 It was thus far honesty in Pilate not to put his Sickle into another Man's that is into Herod's Harvest N. B. 3. Yet herein Pilate began to make a breach upon his own Conscience in sending our Lord to Herod for seeing he to whom the Kill-Christ's referred the whole matter judged Christ wholly Innocent and out of Envy only delivered to him why did he not as his Duty of a Judge was wholly to Acquit him and not venture him to that old Fox Herod at all This he did only to Extricate himself out of the Briars and to gratifie Herod upon a Politick account N. B. 4. Christ did vouchsafe to give an answer to Pilate a Pagan because he sought after the knowledge of the Truth without any precurring prejudice but no answer to Herod who was Circumcis'd and of the Jewish Religion yet had kill'd the Baptist his Voice so left him dumb and would have killed him
the Camp to shew that he was the true Piacular and Satisfactory Sacrifice not only for the Jews within but also for the Gentiles without the Pale Heb. 13.11 12 13. This Golgotha or Calvary was a filthy noisom place where not only the Garbage of the City but also the Skulls and Bones of Malefactors formerly Executed lay to offend both Christ's Sight and Smell Fourthly They Compel Simon of Cyrene to bear the small end of the Cross after Jesus if not the whole Tree Luke 23.26 'T is easie to suppose that by this time our Lord must faint under the Burden his Agony in the Garden his being Tossed too and fro and toiled all Night by the Soldiers one while before Caiaphas and another while before Pilate his Scourges Buffets c. must needs spend him very much Now is he no longer able to bear the Cross None of the Multitude for shame would help him N. B. Note well The Death of the Cross was so abhorred of all no Jew would touch the Cross no nor this Simon whom some suppose to be a Cyrenian-Gentile therefore was he compelled to do it Mat. 27.32 Luke 23.26 coming fresh out of the Field or Country him they lay hold of lays the low end upon him not so much for the easing of a fainting Christ as to hasten the Execution and to keep him alive till he came to it Hence have we these many Remarks 1st That Christ was thus stripped twice to Expiate the Sin which brought the shame of Nakedness upon the First Adam and that we may be clothed with the Robes of his Righteousness And that he might bring us to Paradise out of which Adam was cast as soon as he was clothed c. The 2d Remark is Christ was Mocked in three places 1. In the House of the High-Priest Luke 22.63 2. In the Hall of Herod Luke 23.11 And 3. In Pilate's place of Judicature Mat. 27.31 Mark 15.20 This was done while the Cross war making ready and the Inscription was a fixing upon it He was mocked of Wicked Men that we might be commended by the Most Holy God 2 Cor. 10.18 and have his Euge Mat. 25.34 This shews Priests Princes Presidents as well as People are all mockers of Christ The 3d Remark is We are naturally backward and hang off shrinking in the Shoulder and all of us come off heavily when we are called upon to take up our Cross and follow Christ Mat. 16.24 as Simon here did who was compelled to carry it after Christ and as Peter was Pinioned and carried Prisoner whither he would not John 21.18 This cannot be done till Carnal-Self be denied and undone c. The 4th Remark is Believers have communion with Christ in bearing the Cross as Simon here who did but bear up the smaller and lighter end thereof upon his Shoulders the Cross and heavier end lay still upon the Shoulders of Christ N. B. Note well This may be very comfortable to us to consider that while we are filling up the Afflictions of Christ Col. 1.24 and bearing his Cross yet the heavier end lyes upon him remember Christ has a great load and burden already add not but be sparing of Sin Our part is but the Small End yea the Chips and Shivers of his Cross The 5th Remark is We must go out of the Camp of Sin and out of the Vanities of the World to come to the right Altar c. Heb. 13.10 12 13. The Jews Law was that such as were put to Death it should be done without the Camp Numb 15.35 and without the City 1 Kin. 21.13 when our Lord Christ is made Furcifer a bearer of his Cross Murmur not at any Indignities or Expulsions put upon us The 6th Remark is Let us put all our Sins upon the Head of this Holy Oblation Lev. 16.27 Christ went out of the Old Jerusalem to bring us into the New and to fit us for the Society of Angels After the Preambles come the Concomitants of Christ's Execution the 1st is the place where Now is Christ brought to Golgotha where the Antients say Adam was Buried and where Abraham offered his Son Isaac that place of a Skull not only to encourage us in suffering for Christ in the worst of places as he did for us but also to assure us that his Death is Life to the Dead As in Adam all dye so in Christ all are made Alive 1 Cor. 15.22 Hereupon saith Epiphanius we may marvel that our Lord was Crucified in Golgotha the place where Adam's Body lay Buried for saith he when Adam was cast out of Paradise he went in his