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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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retained the Lord of Sabbaoth Rom. 9. 29. Vers 2. He rested on the seventh day from all the works which he had made That is he did not on the seventh day create any thing as he had done on the foregoing six dayes because all was already finished which he had purposed to make The Creatour of the ends of the earth fainteth not neither is neary Isa 40. 28. onely it is said that he rested on the seventh day because he ceased from the work of creation for as concerning the sustaining and governing of the creatures the Father worketh hitherto and Christ worketh John 5. 17. Vers 3. And God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it The second word sanctified is added by way of explaining the first word blessed and the meaning is that God set apart the seventh day for the speciall work of his service and blessed it with this singular priviledge that it should be wholy consecrate to him and his worship Some Expositours indeed hold that there was not any law imposed upon Adam and his posterity for the keeping of the seventh day holy till at mount Sinai it was commanded the Israelites and so they take this here to be mentioned by Moses by way of Prolepsis to wit that because God rested from his work of creation upon the seventh day therefore he did afterwards ordain that every seventh day of the week should be kept holy by the Israelites as a Sabbath of rest unto the Lord. But the words will not bear this exposition and there are many reasons besides that do evidently enough discover that God did from the first creation appoint that the seventh day should be kept as a holy Sabbath as 1. Because it is expressely spoken of the very next day after the Lord had ended the worlds creation Now if that were a Sabbath sanctified and set apart for holy imployments we cannot think that this ordinance beginning then was not afterward continued 2. Because it is no way probable that the Church had for so many ages before the giving of the Law no set day set apart for holy imployments What though there be no mention made in the Scriptures of the Patriarchs keeping a Sabbath Many things they did which are not mentioned and how could the distinction of severall weeks be kept till the Law yea how could they have known the weekly seventh day from the creation if it had not been constantly kept from the Creation till that time 3. Because it is plain that the Jews did keep the Sabbath defore the Lavv vvas given for before the Lavv vvas given that vvas spoken by Moses Exod. 16. 23. To morrow is the rest of the holy Sabbath unto the Lord. and 4. Because the Apostle Heb. 4. 3. doth evidently enough imply that there vvas a rest vvhich Gods people did observe sin●e the finishing of Gods vvork from the first foundation of the vvorld Vers 4. These are the generations of the heavens and of the earth c. That is in this order and manner as hath been declared vvere the heavens and the earth at first created and made and all the plants and herbs of the field vvhen as yet there had been no such thing grovving thereon according to the course of nature as novv they do Vers 5. For the Lord God had not caused it to rain upon the earth c. As if he should say it must needs be yielded that God did at first by his absolute povver cause these things to grovv out of the earth for there had been as yet none of those ordinary means vvhereby the earth is novv made fruitfull no rain to vvater it no man to till it Vers 6. But there went up a mist c. Junius reades this negatively Nor went there up a mist c. and takes it to be a further confirmation of that vvhich before vvas said that the creating of things by the meer vvord of God cannot be denied because as yet there had not been so much as a mist to vvater the ground But if vve reade it as in our Translation it must be understood as I conceive to be added by vvay of preventing an objection for vvhereas it might be said Hovv then continued they to grovv after they vvere created being there vvas neither rain to vvater the earth nor man to till it Moses telleth us There went up a mist c. Vers 7. And breathed into his nostrils the breath of life That is by his almighty povver the Lord did create and infuse into the yet livelesse body of Adam a living reasonable soul vvhich being instantly united to the body in an incomprehensible manner his body vvas quickened and enlivened vvhich soon appeared by the breath in his nostrils Thus the soul vvas not as the body made of the earth but created of nothing and so joyned to the body Vers 8. The Lord God planted a garden Eastward in Eden To vvit on the third day of the Creation vvhen the Lord commanded the earth to bring forth all herbs trees and plants vvherevvith it is novv adorned for as he then made the earth all over to bring forth some kind of increase or other for the use of living creatures and of Adams posterity as they should increase so for the present habitation of these our first Parents he then also made in Eden a countrey that lay Eastvvard from Canaan mentioned often in the Scriptures Isa 35. 12. Ezek. 27. 23. a most goodly pleasant and fruitfull garden abounding vvith all things that could be therein desired and so curiously ordered in every respect as if it had been planted by art and hereinto Adam vvas put This Garden is by the Greek Interpreters called Paradise and is in the Scripture termed the garden of the Lord Gen. 13. 10. and for the pleasantnesse of it made a figure of the heaven of heavens vvhich is therefore called Paradise Luke 23. 43. To day shalt thou be with me in Paradise 2. Cor. 12. 4. He was caught up into Paradise c. Vers 9. The tree of life c. This tree was so called 1. because it was a memoriall or monitorie signe of that life which he had received from God 2. because it was a sacramentall signe annexed to the covenant of works assuring life and glory upon condition of perfect obedience 3. as some conceive because of the power which God had given it to sustain the body of man in perfect strength without any decay untill they were translated to heavenly glory which they take to be the ground of that which is said Gen. 3. 22. Lest he take also of the tree of life and eat and live for ever therefore the Lord God sent him forth from the garden of Eden Vers 10. And the tree of knowledge of good and evil So called not because the fruit thereof had any such quality or virtue that being eaten it would work in man any increase of knowledge or quicknesse of wit but because it was another sacramentall
where they were forbidden to kindle a fire or to dresse that which they should eat on the Sabbath day yet did not the Jews understand this law so as to restrain them from those works which were necessarily to be done and therefore they used to water their catel as our Saviour faith Luke 13. 15. on the Sabbath day and if need were would pull out of a pit either ox or asse that were fallen into it Luke 14. 5. It is the Sabbath of the Lord in all your dwellings That is to be observed in all your dwellings The other feasts were especially to be kept before the Sanctuary whither all the men of Israel were to assemble Exod. 23. 14. Three times thou shalt keep a feast unto me in the year and vers 17. Three times in the year all thy males are to appear before the Lord God Deut. 16. 5 6. Thou mayest not sacrifice the Passeover within any of the gates which the Lord thy God hath given thee But at the place which the Lord thy God shall chuse to place his name in there shalt thou sacrifice the Passeover and vers 16. Three times in a year shall all thy males appear before the Lord thy God in the place which he shall chuse But the Sabbaths were to be sanctified in all places where they dwelt to which purpose their Synagogues were built Acts 15. 21. Moses of old time hath in every city them that preach him being read in the Synagogues every Sabbath day Vers 7. In the first day ye shall have an holy convocation ye shall do no servile work therein See the first note upon vers 3. Vers 8. But ye shall offer an offering made by fire unto the Lord seven dayes What the sacrifices were that were to be offered on each of these seven dayes of unleavened bread we may see Numb 28. 18 24. Vers 10. When ye be come into the land which I give unto you and shall reap the harvest thereof c. That is and shalt addresse thy self to reap the harvest thereof for the sheaf of the first-fruits of this harvest which they were here enjoyned to bring unto the priest was to be the first corn they cut down when they began to put the sicle to the corn as it is expressed Deut. 16. 9. Nor might they reap their harvest till this sheaf of first-fruits was brought unto the Lord. Vers 11. On the morrow after the priest shall wave it That is on the sixteenth day of the first moneth called Nisan the second of the seven dayes of unleavened bread Upon the fourteenth day of that moneth the Passeover was kept the fifteenth day was the first day of the feast of unleavened bread which day was a Sabbath of rest vers 7. and is called the feast Numb 28. 17. and this is the Sabbath here meant for on the morrow after being the sixteenth day of that moneth the sheaf of the first-fruits was by the care of the Magistrate in the name of all the people brought unto the priest and this sheaf was of barley for that was first ripe in the land of Canaan Ruth 2. 23. She kept fast by the maydens of Boaz to glean unto the end of barley-harvest and of wheat-harvest and Exod. 9. 31 32. The barley was in the ear and the flax was bolled but the wheat and the rie were not smitten for they were not grown up to wit at the feast of the Passeover but wheat-harvest was after at Pentecost or the feast of weeks as we may see Exod. 34. 22. where the feast of Pentecost or the feast of weeks is also called the feast of the first-fruits of wheat-harvest Vers 12. And ye shall offer the day when ye wave the sheaf an he lamb without blemish c. To wit besides the dayly morning and evening sacrifice which upon no occasion were intermitted and besides the sacrifices appointed for every of the seven dayes of this solemn feast of unleavened bread Numb 28. 23 24. For this was appointed peculiarly to accompany this sheaf of the first-fruits and it figured Christ by whom those first-fruits were sanctifyed Vers 13. And the meat-offering thereof shall be two tenth deals of fine flowre c. To wit two tenth deals of an Ephah that is two Omers and this was double to the usuall proportion in all other sacrifices of lambs which was but one tenth deal Numb 15. 