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

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2. And unleavened bread and cakes c. This meat-offering of bread and cakes was to be unleavened to signifie the sincerity and incorruption of Christ of whom all sacrifices were types and who is indeed the true bread of life John 6. 55. and secondly of all the sacrifices evangelicall which through him Christians do offer unto God and likewise the oyl wherewith they were mingled signified the pretious anointing of Gods spirit both in Christ and the faithfull 1. John 2. 27. But the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you ●nd ye need not that any man teach you but as the same anointing teach●th you all things and is truth and is no lie c. Vers 2. Of wheaten floure shalt thou make them The best of the principle grain signifying the purity of Christ and all Evangelicall sacrifices Vers 4. And Aaron and his sonnes shalt thou bring and shalt wash them with water To wit out of the sanctified laver Exod. 30. 18. And this signified the holinesse that was required in these legall priests that were to be types of Christ Vers 7. Then thou shalt take the anointing oyl and poure it upon his head Here Moses is expressely commanded to poure the anointing oyl for the making whereof there is afterwards direction given Chap. 30. 23. c. upon the head of Aaron but in the two following verses where there is order given for the consecration of his sonnes there is no mention made of anointing them whence many Expositours conclude that onely the high priest Aaron was anointed with this oyl and not his sonnes yet because it is said Exod. 30. 30. Thou shalt anoint Aaron and his sons and Chap. 40. 14 15. Thou shalt bring his sons and cloth● them with coats and thou shalt anoint them as thou didst anoint their father that they may minister unto me in the priests office it is more then probable that at their first consecration both Aaron and his sonnes vvere anointed Indeed in succeeding times it is evident that onely the high priests vvere anointed and therefore Levit. 21. 10. he is distinguished from the inferiour priests hereby He that is the high priest among his brethren upon whose head the anointing oyl was poured But at this present consecration of the priests doubtlesse both Aaron and his sonnes vvere anointed And though vve cannot say that they vvere anointed by the pouring out of the oyl upon their heads as Aaron vvas yet it is hard on the other side to restrain their anointing to the sprinkling of the holy oyl upon them and their garments vvhereof mention is made Levit. 8. 30. And Moses took the anointing oyl and the blo●d which was upon the Altar and sprinkled it upon Aarons and upon his sonnes garments with him c. Vers 10. And thou shalt cause a bullock to be brought c. Which vvas to be a sinne-offering for the priest vers 14. But the flesh of the bullock and his skin and his dung thou shalt burn with fire without the camp it is a sinne-offering And Aaron and his sonnes shall put their hands upon the head of the bullock In vvhich rite by the hand of faith they disburthened themselves of their sinnes and laid them upon the head of the sacrifice that is upon Christ Isa 53. 6. God hath laid upon him the iniquity of us all Vers 11. And thou shalt kill the bullock before the Lord c. Thus till Aaron and his sonnes were fully consecrated for the service of the priesthood Moses himself did by extraordinary warrant from god do the work of the priest in offering these sacrifices whence is that of the Psalmist Psal 99. 6. Moses and Aaron among his priests Vers 12. And thou shalt take of the bloud and put it upon the horns of the altar c. That is the brasen altar of the burnt-offerings which stood in the court yard This first sinne-offering differed from others that were offered for the sinnes of the priests In others the bloud was carried into the tabernacle and put upon the horns of the golden altar of incense Levit. 4. 7. And the priest shall put some of the bloud upon the horns of the altar of sweet incense c. here it was not so First because this was also to sanctifie the altar it self that it might be fit afterwards to sanctifie the sacrifices of the people whereby also was implyed the worthlesnesse of these things in themselves if they be not looked upon with reference to Christ Secondly because Aaron and his sonnes being not yet full priests it was done as was usuall at the sinne-offerings of the common ruler and private person See Levit. 4. 25 30. As for the doing of this with the finger this was used in all sinne-offerings Levit. 4. and onely in them teaching us the efficacy of Christs bloud for the purging away of sinne when it is so particularly presented unto God and applyed by his Spirit Heb. 9. 12 13 14. Neither by the bloud of goats and calves but by his own bloud he entred once into the holy place having obtained eternall redemption for us For if the bloud of bulls and of goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh How much more shall the bloud of Christ who through the eternall Spirit offered himself without spot to God purge our conscience from dead works to serve the living God And indeed the finger of God Luk 11. 