wandrings to the place where Jerusalem was after built and there dying he was buried in this very ground called Calvary because his Skull was found there thence had it this Denomination The Place of a Skull In this History saith he there is a Mystery that the Second Adam should be Crucified in the same place where the First Adam lay Buried denoting how the Blood Christ shed upon the Cross besprinkled the Relicks of our First Father and thereby all that Defilement derived from the first Sin upon all Mankind is purged away To this Opinion as to a Truth do Athanasius de passione Domini Cyprian de Resurrectione Ambrose in Luke 23. and Theophylact in Mat. 27 c. All unanimously subscribe so that Origen who first improved this Tradition stood not alone in this quaint and curious Notion N. B. Note well However this is most certain Christ was Crucified in this base stinking place on Earth that he might purchase a better place for us in Heaven Abel whom Cain decoyed into the Field and there kill'd him was a Type hereof so was Isaac as above and Joseph whom they cast into a Pit and the Brazen Serpent lifted up upon a Pole in the Wide Wilderness Gen. 4. and 22 37. Numb 21. to this unclean place is our Lord hurried out of Jerusalem as a Prophane and Unhallowed Person unworthy to Abide in that so called Holy Cty Mat. 27.53 The 2d Concomitant Circumstance is the Company that came along with Christ to his Place of Suffering Besides the Rude Rabble which mocked him as a Malefactor after the Rudest manner there were a great Multitude of Good Souls that Abhorred the Rabble's Rudeness and condoled with Christ in all these his Sorrows and Sufferings Luke 23.27 28 c. especially a multitude of Weeping Women to whom he had been a blessed Benefactor which the Evangelist nameth not yet some of them are named Mat. 27.56 to those disconsolate ones Christ speaks comforting words Weep not for me that is do not ye condole my Death because I most willingly lay down my Life and most freely undergo my Death which I shall in a short time conquer by my Resurrection and unless I Dye ye cannot Live neither Spiritually nor Eternally But weep for your selves admonishing that they would have greater and more grievous cause to bewail their own cases and
pleasure not at Death's demand N. B. Note well Now it was that Death as the Bee lost its sting upon Christ and can sting no more but hath quite lost its Victory through Christ's Death 1 Cor. 15.54 55 56. Christ hereby hath delivered us from the commanding power of Sin from the condemning power of the Law and from the conquering power of Death Though the redeemed in Christ do die yet can they not be kill'd with Death as Jezabel's Children were Rev. 2.23 the second death hath no power over them Rev. 2.11 20.6 14. 21.8 Our Lord 's strong voice may be the more wondered at considering how he was spent with blows blood c. yet now it was the loud voice of his Triumph over Death c. There be yet four Miracles behind to be discoursed briefly upon all wrought wonderfully by a dying Christ upon the Cross by the power of his Deity The Fourth Wonder is The Rending in twain of the Vail of the Temple from the top to the bottom which the Evangelist puts a Behold upon as a thing very wonderful Mat. 27.51 and as wrought by the force of Christ's last loud cry ver 50. then the Angels Presidents of the Temple departed from it as Jerom saith As Christ's last cry upon the Cross was the sign and symptom of frail Man dying so his promising of Paradise-Happiness to the Penitent Thief was a clear demonstration that he was also the Great God Living for none hath the Key of Paradise but the Great God only Nor did our Lord only demonstrate his Deity as above while he was yet living and while his Humanity was in the way of dying But also when he was verily dead and had given up the Ghost he still declares himself to be a Wonder-Working God in all the following Instances whereof this of Rending the Temple's Vail in Twain c. was the first wonder after his Death The distance of the Temple from the place out of the City where Christ was Crucified could not exempt it from the stroke of this Wonder-working Hand when those wretched Priests had made that House of Prayer a Den of Thieves this Vail now Rent was the Partition-Wall that divided betwixt the Holy Place or the Priests-Court and the Sanctum-Sanctorum into which the High-Priest entered only once in the year Exod. 26.31 33. 1 Kin. 6.19 21 31. 2 Chron. 