4. He that offereth his offering unto the Lord shall bring a meat-offering of a tenth deal of flowre the reason whereof may be because this was a gratulatory sacrifice for the fruits of the earth Vers 15. And ye shall count unto you from the morrow after the Sabbath c. Here direction is given how they should know on what day they were to keep the next great feast after that of unleavened bread to wit the feast of weeks or Pentecost namely that they were to number from the morrow after the Sabbath that is from the sixteenth day of the moneth Nisan as is before said in the note upon vers 11. which was the very day that they brought the sheaf of the wave-offering seven compleat Sabbaths that is seven compleat weeks which was nine and fourty dayes and that then on the morrow after the seventh Sabbath that is after the seventh week which was the fiftieth day they were to keep the feast of weeks or Pentecost and to offer a new meat-offering unto the Lord which shows the reason why this feast was called the feast of weeks namely because it was seven weeks after the Passeover or the beginning of the feast of unleavened bread as also why it was afterward called in the New Testament Pentecost Acts 2. 1. to wit from the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth fifty because it was fifty dayes after the first and great day of unleavened bread for they began to number these fifty dayes from the morrow after that Sabbath inclusively which was the second day of unleavened bread the day whereon the sheaf of first-fruits was offered Vers 17. Ye shall bring out of your habitations two wave-loaves of two tenth deals c. That is on the feast of Pentecost you shall bring this offering which was to be offered as the first-fruits of their wheat-harvest as the sheaf offered at the Passeover mentioned vers 10. was brought as the first-fruits of their barley-harvest now it is expressed that these two wave-loaves were to be brought out of their habitations either to signifie that these two loaves were to be made of the new wheat of their own land not of forein corn or bought of strangers or else to signifie that though there were but one sheaf of first-fruits offered at the Passeover in the name of all the people yet now every family was to bring two wave-loaves of first-fruits out of their severall habitations But indeed because the sacrifices mentioned in the following verse that were offered together with these loaves were not brought severally
of the witnesses hands upon the head of the blasphemer did signifie their desire that God would accept of his punishment as a sacrifice offered to the satisfying of his justice and not punish the land and people for it Vers 15. Whosoever curseth his God shall bear his sinne and he that blasphemeth the name of the Lord c. These Laws were given to the Israelites upon the occasion of the foregoing story of the blasphemer that was stoned Evident it is that these are two distinct Laws Whosoever shall curse his God shall bear his sinne and He that blasphemeth the name of the Lord he shall surely be put to death and yet hard it is to say wherein the difference lies between cursing and blaspheming the name of the Lord. But the best resolution of this doubt I conceive is this that by cursing God is meant when a man shall directly and purposely speak reprochfully of God and by blaspheming the name of the Lord is meant when men do so profanely mention the name of God either in cursing or otherwise that what they say of God tends much to the reproch and dishonour of God though they do not directly speak against God Vers 16. All the congregation shall certainly stone him The people must all have their hands in the execution 1. to prove their zeal in revenging the dishonour done to God and his Laws 2. that themselves might learn to fear those sinnes which with their own hands they had punished in others Vers 17. And he that killeth any man shall surely be put to death This Law is here inserted upon the occasion of the blasphemers striving with the Israelite ver 10. and to show that God was tender as of his own honour so of the safety of his people CHAP. XXV Vers 2. WHen ye come into the land which I give you then shall the land keep a Sabbath unto the Lord c. That is every seventh year the land shall lie at rest ye shall neither plow it nor sow it c. Concerning this Sabbaticall year and the grounds thereof see the notes upon Exod. 23. 11. This year also they did forbear exacting their debts of those that were indebted to them because that year there was no tillage nor harvest to make money of of which see also the notes upon Deut. 15. 1. It is also commonly held by Expositours that this year all Hebrew servants were set free of which see Exod. 21. 2. for of this I find no clear ground in the Scriptures but rather the contrary When the first Sabbaticall year was kept by the Israelites it is hard to determine and yet sure we are that it was not till they came into the land of Canaan The most probable opinion is that it was the fourteenth year of Joshua's government for if the land was first divided among the Israelites in the seventh year of Joshua as may be gathered from Calebs age Josh 14. 10. then the seventh year after that when they had tilled the land and reaped the crop of it six years was doubtlesse their first Sabbaticall year Vers 5. That which groweth of it own accord of thy harvest thou shalt not r●ap c. That is as in other years by a peculiar right and interest but in common as others did onely taking what might serve for food Vers 8. And thou shalt number seven Sabbaths of years unto thee c. Here direction is given for the year of Jubile so called as it is most generally held from an Hebrew word Jovel which signifies a ramme because it was proclaimed with trumpets or cornets made of rammes horns A great question there is amongst Expositours nor is it easily to be resolved concerning the numbring of this year of Jubile as likewise at what time of the year it did begin Some conceive that the fourtyninth year which was the last of the seven times seven years was the year of Jubile and whereas it is said ver 10. Ye shall hallow the fifti●th year they say it is called the fiftieth year by reckoning from the year before inclusively and so conceive that the year of Jubile did alwayes concurre with the seventh Sabbaticall year But against this manner of accounting the year Jubile there may be serall strong objections made which cannot well be answered as 1. that the Jews do constantly reckon otherwise making the Jubile every fiftieth year not concurring with the Sabbaticall year 2. that according to this manner of accounting every year of Jubile was then to be counted twice as the last of one fifty years and the first of another and besides in the computation for the first fifty years there was no Jubile before to be included and 3. that it had been superfluous to forbid as ver 11. all sowing and reaping in the year of Jubile if it had alwayes concurred with the seventh Sabbaticall year since all such works had then been unlawfull even in regard that it was a seventh year And therefore I conceive that the more probable opinion is that which is commonly held by Expositours namely that they did reckon seven times seven years which was nine and fourty years and then the next year after to wit the fiftieth year was the year of Jubile and this year was not reckoned in the Sabbath of years following but the one and fiftieth year was the first of the next seven years for else they should not have sowed and reaped six years in this week of years Vers 9. Then shalt thou ●ause the trumpet of the Jubile to sound on the tenth day of the seventh moneth c. That is on the tenth day of the seventh moneth in the year following the seventh Sabbath of years thou shalt throughout all the land with the sound of a trumpet or cornet proclaim that to be the year of Jubile It was proclaimed on the seventh moneth because it was the first moneth of the civil year and so then the year of Jubile began and it was proclaimed on the tenth day of that moneth which was the day of atonement and a publick fast-day for all the people 1. to shew that our freedome from the spirituall bondage wherein we lie by nature is through the atonement made by Christs death according to that of the Apostle Heb. 2. 12 15. For as much then as the children ar● partakers of flesh and bloud he also himself likewise took part of the same that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death that is the devil and deliver them who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to bondage and 2. to teach us that the way to attain spirituall joy and comfort whereof the Jubile was a signe is to humble and afflict our souls as the Jews on this day did and 3. to teach us that if we expect mercy from God in the pardon of our sinnes which was assured to them on this day of expiation we ought to shew mercy to our
joyned together for the eating of the Paschall lambe either they all continued together that following night in the house wherein they eat or else that the doores of both their houses had the blo●d of the lambe sprinkled upon them Vers 8. And they shall eat the flesh in that night rost with fire and unleavened bread and with bitter herbs c. This rosting of the lambe was chiefly enjoyned with respect unto the great haste and speed they were to make because it might be sooner made ready by rosting then by seething and withall it signifyed the bitternesse of Christs passion So likewise the unleavened bread did betoken haste also for unleavened cakes are sooner made But withall it signified if they will be Gods peculiar people they must be purged from all those old superstitions and corruptions wherein they live that have not this interest in God 1. Cor. 5. 8. Therefore let us keep the Feast not with old leaven neither with the leaven of malice and wickednesse but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth And as for the bitter herbs that were eaten with it they were a memoriall of their bitter bondage in Egypt and withall a type of our mortification and read●nesse to undergo afflictions with Christ Vers 9. Eat not of it raw nor sodden at all with water but rost with fire his head with his legges c. Meaning that the lambe must be rosted all and whole not so much but the inward parts after they had been taken out and washed must be put in again and rosted with the rest whereby may well be signified our communion with Christ whole and undivided 1. Cor. 1. 13. Is Christ divided c. Gal. 2. 