20. is expounded to be the Spirit of God Matth. 12. 28. And poure all the bloud beside the bottome of the altar It is likely that it was poured out at the bottome of the altar on the inside and so it might be much consumed with the continuall heat of the fire and this signified the full price that should be paid for our redemption Vers 13. And thou shalt take of the fat that covereth the inwards c. By the ●at may be meant the grossenesse of our nature in all the faculties and powers of the soul the understanding in the heart the angry motion in the liver the concupiscence in the kidneyes or reins which being all corrupted are therefore to be purged by the fire of the Spirit and so to be offered unto God But the plainer reason of this ceremony I conceive to be that the people might be taught highly to esteem the worship of God by this direction of giving him the best of the sacrifices Vers 14. But the flesh of the bullock and his skinne and his dung thou shalt burn without the camp c. Thus it was done whereever bullocks were offered for a sinne-offering Levit. 4. and when the bloud was carried into the tabernacle Levit 6. 30. No sinne-offering whereof any of the bloud is brought into the tabernacle of the congregation to reconcile withall in the holy place shall be eaten it shall be burnt in the fire It was to imply how detestable the sinne was which was as it
thousand seventy one pound weight of silver which at five shillings the ounce comes to thirty six thousand two hundred and thirteen pounds in sterling money Vers 29. And the brasse of the ●ffering was seventy talents and two thousand and foure hundred shekels That is allowing three thousand shekels to a talent two hundred and twelve thousand and foure hundre● shekels of brasse and this counting twenty five shekels to a pound weight amounts to eight thousand foure hundred ninetie six pound weight of brasse whereby it is evident that there was not so much brasse as silver and therefore surely the pillars were made of wood and onely covered over with brasse See chap. 27. ver 9. CHAP. XXXIX Vers 1. ANd of the blew and purple and scarlet they made clothes of service c. See chap. 31. 10. Vers 43. And Moses blessed them That is he not onely commended both the people and workmen and prayed God to blesse them but also as Gods publick minister he pronounced a blessing on them from the Lord. CHAP. XL Vers 9. ANd thou shalt take the anoynting ●yl and anoynt the tabernacle c. The performance of this see in Levit. 8. 10. Vers 10. And thou shalt anoynt the altar c. And sprinkle thereof upon the altar seven times See Levit. 8. 11. Vers 15. For their anoynting shall surely be an everlasting priesthood c. So that their children after them shall not need to be anoynted but shall execut● the office by reason of this unction of their fathers onely the high priests were anoynted in the generations following Vers 17. And it came to passe in the first moneth c. They went out of Egypt the fifteenth of the first moneth and now the next year upon the first day of the moneth the tabernacle is erected so that there wanted now but fifteen dayes of a full yeare since they left Egypt Vers 27. And he burnt sweet incense thereon c. As supplying at present the priests office ANNOTATIONS On the third book of MOSES called LEVITICUS CHAP. I. ANd the Lord called unto Moses c. This word and sheweth the immediate connexion of this book of this story upon that wherewith the foregoing book of Exodus was concluded namely that after the tabernacle was reared Aaron and his sonnes consecrated to the office of the priesthood and the cloud descended upon the tabernacle immediately God spake to Moses from the mercy-seat out of the tabernacle for into it Moses was not able to enter because the glory of the Lord filled it and so informed him how Aaron and his sonnes should carry themselv●s ●n the priesthood c. Vers If any man of you bring an offering unto the Lord c. That is any sacrifice whatsoever This is a generall rule concerning all sacrifices to wit that none must be offered but of the herd or flock that is if they were cattel they intended to offer for if they intended an offering of birds what they must be is expressed afterwards vers 14. Vers 3. If his offering be a burnt-sacrifice of the herd let him offer a male without blemish Here the Lord first gives directions for burnt-offerings which were indeed the chief of all their sacrifices and so called because they were all wholly burnt upon the altars whereas of other sacrifices some part onely was burnt upon the altar and the other parts were otherwise disposed of And the direction that is here first given concerning these is that if a burnt-offering were to be offered of the herd it must be a male without blemish that it might be the fitter to figure forth Christs perfection in himself and ours in him who being perfectly holy and free from the least blemish of sinne He did no sinne neither was guile found in his mouth 1. Pet. 2. 22. did yet notwithstanding by suffering death for us perfectly satisfie the justice of God on our behalf that so he might present the Church to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it should be holy and without blemish Ephes 5. 