3.14 c. Heb. 9.3 4 6 7 8 c. N. B. Note well This Wonder to wit of rending this Mid-Wall was wrought upon a threefold Account 1st To shew that Christ's Death was the Accomplishment of the Levitical Law and that now all the Ceremonies thereof were rent down and done away 2dly That now by the Gospel sealed up in his Death a new way to Heaven was opened Heb. 10.19 20 21 22 c. And 3. To shew that the Mid-Wall of Partition betwixt the outward Court of the Gentiles and that of the People of the Jews was broke down by the death of Jesus Eph. 2.14 15. This Vail is call'd the Separation betwixt the Prophane Place and the Sanctuary Ezek. 42.20 Now the Ceremonial Law should no longer divide those two but Christ became the blessed Cement to unite all believing Jews and Gentiles into one Gospel-building himself being the knitting Corner-stone c. The Fifth Wonder Christ wrought upon the Cross which is the second after his Death was the dreadful Earthquake Mat. 27.51 now that our Lord was dead as to his Man-hood he still letteth forth the Power and Glory of his God-head more than he had done before and whereas he had shewed himself the Lord of Heaven by causing an extraordinary Eclipse of the Sun and covering the whole face of the Firmament with a Curtain of Darkness So now he appears to be Lord of the Earth also by causing it to shake and tremble As the Heavens had given their Testimonial and Acknowledged their Homage to his Lordly Dominion over them in hiding their Glory while their Lord was Suffering Shame So the very Earth here payeth her Respect and Reverence in an humble Submission to her Almighty Landlord in her Trembling before his powerful Presence when the Lion that King of Beasts doth Roat all the Beasts of the Field do Tremble Now did this Lion of the Tribe of Judah roar with a loud Voice and we may well suppose what a Trembling seized upon those Beasts of the Temple the Christ-Killing Priests when they saw the Vail of their Temple Rent in Twain from top to bottom at their hastening now to their Evening Sacrifice Thus well prepared with the Tincture of this Innocent blood more especially when they felt that sad sight seconded by an Earth quake this could not but cause an Heart-Quake and a consternation in them fearing that the Earth might now cleave Asunder and Swallow them all up as it had done Korah's Company of Conspirators these as well as they being now become a Burden too heavy for the Earth to bear and as weary of them would bury them quick This Earthquake might also predict the performance of what God had promised that Christ would shortly shake not only the Earth once more as was done in Sinai at the Promulgation of the Law but even Heaven also by the Gospel Hag. 2.6 7 Heb. 12.26 27. especially when the desire of all Nations shall come and shake all Wickedness out of both the Heavens of Church and the Earth of State and then give those promised New Heavens and New Earth wherein dwelleth Righteousness 2 Pet. 3.13 The Sixth Wonder was the Rocks were Rent Mat. 27.51 where the first word Behold doth spread it self over all the parts and several parcels of all those Miracles mentioned in that verse Behold the Vail was Rent c. Behold the Earth did Quake and Behold the Rocks were Rent to denote the marvellousness of those things and mostly in this because herein Rocks are rent by the Rock and one Rock rendeth many Rocks the Rock that rent the Rocks was Christ 1 Cor. 10.4 he was the creating Rock Deut. 32 4.31 1 Sam. 2.2 2 Sam. 22.2.32 that rent all the other created Rocks c. This was a Work of greater difficulty to rend the Rocks than it was to rend the Vail c. yet the Power of the Death of Christ doth effect this Work of Difficulty N. B. Note well To shew that no Heart is so hard and rocky but the vertue of Christ's Death can rend it into Repentance Though those Christ-Killers had made their Hearts as hard yea harder than an Adamant Zech. 7.12 yet when their time of love came Ezek. 16 8. their Month of Christ's finding them Jer. 2.24 and when the Hammer of God's Word Jer. 23.29 began to beat upon them as Animated and Actuated by the power of his Death oh how kindly did their Hearts Thaw Break and Melt into Tears and Tenderness Acts 2.36 37. with 41. 4.4 When Moses smote that Rock upon which God stood with his
suppose that City to be built upon that very plat of ground where Cain murdered his Brother Abel and bloody Saul would have dip'd this Damascus of a deeper Dye by acting in the Spirit of old Cain to shed the blood of many new Righteous Abels there N.B. Oh stand and wonder how Christ suffered this Mad-man to march end-ways without any Disturbance for five whole days together and for the middle of his sixth day while he was hoping to pepper the poor Professors of Christ in Damascus Object But it may be here demanded What had the High-Priest to do in Damascus which had a King of its own over it 2 Cor. 11.32 and a Deputy-Governour also Answer the first Though the Romans had subdued Judaea Syria c. yet they suffer'd the Jews both at home and abroad in the places of their Dispersion where they had several Synagogues whom they still styled Brethren Acts 22.5 to live according to their own Law and Religion whereupon the High-Priest as Prince and President of the Sanhedrim might judge of any Jews Crime and Imprison c. Though this Council had not power to determine in matters capital which the Romans reserved unto themselves as also to pronounce the Judicial Sentence of Death and the power of publick Execution as is clear in Christ's Caese who was Crucified by Pilate's power Answer the second Hereupon this Plenipotentiary Persecutor carries his Credential Letters to this place taking along with him a great many Sergeants and Bailiffs to Arrest the Christians in that City that he might bring them bound to Jerusalem Acts 9.2 because he feared those Dissenters would find too much favour among those Gentiles had they been Tried in their Courts and because it was impossible a Prophet should perish in any place but in Jerusalem Luke 13.33 That City must fill up the measure of its iniquity Matth. 