20. I am crucified with Christ Neverthelesse I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the sonne of God c. Vers 10. And ye shall let nothing of it remain untill the morning c. Because he would not have them imployed to any other use then what he had appointed And besides it might signifie that when the morning of the Gospel came there should be no more use of those Legall shadows Vers 11. And thus shall ye eat it with your loyns girded your shoes on your feet c. These ceremonies were also peculiar to that Passeover in Egypt and therefore not observed by Christ They were principally intended as an expression of their faith concerning their sudden going out of Egypt which God had promis●d Vers 12. And against all the gods of Egypt I will execute judgement c. It may well be meant of Gods confounding their Idole-Gods by punishing the people that worshipped them and delivering the Israelites whom they had kept in bondage for hereby God discovered the vanity of those Idoles and as it were laid their honour in the dust But because Numb 33. 4. Moses speaks of this executing judgements upon their gods as a severall act from that of killing their first-born I rather conceive that hereby is meant either the killing of the first-born of those beasts which they worshipped as gods or else that some such notable accident befell the Egyptian Idoles as did the Philistines Dagon before the Ark. Vers 14. And this day shall be unto you for a memoriall c. Here begins the direction for the observation of the Passeover in succeeding generations You shall keepit a feast by an ordinance for ever That is untill the coming of Christ who is our Passeover for ever since whose passion there is a like sacrament used also in the Church of the new Testament in remembrance of his death untill he come Vers 15. Seven dayes shall ye eat unleavened bread c. This number of dayes was appointed both because seven being a full and perfect number figured the whole time of their life wherein they were still to remember with thankfulnesse this deliverance and also because the destruction of the Egyptians in the red sea followed seven dayes after the Israelites went out of Egypt Now the first of these seven dayes was the fifteenth day of this moneth and began at the evening immediately after the eating of the Passeover which they did at the very latter end of the fourteenth day Whosoever eateth leavened bread from the first day untill the seventh day that soul shall be cut off from Israel This phrase in this place signifieth not onely the cutting of them off from the communion and society of the Saints both in this life and in the next as in Gen. 17. 14. The uncircumcised manchild whose flesh of his foreskin is not circumcised that soul shall be cut off from his people but also the cutting of them off by death as in the like case Exod. 31. 14. Ye shall keep the Sabbath therefore c. every one that defileth it shall surely be put to death for whosoever doth any work therein that soul shall be cut off from among his people Vers 16. No manner of work shall be done in them save that which every man must eat that onely may be done of you And yet this might not be done on the Sabbath as is clear Exod. 16. 5. 23. 29. On the sixth day they shall prepare that which they bring in and it shall be twice as much as they gather dayly To morrow is the rest of the holy Sabbath bake that which you will bake to day c. and Exod. 35. 23. Ye shall kindle no fire throughout your habitations upon the Sabbath day Vers 22. And none of you shall go out at the doore of his house untill the morning This also was onely for the Passeover in Egypt for Christ with his disciples went out that night Matth. 26. 30. And when they had sung an hymne they went out into the mount of Olives and it was commanded by this signe to teach thee that it was the bloud of Christ the true Paschal lambe whereby they must be defended from the destroying angel Vers 24. And ye shall observe this thing for an ordinance for thee and for thy sonnes for ever That is the commandment of the Passeover and the feast of unleavened bread but not those ceremonies vers 7 11 12. which were appointed for this Passeover in Egypt onely you and your children shall observe them for ever to wit during the time of the Sanctuary and the Legall service for thus this word for ever is often used in the Scripture with respect to the thing spoken of as Psal 89. 1. I will sing the mercies of God for ever that is as long as I live Vers 25. When ye be come to the land which the Lord will give you c. ye shall keep this service The command for keeping the Passeover was therefore chiefly intended for the land of Canaan howbeit they kept it once in the wildernesse Numb 9. Vers 29. Unto the first-born of the captive that was in the dungeon c. Where they
how to order this their double portion Vers 23. Bake that which ye will bake to day and seethe that ye will seethe c. It may seem questionable whether in these words the Israelites were enjoyned to bake and seethe so much of the Manna as they d●sired to eat so dressed on the sixth day and then to reserve the rest unto the morning or to bake and seethe both for that day and the next day which was the Sabbath But yet this last seems the most probable and that because it was not likely they onely eat of it undressed as it was gathered on the Sabbath day and expressely afterwards it was enjoyned in the law that they should kindle no fire throughout their habitations on the Sabbath day Exod. 35. 3. Yet I make no question but that some part of it was reserved for the Sabbath not onely because they did so eat some part of it on the other dayes but especially also that the hand of God herein might be the more evident seeing they could no way keep it whether baked or sodden on other dayes untill the next morning but they found it putrified and which way soever they reserved it whether dressed or undressed for the Sabbath day it did not corrupt but continued good and sound Vers 31. And it was like coriander-seed white and the taste of it was like wafers made with hony We must not so understand these words as if the Manna were said to be like coriander-seed because it was white for the coriander-seed is blackish but that it is compared to coriander-seed in regard onely of its quantity and proportion and then besides that it was of a whitish colour So that we must reade these words as expressing three qualities of the Manna 1. That it was little and round like the coriander-seed ver 4. There lay a small round thing as small as the hoar frost 2. That it was for the colour of it white like Bdellium as it is expressed Numb 11. 7 3. That it was sweet like hony-wafers namely unbaked for being baked the taste of it was as the taste of fresh oyl Numb 11. 8. In that Apocryphall book called the Wisdome of Solomon chap. 16. 20 21 it is said of this Manna that it was able to content every mans delight and agreeing to every taste and that serving to the appetite of the eater it tempered it self to every mans liking whence it hath been by some conceived and maintained that the Manna rellished according to every mans desire and had the savour of any kind of meat which they had a desire to eat of But this is a weak conceit for first there is no evident ground for it in these words and then besides though it had been entended by that Author yet it is directly contrary to this description of the Manna which Moses gives us and again if God had given this miraculous bread such an extraordinary gift to satisfie every wanton appetite that it should taste like any meat they desired to tast of why did the Israelites murmure afterwards against Moses lusting for flesh and fish and repining because they had not the cucumbers and melons and leeks and onyons and garlick which they had in Egypt Numb 11. 4 5. Vers 33. And Moses said unto Aaron Take a pot c. It was a golden pot See Hebr. 9. 4. Wherein was the golden pot that had the Manna Moses rehearseth these things here to make a full end of the history of Manna but they were not done till afterwards when the Tabernacle was built wherein it was laid up before the Lord. Vers 35. And the children of Israel did eat Manna fourty years untill they came to a land inhabited To wit till they were gone over Jordan into the land of Canaan and then it ceased This Manna called by the Psalmist Angels food Psal 78. 25. Man did eat Angels food c. was a notable type of Christ and is therefore called Spirituall meat 1. Cor. 10. 3. And did all eat the same spirituall meat for Christ indeed is the true bread that came down from heaven Joh. 6. 33. upon whom feeding by faith our souls are nourished unto life everlasting White in regard of his purity and innocency and sweeter then the hony to the souls of believers bruised for our transgressions and conveyed to us in the dew of the word as the Manna lay in the dew upon the ground and so is our spirituall nourishment all the time of our travelling towards the heavenly Canaan when there shall be no more use of this food but God shall be all in all to us Vers 36. Now an omer is the tenth part of an ●phah And ephah by the judgement of the best Writers was much like to our English bushel Whereby we may conceive how bountifull the allowance of Manna was which God allotted them for their daily food CHAP. XVII Vers 1. ANd all the congregation of the children of Israel journeyed from the wildernesse of Sin after their journeyes c. This clause after their journeyes is added to imply that Rephidim was not the next station after they went from the wildernesse of Sin no they went from Sin to Dophkah from thence to Alush and from thence to Rephidim Numb 33. 12 13. 14. Vers 2. Wherefore do ye tempt the Lord To wit by their mutinous requiring of water as a signe of Gods presence among them saying Is the Lord among us or not as it is afterward expressed verse 7. when men not believing the promises of God will boldly prescribe God the time when and the manner how he shall perform his promises this is called a tempting of the Lord because thereby they do as it were try whether he be able and faithfull to do what he hath said And thus are the Israelites here said to tempt the Lord. Having Gods promise for their safe convoy through the wildernesse to the land of Canaan and having had already evidence enough of Gods almighty power and fatherly care over them yet being now in some distresse for want of water they came in a bold manner and expostulated with Moses and Aaron and cried upon them to give them water that they and theirs might not perish with thirst and herein they did tempt the Lord because as the Psalmist saith Psal 78. 41. They limited the holy one of Israel they said Is the Lord among us or not that is the want they were in made them question Gods presence and they resolved now to put it upon this tryall Let Moses give them water and they would acknowledge it but if that were not done they would not believe it And hence was this place afterward called Massah that is temptation Vers 4. What shall I do to this people they be almost ready to stone me Though there be no mention made in the foregoing expostulation of the people with Moses that they threatned to stone him yet perhaps some intimation hereof might fall from some of