27. for saith the same Apostle Heb. 9. 13 14. If the bloud of bulls and of goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh How much more shall the bloud of Christ who through the eternall spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God And so again Saint Peter saith Ye know that ye were redeemed with the precious bloud of Christ as of a lamb without blemish and without spot 1. Pet. 1. 18 19. Yet withall hereby the Lord taught both them and us to give God the best in all our services Vers 3. He shall offer it of his own voluntary will at the doore of the tabernacle That is he that will offer a burnt sacrifice he must do it voluntarily of his own mind and not be forced to it and when he brings it he must present it to the priest at the doore of the tabernacle of the congregation that is at the doore of the court close within which the brasen altar for burnt-offerings stood The first of these might signifie the freedome of Gods grace in giving his sonne and the willingnesse of Christ in giving himself to be a sacrifice of propitiation for our souls but principally doubtlesse it was to teach them that in all service done to God it must be done freely and willingly or God will not accept of it The second was appointed to signifie that their sacrifices and so consequently any service that we perform were onely in and through Christ sanctified and made acceptable to God The tabernacle was a type of Christ that greater and more perfect tabernacle not made with hands Heb. 9. 11. and he is the onely doore by whom we have accesse unto the father Vers 4. And he shall put his hand upon the head of the burnt-offering This was to testifie First that he acknowledged himself guilty of death Secondly that he desired and believed that that sacrifice should be accepted of God as a ransome for his soul that all his sinnes should be laid upon it and so it should suffer death as it were in his stead in all which notwithstanding they that did this had not respect so much to the beast slain in the death whereof there could not be an equall compensation given to the justice of God for the death of sinners as to Christ of whom these sacrifices were types who took upon him our sinnes and the curse due to our sinnes when he died for us Thirdly that he desired and would indeavour to consecrate himself wholly to Gods service as now he gave this sacrifice wholly to be offered upon the altar to the Lord crucifying all his sinnefull lusts and affections and yielding up his whole man to the obedience of Gods will in all things whatsoever And it shall be accepted for him to make
c. This is the Law for making the water of separation as it is called ver 9. that is the water that was to be kept for the cleansing of those that were legally unclean and for that cause were separated from the holy things of the tabernacle When this Law was given we cannot say but very fitly it is added here to that which went before for as in the foregoing chapter to appease the peoples excessive fear chap. 17. 12. the priests and Levites were appointed to do the service of the tabernacle and to watch over the people that they might not transgresse about any of the holy things so here also the Lord appoints a water of separation to be made that so if any of the p●ople had contracted any legall uncleannesse by the sprinkling of this water upon them they might be cleansed and so might come freely again to the service of God in the tabernacle without fear of those plagues which otherwise their pollutions might have brought upon them The legall pollutions were to affect them with the filthinesse of their sinnes and this water of separation was to teach them that if they desired to be cleansed from their filthinesse they must go out of themselves and obtain it from God from his Sanctuary and sacrifice For the making of this water a red heifer was to be provid●d and that by the common care and charge of all the children of Israel because it was to be for the common good of them all even for the cleansing of any one amongst them that was by any accident legally unclean And indeed as all other sacrifices so this in speciall was a notable type and figure of Christ for first it must be a heifer that the imbecillity of the sex might shadow forth the mean and humble and despised condition wherein Christ should live in the world secondly a red heifer either to denote the truth of his humane nature that he was indeed the sonne of man who was at first called Adam which in the Hebrew signifies red because of the red earth of which he was made or rather to betoken the bloudinesse of his passion whereto the Prophet seems also as some conceive to allude Esa 63. 1 2. Who is this that cometh from Edom with dyed garments from Bozrah Wherefore art thou red in thine apparrel and thy garments like him that treadeth in the wine-presse and that by his bloud it is that we shall be cleansed from all our sinnes even those sinnes that are red as crimson or scarlet Esa 1. 18. He hath loved us and washed us from our sinnes in his own bloud saith S. John Rev. 1. 