23.32 And when her Ephah was full then was she to be Ruined and removed Zech. 5.6 8. and 11. This Cutting Commission from the Soveraign Sanhedrim Saul was to deliver to the Deputy-Governour under King Aretas who was now as Josephus saith warring against King Herod for putting away his Daughter and taking Herodias to Wife in Aretas his Daughter's stead and those Pestilent Informers could easily gain the Governour to be on their side to assist them by slandering the Christians that they were Traitors to the King of Damascus and took King Herod's part c. The third Remarkable Circumstance is The Manner how this chief Commissioner of Satan was converted by and to Christ which in the general the particulars being referred to the Concomitants is thus described while Saul was marching with a bloody mind the last day of his Journey and was got near even within the sight of his much desired Damascus resolving to Ruine many Christian Families by ragingly rushing in upon them c. before he slept that night Behold in the midst of all those his murdering Imaginations and malicious Diabolical Machinations even then when he was almost at the end of his Devilishly designed Journey there meets him the Lord Jesus and prebably in his glorified Body unhorseth him or knocks him down if on foot as with a Thunder-bolt or Flash of Lightning as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is read circumfulguravit cum the Lord thundered and lightened round about him to stun and astonish him but not to stone him with a Thunder-stone or a spire of Lightning as he had stoned Stephen by other wicked hands And the Thunder of Christ's Power uttered this Voice Saul Saul why persecutest thou me Acts 9.4 This terrible Noise and dazling Light from Heaven makes this proud and presumptuous Persecutor fall down to the Earth He could not but be sensible of the Affrighting presence of the great God who was wont to make himself known in so amazing a manner to meer mortals N.B. Saul being learned in the Law could not but know that Daniel himself a man greatly beloved Dan. 9.23 did in a prostrate posture Reverence the Majesty of God's presence Dan. 8.17 and 10 9. How much more such a matchless wretch as himself who had justly deserved no better a denomination than to be reputed a Man or rather a Monster greatly to be abhorred being conscious to himself that he was a Villain of the first Magnitude and had bid Defiance of the deepest Dye against the God of Heaven and Earth c. Christ calls Saul by his name to mind him that he was doing the Devil's Drudgery just as his old Name-sake Saul had done in persecuting David who was the Father Type and Figure of Christ and that name Saul is doubled not only the more to awaken him but also to shew his greater commiseration of him And though Christ was now above the reach of Saul's Rage N.B. Yet because he and his Church make but one Body he saith to Saul Why persecutest thou me I am the Head of my Church and do feel my self wounded in my Members of the Saints In whom I live Gal. 2.20 and to whom thou art injurious 1 Tim. 1.13 All injuries done to my little ones I take them as done to my self Mat. 25.35 c. And in all their afflictions I am afflicted Isa 63.9 As the honour of the Head redounds to the Members so their sorrows and sufferings do reach unto the Head Our Head is not sensless though it be in Heaven when his Members suffer although they be on Earth N.B. Our Lord retains still both a feeling and a fellow-feeling and is not only sensible of his Saints saying He that despiseth you despiseth me Luke 10.16 but is also tender over them saying likewise He that toucheth you toucheth the Apple of my Eye Zech. 2.8 or Why persecutest thou me may be emphatically meant of Christ himself And why me for what demerit of mine Sure I am it is causless on my part It cannot be but for my good deeds that thou dost it I have given thee no other cause to persecute me but this that I have so loved thee as to lay down my Life for thee Thus Christ speaks and Saul says Who art thou Lord verse 5. Art thou God or art thou an Angel This learned man in the Law was an Ignoramus in and knew little of the Gospel He knew something of God the Father in the Old Testament but nothing of God the Son in the New therefore he asks Who art thou He answers not therefore Speak Lord for thy Servant heareth as the Child Samuel did 1 Sam. 3.9 N.B. Saul under this consternation is answered by his sweet Saviour I am Jesus whom thou persecutest 't is hard for thee to kick against the pricks There are more words added to this short Answer Acts 22.10 and 26.14 In which places this short History hath a more ample and plenary Relation However so much is Related and Recorded in this place Acts 9.5 as gives Saul an account 1. That though Saul might not directly design to persecute Christ himself