Keep thee farre from a false matter c. Though all lying be sinnefull and may be here implicitely forbidden yet I conceive that which is here directly and principally forbidden is lying in or at the seat of justice as is manifest by the following clause and the innocent and righteous slay thou not which must needs be meant of innocent mens being put to death by means of unrighteous judgement so that the principall thing intended in this Law is that judges should be marvellous shy either to admit of a false testimony from others or to give false judgement themselves especially when it is against the life of a man For I will not justifie the wicked These words imply two reasons why judges must take heed of false judgement and of condemning the innocent and righteous 1. Because the judge is not to do in Gods name what the Lord will not do and God will not justifie the wicked and so condemne the righteous 2. Because the Lord will not justifie such wicked judges as condemne the righteous when they come before his Tribunal Vers 11. But the seventh year thou shalt let it rest and lie still That is neither plow it nor sow it nor gather those fruits which should this year grow of themselves for so we find this Law more fully expressed Levit. 25. 20. And if ye shall say What shall we eat the seventh year Behold we shall not sow c. Where their distrust of want of food is answered with a promise that in the sixth year the Lord would cause the earth to yield enough for three years Then will I command my blessing upon you in the sixth year and it shall bring forth fruit for three years Now God appointed this Sabbath year first to give rest to the land and it was a signe of a very fruitfull countrey if it lay fallow but once in seven years secondly to give rest to the servants who had by this much ●ase every seventh year Thirdly to provide for the poore who now gathered freely of the fruit of every mans ground for their present use and this was given to the Lord who gave them the land Fourthly that they all might have the more liberty to exce●cise themselves in holy things as the learning of the Law which was this year with more then ordinary solemnity to be read in the audience of all the people Deut. 31. 10 11 12. And Moses commanded them saying At the end of every seven years thou shalt reade this Law before all Israel c. And fifthly that it might be a memor●all of the creation and Gods rest on the seventh day and a shadow of our rest in Christ and that the rest of the land might teach how exact God is in requiring his Sabbaths That the poore of thy people may eat Namely such corn as grew this year of it own accord as it used to do in some good store in those countreys of the grains scattered in the former harvest as also the fruit of their vineyards and oliveyards c. and of this the owners might eat as well as the poore Levit. 25. 6. And the Sabbath of the land shall be meat for you for thee and for thy servant c. though they might not gather and store it up Vers 12. Six dayes thou shalt do thy work and on the seventh day thou shalt rest c. One reason of repeating this Law here may be well thought to be this to let them know that they were not exempted from the peculiar sanctifying of the seventh day on this Sabbath y●ar but were rather bound more religiously to keep it holy and also besides by placing it amongst the judiciall Laws the magistrate was enjoyned to see that it was kept Vers 13. And make no mention of the names of other gods c. That is let them be so abominable to you that you may detest to make any mention of them that it may be irksome to you to name them or hear them named We must not think that it was to the Israelites or is to us a breach of this Law any way or upon any occasion to name the gods of the heathens for we see they are often named in the Scripture The meaning of this Law we may gather from that place of the Apostle Eph. 5. 3. But fornication and all uncleannesse or covetousnesse let it not be once named amongst you For as the Apostles meaning there is onely that those horrid sinnes should be an abomination to them so here the Lords meaning is onely that they should abhorre all false gods so as to d●test their very names and of this detestation of Idols is that spoken Hos 2. 17. I will take away the names of Baalim out of her mouth and they shall no more be remembred by their name Vers 15. And none shall appear before me empty To wit at the feast of unleavened bread and so also at neither of the three feasts whereon they were all bound to appear before the Lord. See Deut. 16. 16 17. Vers 16. And the feast of harvest Called also the feast of weeks or of sevens Exod. 34. 22. And thou shalt observe the feast of weeks c. To wit because it was seven weeks after the former feast upon the fiftieth day following called thereupon Pentecost and it was celebrated not onely in remembrance of the giving of the Law which was given the fiftieth day after their going out of Egypt but also by way of thanksgiving for their harvest and therefore the first bread or loaves of the new fruit was then offered Levit. 23. 16 17. Even unto the morrow after the seventh Sabbath shall ye number fifty dayes c. Ye shall bring out of your habitations two loaves c. as in the end of the Passeover the first eares of corn And the feast of in-gathering which is in the end of the year c. The feast of in-gathering to wit of all the fruits not onely corn which was before inned but all other fruits as wine and olives c. It was also called the feast of boothes or of tabernacles Levit. 23. 24. The fifteenth day of this seventh moneth shall be a feast of tabernacles c. and the time allotted for this feast is said here to be in the end of the year because though Abib was appointed to be the first moneth for the computation of those things that concerned religion as their holy fea●ts c. yet the moneth Tisri the seventh in this account was yet the first moneth for their civill affairs and so the feast of tabernacles being kept in this moneth when one year was ended and another began therefore it is said to be in the end of the year Now this feast was kept first in remembrance of Gods favour to them in the wildernesse when they dwelt in boothes Levit. 23. 43. I made the children of Israel to dwell in boothes when I brought them out of Egypt c. And
withall for ornament Vers 25. And thou shalt make unto it a border of an hand-breadth round about This border was surely either the very frame wherewith the feet of the table above close under the board were joyned together and whereon the board of the table was by some means fastened or else rather it was a border for ornament round about the frame as is usuall to hide the joynts where the frame and feet were joynted together And thou shalt make a golden crown to the border thereof round ab●ut This was not the same crown mentioned vers 24. but another which went round about the frame of the table upon or over the border and that onely for ornament Vers 27. Over against the border shall the rings be c. That is close under the border in the upper part of the frame that it might be carried the more conveniently Vers 29. And thou shalt make the dish●● ther●of c. Foure kinds of vessels are here named belonging to the table hard it is to say for what purpose they were severally used yet according to our translation the most probable opinion is that first the dishes were to hold the loaves of shew-bread and some of them happely to hold franckincense which was put upon ●ach row of the shew-bread Levit. 24. 7. secondly that the spoons were to put in the franckince●●e into the dishes and to take it out again when it was to be burned upon the altar of incense Levit. 24. 7. and thirdly that the two last kind of vessels were two severall sorts of covers as is evident in the text where they are called covers and bowls to cover withall the one happely being plates for the covering of the loaves the other bowls for the cov●●ing of the dishes of franckincense and which might also serve for the burning of t●e franckincense Vers 30. And thou shal● set upon the table shew-bread before me alwayes c. To wit twelve loaves or cakes each containing two homers or tenth deals of fine flower which were set in ●wo rowes upon the table and changed every Sabbath day Levit 24. 5. c. And were therefore called sh●w-bread because they were alw●y●s set forth and shewed as inthe presence of God Vers 31. Thou shalt make a candlestick of pure gold This candlesti●k was a type of Christ and that as he is and alwayes hath been both by his word and spirit the light of the Church John 12. 46. I am come a light into the world that whosoever believeth in me should not abide in darknesse Vers 32. And six branches shall come out of the sides of it c. The shaft went upright in the middest and then from this shaft went out six branches three on a side one above another and they went out by couples one on the one side and righ● over against that another on the other side ●●ither were they all of one length for the nethermost branches were the longer and the uppe●most the shorter so that they were all of one height above Now these did denote the Prophets and Priests before and the Apostles Evangelists and Pastours since the dayes of Christ who did all in their severall times places and degrees receive their gifts and authority from Christ and were as so many burning and shining lamps as it is said of the B●ptist John 5. 35. Vers 33. Three bowls made like unto almonds with a knop c. These bowls knops and flowers such as are usually in candlesticks were onely for o●nament y●t might also signifie the severall gifts and ornaments wherewith Christ dot● endue his ministers and there was three of each in every branch Vers 34. And in the candlestick shall be foure bowls c. That is in the shaft of the candlestick as in the branches there were bowls and knops and flowers for ornament so also in the shaft or body of the candlestick which went up right in the midst of the branches yet in this there were foure of each whereas there wer● but three in the branches Vers 35. And there shall be a knop under two branches of the same c. That i● just ove● the fi●st and lowest knop in the shaft came out two branches one on each side and so over the second and third and then in the upper part of th● shaft above the place where the branches went forth was there a bowl a knop and a ●lower Vers 37. And thou shal● make the seve● lamps thereof That is the sockets where the oyl was put to feed the light which may well signifie the many●old gifts of th● spirit as Rev. 4. 