5. thirdly it must be a heifer without spot wherein is no blemish to signifie the purity of his nature without any blemish of sinne and the perfection both of his righteousnesse and suffering and fourthly a heifer upon which never came yoke for they used in those times to plow and to draw their carts with heifers and cows as well as with oxen Judg. 14. 18. and 6. 7. and that to signifie his fr●edome from the bondage of sinne as also his voluntary doing of those things that were to be done for our redemption John 10. 17 18. I lay down my life that I might take it again No man taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self and Heb. 9. 13 14. If the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh How much more shall the bloud of Christ who through the eternall spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your consciences from dead works to serve the living God Vers 3. And ye shall give her unto Eleazar the priest c. This heifer must be given to the priest to signifie that our redemption and purification was the work of Christs priesthood who was both priest and sacrifice yet not to the high priest but to Eleazar because by doing this service that was now to be done he was to be unclean ver 7. and it was fitter that he should be defiled then Aaron and secondly it must be carried without the camp as an accursed thing figuring Christs being made a curse and suffering without the citie Heb. 13. 12. Wherefore Jesus also that he might sanctifie the people with his own bloud suffered without the gate Vers 4. And sprinkle of her bloud directly before the tabernacl● of the congregation seven times Signifying that though it bore the curse yet it was accepted of God for the cleansing of the unclean and that by Christs bloud we are made clean in Gods sight and have an entrance into heaven thereby Vers 5. And one shall burn the heifer in his sight her skinne and her flesh c. This was done to signifie the grievous suffering of Christ in the whole man both soul and body as also say some the ardent love which he bore unto his people in that he did offer up himself as a sacrifice to God in their behalf Vers 6. And the priest shall take cedar-wood and hyssope and scarlet c. To signifie that these things should be used for a sprinkle in sprinkling the unclean with the water of separation Lev. 14. 4. and that was by the virtue of the sacrifice that these things should be sanctified to this end that to them might be applyed the cleansing virtue of Christs death and spirit for the purging of our sinnes Vers 7. The priest shall w●sh his clothes c. The like is said of him that burnt this heifer ver 8. and of him th●t gathered up the ashes ver 10. and of him that sprinkled an unclean person with the water of separation made of these ashes ver 21. They that were imployed in preparing this water were defiled by that which was for the cleansing of others that were defiled And this was first to discover thereby the abominablenesse of sin in that the sinnes of the people being as it were imputed to this heifer that she might die for them every one that touched her was thereby polluted secondly to signifie that Christ of whom this heifer was a type by the imputation of our sinnes should be made a curse for us and should be numbred amongst transgressours thirdly to teach them that it was not so much the signe as the thing signified thereby that had virtue in it to purifie those that were spiritually unclean and consequently to shew the imperfection of the legall priesthood because by preparing the means of the Churches sanctification themselves were polluted Vers 9. And a man that is clean shall gather up the ashes c. This branch of the Law that the ashes of the heifer must be gathered up by a man that is clean and laid up without the camp in a clean place was because they were now consecrated to a holy use however the man that gathered them was thereby made unclean as is expressed in the following verse because they were the remainder of a heifer slain as
flesh Vers 6. And sprinkle of the bloud seaven times before the Lord c. A mysticall number signifying the full satisfaction that was given to God and the full and perfect cleansing of sinne by the sprinkling of the bloud of Jesus Heb. 9. 13 14. For if the blo●d of bulls and of goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctisieth to the purifying of the flesh How much more shall the bloud of Christ c. purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God and that our sinnes need much purgation Psalm 51. 2. Wash me throughly from mine iniquities and cleanse me from my sinne Vers 11. And the skin of the bullock and all his flesh c. In other sinne-offerings after the fat was offered upon the altar the remainer of the sacrifice was eaten by the priests chap. 6. 26. The priest that offers it for sinne shall eat it in the holy place shall it be eaten but in the sinne-offering for the priest here another order is given and so likewise in the sinne-offering for the whole congregation vers 21. because there the pries●s were included with the rest to wit that it should be wholly carried forth without the camp and burnt there whence is that law chap. 6. 