for beginning this great work of bringing both Jews and Gentiles together into one Bond of Communion this place was therefore God's choice where both of them abounded and the mentioning of Cornelius's his being of the Italian Band Acts 10.1 may be look'd upon as an intimation from the Holy Spirit that this very City was designedly pitched upon for this very end wherein both Jews and Gentiles should meet here first in Christ's Sheepfold 4. In their unwillingness to deliver God's Errand for both were backward to it both were more for disputing than for dispatching their Lord and Master's commands Much unlike to Abraham who followed God blindfold and went out not knowing whither Heb. 11.8 N.B. But though he knew not whither he went yet did he know full well with whom he went namely that he walked as a Child in his tender Father's hand which is sufficient incouragement even to a timorous Son as it was to David Psal 23.4 to walk through the Valley of the shadow of Death but neither Jonah nor Bar-Jonah had this confidence First Jonah the Prophet did take shipping at Joppa this very same City when he would flee from the presence of God and decline his duty Jon. 1.3 He Rose indeed like a Servant whom his Master calls up to do his commands verse 2. but it was to Run from his business not to perform it Whatever was the Reason that moved Jonah to Run away from God's command yet is this strange he should fall into such a fixt Opinion that he might and take up such a fixt Resolution that he could flee from the presence of the Lord mentioned twice in verse 3. He could not be ignorant how David had described the Omni-presence of God Psal 139 7 8 9 10 11. Yea natural Reason would rebuke him for thinking he could flee from God Jovis omnia plena God fills all places saith the Heathen Poet. Secondly Bar-Jonah the Apostle was backward enough also as is before related for though he did not as the other Jonah who out of a sullen humour and a melancholy discomposure at the dislike of his Message crept into a Ship-Cabbin or got under the D●●k before the Ship was ready for her Voyage that he might be sure to go in her and therefore paid for his passage before-hand presently upon his going first on Board which used not to be paid till Passengers come to the Port or Haven designed c. Yet this Bar-Jonah did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 stick fast in the Mud of his own doubting heart of unbelief and could find no way out Acts 10.17 In this sense the same Greek word is ●●●d to express the perplexity of Herod's guilty Conscience Luke 9.7 as Beza noteth N.B. 'T is true Jonah Run away but Bar-Jonah stood at Mark for the former had only an ordinary Divine Command Arise go to Nineveh c. Jon. 1.2 but this latter had an extraordinary Divine Vision and Commission to converse with the Gentiles notwithstanding Peter's doubting was so prevalent that he verily thought his Jewish Custom in shunning Gentile-Communion was a Reason strong enough to refuse God's Command therefore he cryed Not so Lord c. Acts 10.14 till he was expresly bid to go doubting nothing verse 20. and then he delayed not to obey the Heavenly Vision as Acts 26.19 2. The Disparity betwixt Jonah and Bar-Jonah are these 1. The former was sent in Embassage to a prodigiously vast and populous Gentile-City but the latter was God's Embassador at the first only to a Gentile-Family and his Friends and Relations 2. Jonah's Doubting was worse than Bar-Jonah's for Jonah not only doubted whether the Conversion of the Gentiles might not prove the Rejection of the Jews whereof he was very unwilling to become the Instrument and Bar-Jonah might have the like Doubt But also Jonah doubted whether that great King and his City would not rather deride and punish him than regard his Message for he had no such good Character of them as ●eter had of Cornelius before his going to him Acts 10.22 to incourage him 3. Jonah also feared that his Threatning Message to Nineveh would not proye true for God's graciousness he thought would Reverse the Doom of destroying it within forty days if the City did Repent and then they would repute him for a false Prophet but Bar-Jonah had no such Reasons of any such fear here 4. This Refractory Prophet is punished for a Run-away and put close Prisoner into Little-ease the Whale's Belly out of which upon his prayer he is delivered when made more sensible of his duty by this Miraculous Deliverance yet when thus forced to set upon his work and became successful in it he became passionate and in a pet fit he must needs lie down and die Notwithstanding this God most graciously spared him as well as Nineveh and left him upon Record not only as a Type of Christ's Burial and Resurrection as he lay three nights in the Whale's Belly and then was cast upon dry ground Matth. 