5. And there were ●even lamps of fire burning before the throne which ●r● the seven spirits of God Now these seven lamps ●ere on the top of the shaft and the ●ix branches thereof That they may giv● light over against i● That is round about it See Numb 8 ● Vers 38. And the to●gs thereof and the sn●ffdis●es thereof shalt be of p●re gold The tongs or s●uffers were appointed to raise up the wick of the lamps or to cleanse the droppi●gs of it and the● the 〈◊〉 so tak●n away was put into the sn●ffdishes Vers 39. Of a t●lent of pure g●ld shall ●e make it That is of a● hundred an● twenty pound weig●● CHAP. XXVI Vers 1. MOreover thou shalt make the t●bernacl● with ten curtains c. This word tabernacl● is sometimes taken in a larger sense including the court also but h●re it is onely taken for the inclosure of the ten cur●ains which did compass● the Sanctuary of the most holy place With Cherubi●● of c●●ni●g ●●rk c. Th●se Ch●●ubims w●r● a visibl●●●g●● of Gods presence a●d of 〈◊〉 Angles ministry in th● Church whereof th●●●b●rnacle was a type Vers 2. The length of one curtain c. According to our m●asures every curtain was four●t●●n yards long and two yard● broad and so the breadth of all the ten curtains togeth●r was tw●nty y●rds and thu● they w●r● ordered they were laid in the length of them crosse athwart the tabernacle in the breadth ofit from th● North to th● South Now th● tab●rnacle b●ing fifteen yards compasse from th● ground on th● Southsid● to the ground on the Northsid● for it was on both sid●s five yards high and on th● top five y●rd● bro●d the curtain● of four●t●●● yards length would cov●● i● fr●● one sid● to the oth●● within half●a yard of th● grou●d on ●ach side and again the t●bernacle b●●ng fif●●●n yard● long the breadth of thes● t●● curtains making together twenty yards would cover the tabernacle in the length of it and then foure yards and an half would b● l●f● to hang down as a coveri●g f●● th● fa●●he●t end of the taber●acl● Eastward within h●l●●● yard of th● ground as on the sides and it might lean over on th● fore●●ont half a yard Vers 3. Th● f●●● curtains shall be coupled tog●th●●● c. S●w●d or f●st●ned together and so should make two great curtain●
repentance to see whether they would not again revolt from God and secondly to procure the more authority to Moses that they might look upon him when he brought the law as an angel sent to them from heaven And he wrote upon the tables c. That is the Lord. See ver 1. Vers 30. Behold the skinne of his face shone No such thing befell him before when he was the first time upon the mount with the Lord fourty dayes and fourty nights because then the Lord had not shown him his glory in so great a degree as now he had Nor need we wonder that Moses wist not that the skinne of his face shone as it is said in the former verse for coming from the exceeding glory and brightnesse of Gods presence that spark of shining brightnesse that was in his own face was not discernable by him though terrible to the Israelites Now for the shining of Moses face it was doubtlesse to signifie the glory of the law which he preached to them whence is that of the Apostle 2. Cor. 3. 7 8. But if the ministration of death written and ingraven in stones was glorious so that the children of Israel could not stedfastly behold the face of Moses for the glory of his countenance which glory was to be done away how shall not the ministration of the spirit be rather glorious But withall the people by this were taught to reverence him even as an angel come from heaven to look upon him as one that stood in Gods stead when he spake to them and to assure themselves that God had inlightned him also inwardly that he might teach and instruct them And they were afraid to come nigh him Moses came down with vengeance before and what might they think of this glory put upon him now being still conscious to themselves of the haynousnesse of their former rebellion Besides this was to shew that Moses his ministration was condemnation 1. Cor. 3. 7 9. because it gives knowledge of sinne and causeth wrath Rom. 4. 15. The law worketh wrath for where there is no law there is no transgression Vers 33. And till Moses had done speaking with them he put a vail on his face Hereby it is evident how long the brightnesse of Moses face continued not all the time of his life but onely the time of his going to and fro between the Lord and his people that he might deliver to the people the laws and commandments he gave them in charge All this time the shining of his face continued and so when he came to speak with the people he p●t on a vail which signified First the vail of the obscurity of the law whereby Christ and the end of the law was hardly discerned and secondly that vail of ignorance and infidelity which was spread upon our hearts by nature untill it be removed by Christ Vers 34. But when Moses went in before the Lord to speak with him ●e took the vail off c. Signifying that when we come to see God in Christ the vail is taken away See 2. Cor. 3. 15. 16. Even unto this day when Moses is read the vail is upon their heart neverthelesse when it shall turn to the Lord the vail shall be taken away CHAP. XXXV Vers 3. YE shall kindle no fire throughout your habitations upon the Sabbath day This clause of the law concerning the Sabbath must be explained by that chap. 16 23. To morrow is the holy rest of the Sabbath unto the Lord bake that which ye will bake to day and seethe that which ye will seethe c. Namely that they must not kindle any fire therewith to dresse any meat for themselves or except in case of absolute necessity for that they might not kindle fire either to light a candle or to warm themselves in the extreme cold of winter is altogether improbable Vers 22. And they came both men and women as many as were willing-hearted and brought brac●lets and eare-rings c. That is not onely gold and silver but also their very ornaments contributing these things as willingly now after repentance for the service of the tabernacle as before for the making of their golden calf CHAP. XXXVI Vers 2. ANd Moses called Bezaleel and Aholiab c. Though gifted yet they must have a calling Vers 8. And every wise-hearted man among them that wrought the work of the tab●rnacle made ten curtains c. This is first made though in the directions given the ark table and candlestick were first mentioned because it was to rec●ive and contain these holy things which might not stand without their tent CHAP. XXXVIII Vers 8. ANd he made the laver of brasse and the foot of it of brasse of the looking-glasses of the women assembling c. For it is evident by severall Writers that in ancient times they used looking-glasses made wholly of pure bright brasse Vers 18. And the height in the breadth was five cubits c. That which is the breadth of the hanging lying is the height of it standing or hanging and therefore it is said that the height in the breadth of it was five cubits Vers 21. This is the summe of the tabernacle c. Or counted things that is this is the summe and particulars of the tabernacle and holy things belonging to it which were thus taken as it were in an inventory by Ithamar at the commandment of Moses and so delivered into the custody of the Levites that nothing might be lost This clause I conceive therefore may have respect both to the rehearsall of particulars which went before and vvithall likevvise to the summe of the gold and silver spent in making these things whereof Moses speaks in the words following Vers 24. Even the gold of the offering was twenty and nine talents c. Twenty nine talents and seven hundred and thirty shekels counting the talent at an hundred and twenty pound and five and twenty shekels to a pound will make three thousand five hundred and nine pound weight of gold and five shekels which in sterling money if we account a pound weight of gold to be worth but thirty pound of sterling money comes to above an hundred and five thousand pound viz. one hundred five thousand two hundred and seventy pound Vers 25. And the silver of them that were numbred of the congregation was an hundred talents and a thousand seven hundred ●hreescore and fifteen shekels c. There were numbred six hundred and three thousand five hundred and fifty men and the very same number we find Numb 1. 46. of which see the notes there who all paying half a shekel Exod. 30. 13. the summe of the silver amounts to three hundred and one thousand seven hundred seventy and five shekels of silver which is as here allowing three thousand shekels to a talent an hundred talents and a thousand seven hundred seventy five shekels over and this counting twenty five shekels to a pound weight amounts to twelve
of the day might signifie to them that God abhorres those that hate the light of the word and requires that his people should be children of the light and of the day and should abhorre the works of darknesse and the workers of them according to that of the Apostle Ephes 5. 11. Have no fellowship with the unfruitfull works of darknesse but rather reprove them The first word here translated the Owl is in the Hebrew the daughter of the Owl concerning which some Interpreters have noted that because many fowls are desired for meat while●● young which are refused being old as y●ung Daws and Rooks therefore the young ones of this kind are forbidden and much more then the old ones also Vers 18. And the Geir-eagle the Stork These two fowls are little known in our parts the Geir-eagle in the Hebrew hath its name from dear love which these kind of birds bear to their young ones and the Hebrew word translated here the Stork signif●eth kindnesse such as young Storks whereto also agreeth the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are said to shew to their dammes whom they nourish in their age It is a bird much like a Crane cometh in Summer and goeth away in Winter and in cities buildeth her nest on tops of houses and chimneys as the Swallow also doth though elsewhere upon the tops of firre trees Psal 104. 17. Where the birds make their nests as for the Stork the firre trees are her house It feedeth much on fishes snakes frogges c. and so it is forbidden as unclean Vers 20. All fowls that creep c. That is not onely the Bat last mentioned in the foregoing verse but all of that sort are unclean both because being of a mungrell kind they do well resemble men of a mungrell religion as also because in their crawling with all foure they set forth men given wholly to cares and delights of the world Vers 22. And the Bald-locust after his kind c. These are undoubtedly flying creeping things though with us unknown Vers 24. Whosoever toucheth the carcase of them shall be unclean untill the even That is till the end of that day and beginning of a new And this might signifi● mans pollution by sinne till he come to the new day of salvation by Christ or that those legall pollutions were to continue onely till the new day of the Gospel Col. 2. 