30. that no sin-offering should be eaten whereof any of the bloud was brought into the tabernacle of the congregation to reconcile withall in the holy place which was onely done in the sinne-offering for the priest and for the congregation but that they should be burnt with fire The literall reason of this doubtlesse was because the offerer himself might not eat of the sinne-offering and in these sinne-offerings the priest himself was the offerer either solely by himself as here or jointly with the rest of the people as in the sinne-offering for the whole congregation but withall assuredly there was a mystery in it for first hereby they we●e taught how detestable a thing sinne is especially the sinnes of sacred persons and common sinnes of a whole Church and people which here were laid as it were upon the bullock that was carried forth out of the camp 2. It signified that Christ the true sinne-offering should be carried out of Jerusalem to suffer as the Apostle himself saith to shew the meaning of this ceremony Heb. 13. 11 12. The bodies of those beasts whose bloud is brought into the Sanctuary by the high priest for sin are burnt without the camp Wherefore Jesus also that he might sanctifie the people with his own bloud suffered without the gate 3. To teach us that by Christs sufferings our sinnes are perfectly forgiven cast as it were out of doores and removed farre away from us As for the person that was to carry forth this bullock for a sinne-osfering without the camp and to burn him there though the words in the 12. vers may seem to have reference to the priest that offered the sinne-offering The whole bullock shall he carry forth without the camp c. yet the meaning onely is that he should see it were done not that he should do it himself and so become unclean thereby as may appear by what is said in another place that is parallel vvith this chap. 16. 27 28. Vers 13. And if the whole congregation of Israel sinne through ignorance c. That is if the vvhole congregation shall of mere ignorance or infirmity vvhich is a kind of ignorance or errour because such as sinne thus are for the time as men blinded carried avvay vvith the strength of their corruptions shall do any thing that is evil and either not take any notice of it or not lay to heart the evil they have done after they come to knovv it or to be touched in conscience for it they shall offer a sinne-offering for their atonement vvhere by the vvay it is vvorth the noting that the vvhole assembly of particular Churches may erre Vers 14. When the sin which they have sinned against it is known then the congregation shall offer a young bullock c. In Numb 15. 24. the Israelites are injoyned to bring a kid of the goats for a sinne-offering for the sinne of the vvhole congregation but that vvas onely for the sinne of omitting any of those ceremoniall duties there injoyned them but this is more generall for all sin vvhatsoever vvhich you may see more fully explained in the note upon that place Vers 20. And he shall do with the bullock as he did with the bullock for a sinne-offering c. That is the bullock for the priests sinne-offering vvhereof before the first bullock as it is called vers 21. Vers 22. When a ruler hath sinned c. and is guilty or if his sinne wherein he hath sinned come to his knowledge c. That is vvhen any civil magistrate hath sinned vvhether he be presently struck vvith an acknovvledgement of his guilt or vvhether his sinne be aftervvards by any means discovered to him so soon as he comes to the knovvledge of it he shall bring his sinne-offering Vers 24. And he shall lay his hand upon the head of the goat and kill it in the place c. That is on the Northside of the altar See Levit. 1. 11. Vers 25. And the priests shall take of the bloud of the sinne-offering with his finger and put it upon the horns of the altar c. The bloud of this sinne-offering for the ruler as likewise that for the common people why was it not as in the former carried into the tabernacle sprinkled before the vail and upon the altar of incense surely because the sinne of the priest and congregation was more hainous then that of the ruler therefore was there a more solemn manner of atonement appointed for their sin then for the rulers or the private persons Vers 26. And he shall burn all his fat upon the altar c. The remainer was eaten by the priests See Levit. 6. 26. whereas the remainer of the sin-offerings for the priest and congregation were burnt without the camp for the reason above shown in the note upon vers 11. Vers 27. And if any one of the common people sinne through ignorance c. That is either Israelite or stranger that is joyned unto them See Numb 15. 15. Vers 30. And the priest shall take of the bloud thereof with his finger and put it upon the horns of the altar c. See the note vers 25. Vers 32. And if he bring a lambe for a sinne-offering c. This sacrifice is spoken of apart from the former of the goat because of the difference in the fat that was burned which was not wholly the same in a lambe as it was in a goat See the note upon chap. 3. 9. CHAP. V. Vers 1. ANd if a soul sinne and hear the voice of swearing and is a witnesse whether he hath seen or known of it c. In this chapter some instances are given of sinnes committed by private persons