12.40 but also as a Caution and Warning-piece to Prophets and People that 't is possible they may prove over-passionate and though good men may Run over far away from their duty This doth not cum Petroquadrare Bar-Jonah did not do as this old Jonah did c. This brings in the first Circumstance namely How Peter was expected by Cornelius Acts 10.24 but so was not Jonah expected by Nineveh Peter after he had lodged the Centurion's Messengers for him whereof Nineveh sent none for Jonah in all civility tho' Gentiles all night verse 23. In the morning he rose up and went with them taking six Brethren from Joppa with him that they all might testifie with him the Grace of God which was dropped down from Heaven upon the Gentiles when it might be questioned as it happened afterwards to be Acts 11.1 2. when Peter returned the second time to Jerusalem to be after observed Now comes he to Caesarca where it is expresly said Cornelius waited for him and he had called together his Kinshmen and near Friends to wait with him for Peter N.B. For this good man Cornelius thought he could not express his love to his Relations and Acquaintance who had probably with him forsaken all Pagan Idolatry better than by giving them an opportunity to hear the Word of Life and receive Instruction for their Souls And 2dly How he was accepted and entertained So soon as Peter was come Cornelius met him fell down at his feet and worshipped him verse 25. Acts 10. that is with a most humble Civil Worship not with any Divine Worship for he had forsaken his Pagan Idolatry and though he could not think him to be God yet perhaps might mistake him for an Angel and designed to worship him accordingly for which Peter blames him verse 26. by letting him know he was no more than a Man who must adore God but must not be adored either as God or as an Angel by Mortal Men We must glorifie
N.B. and here he was in most Eminent danger to be pulled in pieces by this Tumult or mawl'd with blows to death when this inraged rabble falls Pell-mell upon him with the faggot sticks prepared for the Altar or what came first to hand had not the Roman Commander come so seasonably in for his Rescue verse 30 31 32. Wherein we have this account N.B. That before his Seven days of purification the time of his Vow were accomplished those implacable Jews of Ephesus who were come to keep the Pentecost-Feast here saw him in the Temple where he waited till his Nazarite offering was over Numb 6.13 they against all Law lay hands upon him laid false as well as soul things to his charge crying out that he was an Enemy both to the Jews to the Law and to the Temple c. malicously surmising that he had brought Trophimus a Known Ephesian beyond the Court of the Gentiles the place allowed for such as came out of the Gentile-stock yet worship'd the true God as the Eunuch of Candaces did Acts 8. even into the Court of the Jews which was death by their Traditional Law N.B. And all the ground they had for this Accusation was because they had seen this Trophimus with him in the City therefore he must be with him in the Temple too which was only the frantick Dream of their inraged Jealousy v. 29. with this out cry of Paul's polluting the Temple the whole City was in an uproar by those Asian Blood-hound who had former Contests with him there and now pursued him hither dragging him out of the Temple in order to kill him thinking it great impiety to stain the Pavement of that holy place with blood yet not sticking at staining their Souls with the blood of the innocent here was straining at Gnats and Swallowing Camels verse 30 31. Now when they were just about killing Paul N.B. God steps in for his Rescue in this manner The Romans durst not trust such vast multitudes at Jewish Festivals without a sufficient check therefore kept they a Strong Garrison in Antonie's Tower on the North side of the Temple the Governour hereof having Tidings of the Tumult brings his bands of Souldiers to fee the peace kept his affrighted the Jews from their murthering Paul N.B. The fear of man caused ●hem to forbear what the fear of God could not for the Jews had not power of life and death permitted them by the Romans which sufficiently demonstrates it was not Divine Zeal but Diabolical malice that set them upon this outrage and it was an admirable instance of Gods good providence who delights to Reserve his hand for a dead lift to save those that are forsaken of their hopes God comes unlookt for here and as it were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 out of an engine to save Paul and that by an Heathen Colonel who neither had any such intention nor any affection for persecuted Paul as appears by his binding him with two Chains as Agabus had foretold and carried him P●●soner into the Castle verse 32 33 34 c. CHAP XXII Paul in Prison PAVL now was become a Prisoner to this chief Captain or Roman Tribune who tho' he delivered Paul out of the hands of those that would have murdered him yet bound he him with Chains possibly looking upon him as the Author of this Tumult Acts 23.27 