16 17. Let no man therefore judge you in meat or drink or in respect of an holy day or of the new moon or of the Sabbath dayes which are a shadow of things to come but the body is of Christ Vers 25. And whosoever beareth ought of the carcase c. That is though he do not touch them with his flesh here the clothes must be washed because by carrying it both the man and his clothes also are defiled and this legall washing was a type of our cleansing by repentance and faith in the bloud of Christ Vers 31. Whosoever doth touch them when they be dead c. And so by the rule of proportion grounded upon vers 25. if he did bear them he was to wash his clothes and be unclean untill the even Vers 34. That on which such water cometh shall be unclean That is water out of any such defiled vessell Vers 35. Whether it be oven or ranges for pots c. This is added to shew the full extent of this law and by this strictnesse of the law were they taught how strict they were to be in avoiding the least pollution of sinne Vers 37. And if any part of their carcase fall upon any sowing seed that is to be sowen it shall be clean To wit because of necessity since there might be too great inconvenience in being deprived by such accidents of seed to be immediately sowen as for the like reason fountains and wells of water were to be excepted vers 36. Vers 38. But if any water be put upon the seed c. Not because then being wet with water it was more apt to take poll●tion as most Expositours but because being wet with water it was not in case to be presently sowen and scattered abroad and therefore was not by the foregoing rule grounded upon necessity excepted from being polluted Vers 39. And if any beast of which ye may eat die c. That is as he that toucheth the carcase of an unclean beast whereof ye may not eat shall be polluted thereby so also he that toucheth the dead body of any clean beast of which you may eat to wit if it dyeth of it self or be strangled or torn by a wild beast for in those cases indeed they might not eat of the dead bodies of clean beasts and so consequently not touch them neither without pollution Yet by the law Levit. 7. 24. And the fat of the beast that dyeth of it self and the fat of that which is torn with beasts may be used in any other use but ye shall in no wise eat of it it is evident that they were allowed to make use of the fat of such beasts and therefore by the touch of the fat perhaps they were not defiled Vers 40. And he that eateth of the carcase of it c. To wit unwittingly or of urgent necessity for if he did it presumptuously and in contempt of Gods law he was to die for it Num. 15. 30. But the soul that doth ought presumptuously whether he be born in the land or a stranger the same reprocheth the Lord and that soul shall be cut off from among his people Vers 42. What soever goeth upon the belly c. That is no manner of creeping thing may ye eat whether it goeth upon the belly as snakes or wormes c. or crawls upon all foure as toads and scorpions c. or ●ath any feet to creep withall as caterpillars c. CHAP. XII Vers 2. SPeak unto the children of Israel saying unto them If a woman have conceived seed c. As former laws concerned uncleannesse which came from without so those which next follow in this and the following chapters concern uncleannesse which came from within and the first which we have in this chapter is concerning the uncleannesse of women in childbirth to wit that if a woman had conce●ved seed and born a man-child then she should be unclean seven dayes according to the dayes of her separation for her infirmity that is for those first seven dayes she should be unclean with as contagious a pollution as in the seven dayes of her separation for the infirmity of her monethly fluors wherein as we may reade in the law Levit. 15. 19. 24. she was not onely debarred from going to the Sanctuary but was also separated from all communion with others and defiled whatsoever she did sit or lie upon or touch c. and was therefore restrained to her chamber though not shut out of the camp as lepers and others were Now this law was delivered as others were to the
is his sister and therefore he might not uncover her nakednesse Vers 10. The nakednesse of thy sonnes daughter c. And so other of further descent how much more then his next daughter though she be not named Vers 11. The nakednesse of thy fathers wives daughter c. That is the daughter of thy father not the daughter of thy mother See above vers 9. Vers 16. Thou shalt not uncover the nakednesse of thy brothers wife To wit except in that speciall case when a man deceasing without children his nex● broth●r by an expresse exception of the law Deut. 25. was to marry the wife of the deceased and to raise up ●ee● unto his brother as Onan the so●ne of Judah did Gen. 38. 8. Vers 18. Neither shalt thou take a wife to her sister to vex her c. This is all one with one wife to another as it is translated in the margin of our Bibles as Ezek. 1. 9. the wings of the beast are said to touch a woman to her sister as it is directly in the Hebrew words that is one another Though the ordinary exposition be that this is meant of sisters that man having married any woman must not afterward marry her sister to vex her c. yet these reasons so farre sway me that I cannot but understand it of any two women First because incest with sisters is above forbidden vers 9. 11. Secondly because polygamie is no where else forbidden if not here unlesse to the King Deut. 17. 16. Thirdly because the following words cannot unlesse extremely forced be brought to agree with that exposition of sisters for would not the marriage of her husband with another woman vex her as much as with her sister happely more And why is it added in her life as if it were lawfull for a man to marry his wives sister after his wives decease those things winne me to think that it is meant of any two women Vers 19. Also thou shalt not approch unto a woman to uncover her nakednesse as long as she is put apart c. To wit though she be thy lawfull wife Vers 21. And thou shalt not let any of thy seed passe through the fire to Molech Molech was an idol worshipped by the Ammonites and other heathen called also Moloch Amos 5. 26. But ye have born the tabernacle of your Moloch and is thought of some to be the starre Saturn the highest or the Sunne the chief of the Planets thence called the starre of your God Amos 5. 26. And it is derived of Melech which signifies a Prince or King It is thought by many to b● the same idol that is ordinarily in Scripture called Baal which they gather by comparing together 2. Kings 23. 10. And he defiled Topheth which is in the valley of the children of Hinnom that no man might make his sonne or his daughter to passe through the fire to Molech Jer. 19. 5. They built also the high places of Baal to burn their sonnes with fire for burnt-offerings unto Baal c. chap. 7. 31. And they have built the high places of Tophet which is in the valley of the sonne of Hinnom to burn their sonnes their daughters in the fire c. chap. 32. 35. Now to this idol they caused their children to passe through the fire two wayes for some burned them to death or at least killed them and then burnt them on their altars for so it is said of Ahaz 2. Chron. 28. 3. He burnt incense in the valley of Hinnom and burnt his children in the fire c. and of the Israelites in generall Psal 106. 37 38. They sacrificed their sonnes and their daughters unto devils and shed innocent bloud But some onely made them to go through between two fires as a signe of their consecration This sinne is here forbidden amongst whoredomes and incests because as all idolatry is spirituall fornication so this especially because their seed was here given away unlawfully which i● therefore called a going a whoring after Molech Levit. 20. 3 5. But though this idol be here named yet under this the like wicked service to any idol is forbidden N●ith●r shalt th●u profane the name of thy God This is added as a reason why in the foregoing law they were forbidden to let their seed passe thorow the fire to Molech to wit because it would be a vild profanation of Gods holy name and that first in regard it would be an horrible vilifying of the Lord God to forsake him and yield such ●onour to such a base idol-god and secondly because horrible wickednesse in a people called by his name that is called the people and servants of God would be a dishonour to God and would cause the name of God to be blasphemed even among the Gentiles Vers 24. For in all these the Nations are defiled which I cast out before you That is with all these incestuous mixtures the Canaanites defiled themselves and so provoked me to cast them out of the land and therefore take you heed that you do not provoke me by the same sinnes Now hereby it is manifest that all the severall sorts of incest before mentioned are sinnes against the law and light of nature because the Lord abhorred the heathen that had no other law and punished them so severely for these very sinnes Vers 26. Ye shall therefore keep my statutes and my judgements The mention of Gods statutes here doth intimate what a shame it would be for them that had the light of the word to walk in these evil courses whereinto the heathen fell because they lived in darknesse CHAP. XIX Vers 3. YE shall fear every man his mother and his father Because the mother is usually most despised the Lord injoyns the fear of the mother in the first place And keep my Sabbaths Because the commandment for sanctifying Gods Sabbaths is directed to the fathers and mothers of the family who are to take care that children and servants profane not Gods holy day therefore the charge for fearing mother and father is here prefixt bfore this of sanctifying the Sabbath The meaning is that children and servants must have such an awfull fear of their superiours as willingly to be guided by them according to Gods word in the matter of sanctifying Gods Sabbaths and not to resist them in it Vers 6. It shall be eaten the same day ye offer it and on the morrow That is if it were a peace-offering for a vow or a freewill-offering otherwise if it were for a thanksgiving it was to be eaten the same day Levit. 7. 15. And the flesh of the sacrifice of his peace-offering● for thanksgiving shall be eaten the same day that it is offered he shall not leave any of it untill the morning And so that which was left of the one was to be burnt the second day and that which was left of the other upon the third which must needs make them more willing to call the poore to