and examined him publickly who he was and what he had done Acts 21. verse 33. However by this same means as what was foretold from God to him Acts 21. v. 11. was fulfilled for not one tittle that is foretold by his Servants from him can fail So God provided hereby that Paul should have a fair hearing before he could be condemned and Executed by that Riotous Rabble who agreed well enough in doing this murdering mischief so far as they durst but could render no reason to this Tribune for their outrage against Paul N.B. Wherefore the Captain ordered his Souldiers to carry away the Prisoner into the Castle not only to secure him from the fury of this confused popular commotion but also to be examined privately again Paul being by this good providence handed up upon the Ascent to the Castle out of the reach of his murderers hands craveth leave of the Captain to make his Apology to this Tumltuous and Frantick people and he did this both to Vindicate the Gospel that no Scandal might rest upon truth and to demonstrate his invincible Zeal for his own Country-men and Kins-men who while they were doing their utmost for his destruction would leave no means unattempted for their Salvation Acts 21. v. 34 35 36 37. When Paul requested this liberty of speaking for himself the Captain asks him two Questions N.B. The first was about his skill in the Greek Language which had been the common Lingua in Asia and Aegypt c. while the Graecian Empire retained its predominacy and was well known among the Romans who were of any good quality and education And his second Question was about his Person whether he were not that Famous Ring-leader of a Rebellious Crew Judas Galilaeus who pretended himself to be a Prophet made an horrible insurrection yet escaped when many of his followers were slain of whom Josephus Lib. 20. Cap. 11. Antiqu. mentions to which Paul Answers No but declares what he was and so had license to make his defence verse 38 39 40. of Acts 21. In Paul's Apology to the people for quelling the Tumult Acts 22.1 2 c. we have these Remarks The first is There is a lawful and pious insinuation for gaining the Attention of Auditors which may be used in Sermons or Orations N.B. Thus Paul did here tho' his Auditory consisted of wicked men and of the most peevish and pestilent persecutors yet doth he give to them their due Titles of respect and honour belonging to the places wherein the providence of God had placed them stiling them Men Brethren and Fathers verse 1. and not using any opprobious invectives which they now deserved Moreover he that could speak all tongues by the Gift of the Holy Ghost upon him chused to speak in his own Mother-Tongue namely the Hebrew mixt with the Syriack ever after the return from the Captivity as knowing that Language was most grateful to this people who had so great a prejudice against all other Nations and Languages This made them keep the more silent verse 2. The second Remark is such as are become renewed in the Spirit of their minds Eph. 4.23 have quite contrary thoughts and understandings to what they had in their unrenewed Estate Thus Paul while he was the Pharisaical Saul had such high thoughts of his strict Sect as to believe if only two persons were to be admitted into Heaven the one must be a Scribe and the other a Pharisee He looked upon himself as a perfect Zealot in Pharisaism wherein persecution of Christianity was one part of his Perfection verse 3 4. but when he by his
the Heavens passing away with a noise the Elements melting with heat the Earth burnt up c. 2 Pet. 3. v. 10 11. Such as the Destruction of the whole World is usually expressed by in other Scriptures to alarm the secure c. The fourth Remark is the manner of Peter 's death whereof we have some Scripture-light and of him only of all the Apostles As Peter's second Epistle leaves us some light concerning the time of his death as well as of writing that Epistle to wit a little before his death as is above said which he saith was to be very shortly yet must that phrase of his as our Lord Jesus Christ hath shewed me 2 Pet. 1.14 borrow some light from John 21.18 19 c. to make the manner of his death the more manifest where Christ tells Peter that he should dye a violent kind of death wherein another shall manacle and pinion thee carry thee prisoner where thou wouldst not and that he should follow his Master in the manner of his death in being Crucified at his Martyrdom as Christ had told Peter thou canst not follow me now but thou shalt follow me afterward Joh. 13.36 This our Lord spake signifying by what death Peter should glorifie God John 21.18 19. That Peter's hands should be stretched out and nailed to the Cross as Christ's were-when Crucified c. This must be Peter's Exitus or way of decease and the manner of taking down his Tent and Tabernacle 2 Peter 1.14 15. when Peter heard his own fate he then is too curiously inquisitive to know what was John's destiny ver 20 21. Our Lord checks his curiosity bids him mind his own concern of executing his master's commands and Imitating