they eat their holy things c. That is the priests shall not by suffering the people to eat of the holy things expose them to the guilt of such a sinne and the punishment that will follow thereon Vers 18. Whatsoever he be of the house of Israel or of the stranger in Israel c. In this precept three things are required in all burnt-offerings whether they were brought by Israelites born or proselytes who though they were strangers born yet embracing the religion of the Israelites were admitted to offer sacrifices as being ingrafted as it were into Gods Israel and whether they were brought for a vow or a freewill-offering to wit first that they must be of the beeves or sheep or goats secondly that they must alwayes be males in other sacrifices a female was sometimes accepted but never in burnt-offerings and thirdly that they must be without blemish of all which see the notes upon the first chapter of this book Vers 21. And whosoever offereth a sacrifice of peace-offerings c. Here direction is given for their peace-off●rings to wit that whether they were brought for a vow or for a freewill-offering they must be first of the flocks or herds beeves or sheep or goats and secondly that they must be perfect and without blemish that is as some distinguish them perfect in regard of the inwards and outwardly without blemish Yet in peace-offerings that were not for a vow but for a freewill-offering though no blemish was allowed yet something was allowed that was after a sort a blemish as appears in the exception that follows vers 23. to wit a bullock or a lamb or kid that had any thing superfluous or lacking in his parts for this is not meant of such cattel as were any way monstrous that had of any part too many or too few as five legs or three ears or but one eye but it is meant of such as had any part too long or too short over big or over little not according to th● ordinary proportion of nature as is usually in other catel of that kind and this though it were some kind of defect yet it was not accounted a blemish and so it was allowed in peace-offerings that were brought for a freewill-offering not in peace-offerings that were brought for a vow Vers 2● Ye shall not offer unto the Lord that which i● bruis●d c. No not in freewill-offerings Vers 25. Neither from a strangers hand shall ye off●r the br●ad of your God c. Some understand this of strangers that were proselytes le●● say they any man should think that such blemished sacrifices as are before spoken of might serve for proselytes expresse mention is made that from their hands they should not be excepted Some again by strangers will have such meant as were neither of the seed nor the religion of the Israelites uncircumcised strangers and these expound this law three severall wayes to wit first that though such blemished sacrifices were bought from the hand of strangers uncircumcised with their money yet they might not offer them to God because they were blemished and so their corruption was in them that is they were corrupted and polluted and so were not fit for sacrifices or secondly that if a stranger that is any of the h●athen uncircumcised would bring any sacrifice to be offered for them and brought any of those fore-mentio●ed blemished sacrifices it should not be accepted or thirdly that from the hand of any pagan they should not offer the bread of their God that is his sacri●●ces of any of these that is of any of the cattel before mentioned whether blemished or without blemish and that because they are blemished and polluted even because they are brought by the uncircumcised But neither of these two last Expositions seem to me probable Not the first of them because I no where find that the heathen were allowed to bring any sacrifices at all and therefore it was needlesse to forbid the taking of a blemished sacrifice from them Nor the last because thi● law doth onely speak of sacrifices that should be accepted from the Israelites and not for heathens as the last clause doth evidently shew they shall not be accepted for you Vers 27. When a bullock or a sheep or a goat is brought forth then it shall be seven dayes under the damme c. The same is enjoyned concerning their first-born cattel Exod. 22. 30. Because till they were eight dayes old they were not fit to be eaten by men therefore till then the Lord would not allow them to be brought for sacrifices Vers 28. And whether it be cow or ew ye shall not kill it and her young both in one day To wit that being taught mercie in killing of beasts for sacrifices they might learn much more to shew mercie to men and also how they should labour after perfect purity when they came to offer sacrifices to God Vers 30. On the same day it shall be eaten up c. See chap. 17. 15. CHAP. XXIII Vers 2. COncerning the feasts of the Lord which y● shall proclaim to be holy convocations even these are my feasts c. That is these are the feasts which you my people shall cause to be proclaimed as holy convocations to wit by the priests for it is generally held that the priests did by sounding of the trumpets proclaim these festivals The Lord having before given direction for sacrifices now gives order for festivall times whereon many sacrifices were usually offered Vers 3. The seventh day is the Sabbath of rest an holy convocation yè shall do no work therein That is no work appertaining to their earthly businesses or imployments upon other festivall dayes they were not tyed so strictly except onely the day of Expiation for upon other festivall dayes the restraint is ye shall do no servile work therein as we may see vers 7 8 21 c. but upon the Sabbath and the day of Expiation vers 28. the Law runnes ye shall do no work therein and the difference betwixt these is commonly held to be this that on the other festivals they were forbidden all servile work that is all work appertaining to their worldly callings wherein usually on other dayes their servants were imployed but were allowed any work in providing food for the day and so indeed that which was forbidden on the first day of unleavened bread in the seventh verse of this chapter under the name of servile work In the first day ye shall have an holy convocation ye shall do no servile work therein is expressed thus Exod. 12. 16. And in the first day there shall be an holy conv●●ation no manner of work shall be done in them save that which every man must eat and that onely may be done of you But on the Sabbath day and day of atonement they were restrained from all bodily labour yea even that of providing or dressing their food as is evident Exod. 16. 23. and Exod. 35. 3.
by every family but provided at the common charge and offered in the name of the whole Church and because that it is said expresly vers 20. that these two loaves of the first-fuits were waved by the priest together with the peace-offerings which could not be if every familie in Israel brought two loaves therefore I onely think that the onely reason why it is said Ye shall bring two wave-loaves out of your habitations was to signifie that the loaves were to be made of the wheat of their own land They shall be of fine flowre they shall be baken with leaven they are the first-fruits unto the Lord. Thusthere is a difference made betwixt the meat-offerings which were in part burnt upon the altar and were therefore ever without leaven Levit. 2. 11. and these of the first-fruits which where wholly for the priests food and therefore allowed to be leavened Vers 18. And ye shall offer with the bread seven lambes without blemish of the first year and one young bullock c. In Numb 28. 27. there is appointed two bullocks and one ramme here one bullock and two rammes the reason of this difference we may conceive was this Those were as the peculiar sacrifices of that feast-day these are a further addition in respect of the two loaves as a particular testimony of their thankfulnesse for the fruits of the earth and of their faith in Christ by whom they were restored to the use of the creatures and their sacrifices of praise made acceptable to God Vers 19. Then ye shall sacrifice one kid of the goats for a sinne-offering c. Lev. 4. 14. a bullock is prescribed for a sinne-offering of the people and nothing was to be eaten thereof it was to be burnt without the camp But this was for some speciall sinne of the congregation whereas the sacrifice here appointed was in generall for all their sinnes and was therefore in the kind of a common sacrifice whence a goat is appointed and the priest to have the remainder Vers 20. They shall be holy to the Lord for the priest Whereas ordinarily the priest had but the breast and the right shoulder of the peace-offerings Lev. 7. 32 33. c. The breast shall be Aarons and his sonnes And the right shoulder shall ye give unto the priest of the sacrifices of your peace-offerings c. Here he had all because this was offered in generall for all the congregation and so no particular man had right to eat thereof therefore it belonged to the priest wholly Vers 21. And ye shall proclaim on the self same day that it may be an holy convocation unto you c. This was the feast-day of Pentecost or of Weeks whereon the two loaves and the sacrifices before mentioned were offered unto the Lord and it was instituted partly as a memoriall of their coming out of Egypt Deut. 16. 10 12. Thou shalt keep the feast of Weeks unto the Lord thy God according as he hath blessed thee And thou shalt remember thou wast a bondman in Egypt and shalt observe and do these sta●utes and of the giving of the Law at this time of the year at mount Sinai Exod. 19. 11. and partly by way of thankfulnesse for the fruitfulnesse of the Land One thing prefigured might be the giving of the Law of Christ by the Apostles when the holy Ghost came down upon them the first-fruits of the Spirit in the likenesse of cloven tongues Act 2. 1 2 3. whereupon they went forth to reap that which the Prophets had sown John 4. Vers 22. And when ye reap the harvest of your land thou shalt not make clean riddance c. Speaking of the feasts in the harvest he repeateth this Law concerning the poore whose relief he joyns with his own service Vers 24. In the seventh moneth in the first day of the moneth shall ye have a Sabbath For Ecclesiasticall businesses God hath appointed the moneth Nisan or Abib to be the fi●st mone●h of the year to the Is●●elites which answere●● to part of our March and Aprill and that in remembrance of their coming then out of Egypt Exod. 12. 2. and so the seventh moneth from that was this here spoken of which they called Tisri and agreeth in part with our September and had been formerly the first moneth of their year yea and so still con●inued for civil affairs and therefore the year of Jubile begun still at this moneth and so was on this moneth proclaimed chap. 25. 