his Example not troubling himself with the concerns of others yet withall intimating that Peter's death should be before John's who should live till he came to wit in judgment against Jerusalem to destroy it ver 22. John lived to see the holy City destroyed but Peter was crucified a little before N.B. And yet that he might dye in charity to Paul who had as before exposed him to some open shame by his so publickly reproving him He makes a most honourable mention of him as his Beloved Brother c. 2 Pet. 3.15 16. Whereby he declares to all the world upon record that he had nothing the worse thoughts of him for being so sharply rebuked by him but rather loved him the better for his faithfulness according to Solomon's saying Rebuke a wise man and he will love thee Prov. 9.8 c. N.B. This is the last Account and the Total which the sacred Scripture gives us concerning the great Apostle Peter Therefore the life of Peter written by the Jesuit Xaverius that mock Evangelist among the Indians in the Persian Language and translated into Latine by Ludovicus de Dieu is no better than a fardle fraught full of many impudent Fables wherein take only this short tast he telleth how Peter solliciteth the Blessed Virgin to intercede for him with her Son to procure his pardon for his Thrice Denying him As likewise how Christ made Peter and his Successors to be he Lord's Vicars upon Earth and much more ejusdem farinae of the same Bran as appeareth in the Animadversions upon that fabulous lie That Peter was martyr'd by the Jews in Babylonia where he now was is far more probable because such a Frantick Madness was now judiciarily fallen upon them in all parts and a bloody Rage against the Gospel the Devil at this time bestirring himself in the Jews knowing his time was so short N.B. That Peter left no more Writings behind him save those two Epistles makes more against Popery than for to countenance it The third Apostle that still the sacred writ gives some light into their lives is the Apostle Jude on whom take these few Remarks The first is His Name which is prefixed to his Epistle according to the common manner of writting Letters and Epistles in that time Acts 23.26 and all the Apostolical Epistles and not subscribed as our manner is he is called Jude whom Luke calls Judas Luke 6.16 Matthew calls him Lebbeus Matth. 10.3 and Mark Thaddeus Mark 3.18 So that he had three Names Luke calls him the Brother of James the less to distinguish him from Judas Iscariot and from him who was the mover of Sedition Acts 5.37 His Mother seems to be the Wife of Cleopas the blessed Virgin 's Sister John 19.25 Matth. 27.56 compared with Matth. 13.55 In which sense his Brother James is called the Lord's Brother Gal. 1.19 as he calls himself James's Brother Jude verse 1. And such was his humility and his Brother 's also James 1.1 that neither of them writ themselves a Brother or Kins-man of Christ nor yet an Apostle as both Paul and Peter do but both of these Brothers stile themselves only the Servants of Christ which they esteemed more honourable than the most glorious Title in the world Thus David in his Title to Psalm 18. useth the like phrase David the Servant of the Lord which he accounted a greater honour than his being KING of Israel Jude's other Name Lebbeus signifies Hearty being an Humble and Hearty Servant of Christ The second Remark is The length of his Life As Christ promised by way of Equivalency to Peter that he should not be Martyred in the middle of his Life but that he should live God's Servant all that time and that not until he came into his old age he should then dye God's Sacrifice as appeareth in the foregoing discourse of him So it is as apparent that the Lord performed his promise of prolonging the Life of his Kins-man Jude insomuch that he survived and over-lived all the Apostles except John This truth is proved from Jude's own word in his Epistle verse 17. Saying Remember beloved the words which were spoken by the Apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ adding in verse 18. How they told you that there should be Mockers in the last times c. which passages make it plainly appear that Jude wrote his Epistle very late even later than any of either Paul's or Peter's Epistles for those two were the very Apostles especially that gave any such fore-warnings upon Record Acts 20.29 1 Tim. 4.1 2 Tim. 3.1 and 2 Pet. 2.1 2 c. which reference renders it also probable that those Apostles might be dead at Jude's writing his Epistle However he putteth the Christian-Jews in remembrance of those Apostles Sayings which he would not have to dye with them seeing those Mockers of Gospel-Mysteries still lived among them The third Remark is The subject matter of Jude's Epistle which is much like to that of Peter's second Epistle not only in matter but also in style and therefore some Cavillers will not have this Canonical because as they say it was borrowed from Peter's and not dictated by the Holy Ghost N.B. But by the same Rule Obadiah's prophecy may be reputed Apocryphal because 't