9. Then shalt thou cause the trumpet of the Jubile to sound on the tenth day of the seventh moneth c. Now the first day of this moneth God here appoints them to keep a Sabbath that is a solemn feast-feast-day and it was called the feast of trumpets because it was ●olemnized with blowing of trumpets Indeed the first day of every moneth which was their new Moon they kept as an holy day a day of speciall solemnity and thereon the priests did blow with their silver trumpets over their sacrifices Numb 10. 10. In the beginnings of your moneths ye shall blow with your trumpets over your burnt-offerings c. But the first day of this seventh moneth was kept as a farre more solemn festivall and that with blowing of trumpets in way of rejoycing as it may probably be thought throughout all the cities of Israel And the end of this festivall was 1. to be a memoriall that this was the first day the beginning of their New year for civil afairs whereon it was therefore fitting that they should with rejoycing acknowledge the blessings injoyed in the foregoing year 2. to be a memoriall to them when they were come into Canaan of the severall victories which God had given them over their enemies where the priests with the holy trumpets did sound an alarm See Numb 31. 6. 3. That it might be a preparation for the following day of atonement their solemn fast-day on the tenth day of this moneth that so by the sounding of the trumpets they might be put in mind to wake out of the sleep of sinne and with trembling fasting and prayer to turn unto the Lord and 4. to put them in mind of the speciall holinesse of this moneth for as the seventh day of every week was a Sabbath and every seventh year was kept holy as a Sabbaticall year so the Lord would have the seventh moneth of every year to be holy in some singular manner above the rest of the moneths and therefore though it was not wholly spent in sacred festivities yet there were more holy-holy-dayes in this moneth then in all the year besides to wit the feast of trumpets the feast of expiation and the feast of tabernacles Vers 25. Ye shall do no servile work therein but ye shall offer an offering made by fire unto the Lord. What the sacrifices appointed for this feast of trumpets were see Numb 29. 2 6. Vers 27. And ye shall afflict your souls and offer an offering made by fire
before the Lord. See that note upon Lev. 16. 29. and Numb 29. 7. where the severall sacrifices of this day are also described Vers 34. The fifteenth day of this seventh moneth shall be the feast of tabernacles for seven dayes unto the Lord. It was called the feast of tabernacles or of booths because when the Israelites came up to Jerusalem to keep this feast during the feast they dwelt not in houses but onely in booths or arbours made of boughs it is afterwards more fully expressed ver 40. and it was kept 1. in remembranc● of Gods shadowing protection over them for fourty years together both summer and winter in their travelling through the wildernesse whilst they dwelt in tents and booths and were not yet come to their place of rest as is expressed ver 43. and hereby it is evident that they never kept this feast till they were settled in the land of Canaan because they kept it in remembrance of their dwelling in booths whilst they wandred through the wildernesse 2. to testifie there thankfulnesse to God for the fruits of the earth which this moneth they gathered in Deut. 16. 13 14. Thou shalt observe the feast of tabernacles seven dayes after that thou hast gathered in thy corn and thy wine and thou shalt rejoyce in thy feast c. and 3. as a figure both of Christs incarnation who coming into the world about this time of the year to dwell in the tabernacle of our flesh was made flesh dwelt or pitched his tent amongst us John 1. 14. and also of our condition who are strangers and pilgrims here on earth Heb. 11. 13. dwelling in earthly tabernacles which must be di●solved untill our labours being ended we come at length to a place of rest that dwelling of God eternall in the heavens 2. Cor. 5. 1. and should therefore with thankfulnesse remember how Gods hand is continually over us to protect us in our pilgrimage of which spirituall keeping the feast of tabernacles Zachary speaketh Zach. 14. 16 19. As for the time allotted to the keeping of this feast to wit seven dayes this compleat number signified that all the dayes of our pilgrimage in this frail tabernacle of our bodies should be consecrated as holy to the Lord. Vers 36. Seven dayes ye shall offer an offering made by fire unto the Lord. What sacrifices were appointed for this feast and in what manner they were to be offered see Numb 29. 13 38. On the eighth day shall be an holy convocation unto you c. Though this eighth day was a part of the feast of tabernacles or at least belonged thereto and therefore is called the last and great day of the feast John 7. 37. yet most properly the first seven dayes were onely counted as the dayes of the feast of tabernacles as is before said ver 34. The fifteenth day shall be the feast of tabernacles for seven dayes unto the Lord and that because they dwell in tabernacles or booths onely during those first seven dayes but on the eighth day they met together in the Temple to keep there an holy assembly as it were in remembrance of their being settled in peace in the land of Canaan after their long travels through the wildernesse and so this eighth day was rather an appendix to the feast of tabernacles then any part properly of the feast it self Vers 37. A sacrifice and drink-offerings every thing upon his day c. Amongst the severall sacrifices appointed for these feasts one is called peculiarly a sacrifice which comprehend both sinne-offerings and peace-offerings Vers 38. Beside the Sabbath of the Lord. That is beside the weekly Sabbaths and the sacrifices thereto belonging Two things are implyed in these words 1. that as God required the keeping of these solemn ●easts so also especially the sanctifying of the Sabbath 2. that when any of these feast-dayes lighted on a Sabbath they must not think to make the Sabbath sacrifices serve for these festivals Beside the gif●s and beside all your vows c. By gifts are meant the first-born cattel and first-fruits and all other contributions and gifts which of their own free will they were wont to give to the priests by vows are meant vowed sacrifices the drift of this is to prevent any covetous thoughts which might arise in their minds of thinking with such gifts or vowed sacrifices to supply the extraordinary sacrifices of these festivals for these God requires over and above their gifts and vows and freewill-offerings if they offered ever a whit the lesse because of the sacrifices of these feasts they should be judged as men that dealt fraudul●ntly with God Vers 39. Also in the fifteenth day of the seventh moneth when ye have gathered in the fruit of the land c. Now he proceeds to set down more particularly how that feast of tabernacles was to be solemnized whereof he had begun to speak ver 34. and first by mentioning that this feast was to be kept when they had gathered in the fruit of the land he puts them in mind that they might be the better at leisure to keep this extraordinary Sabbath and withall implies that one main end of it was to return thanks for the fruit of the land which they had now gathered where also by the fruit of the land is meant not their corn which was gathered long before in the time of Pent●cost but the latter fruit of their vines and olives c. whereupon this feast is called the feast of ingathering Exod. 23. 16. Vers 40. And ye shall take you on the first day the boughs of goodly trees c. That is upon the first day of the feast of tabernacles which was the fifteenth day of the seventh moneth ver 34. This day it seems they made their booths or tabernacles some upon the roofs of their houses some in the streets and courts of Jerusalem c. as is largely ●xpressed Neh. 8. 15 16. Go forth unto the mount and fetch olive-branches and pine-branches c. to make booths as it is written so that the boughs they are here appointed to take were it seems to make or at least to adorn the booths they were to dwell in yet withall that is not unlikely which the Jews say that they carried boughs and branches also in their hands in signe of joy And to make their booths the more beautifull and that all things might represent a glad and joyfull time they are appointed to choose the boughs of the goodliest trees such as are the olive pine myrtle mentioned Neh. 8. 15. and the boughs of thick trees for the thicker they were the more glorious shew they made and the fitter they were to make booths or arbours for a shadow and shelter and willows of the brook to intimate a land well watered which might be of use to bind the other boughs c. and also to be either in the hand or on the booths ornaments and signes of joy and that especially for the
down and the Canaanites which dwelt in that hill and smote them and discomfited them even unto Hormah That is the Amorites the posterity of Canaan Deut. 1. 44. And the Amorites which dwelt in that mountain came out against you and chased you as bees do After this discomfiture the Israelites returned and wept before the Lord but he would not hear their voice nor give ear unto them So they abode in Kadesh many dayes Deut 1. 45. Now for Hormah whither the Israelites were chased it was a place afterwards so called upon occasion of the Israelites destroying the Canaanites there chap. 21. 3. CHAP. XV. Vers 1. ANd the Lord spake unto Moses saying Speak unto the children of Israel c. In this chapter the Lord enlargeth and explaineth some laws formerly delivered And it is most likely that this was delivered in the order as here it is set down within some short time after their departure back from Kadesh toward the red sea and that purpo●ely to chear up the people with hope of Gods reconciliation that he had not utterly cast them off but would again smell the sweet savour of a sacrifice from them and perform the promises made to them to which end also there is a particul●r mention made that they should observe these directions given them when they c●me into the land of Canaan Vers 2. When ye be come into the land of your habitations which I give unto you c. This law is to shew what meat-offerings and drink-offerings were alwayes to be offered together with their sacrifices whereof part was burnt upon the altar as accessories and appurtenances thereto belonging for the understanding whereof we must note that whereas there are two sorts of these offerings by fire mentioned vers 3. that were to have these accessory meat-offerings and drink-offerings to wit a burnt-offering or a sacrifice by sacrifice there is meant onely the sacrifice of peace-offerings as in many other places besides And indeed unlesse it be i● the sinn●-offering that was offered at the cleansing of the Leper Levit. 14. 10. we do not any where reade that there was any meat-offerings appointed for sinne-offerings b●t onely for burnt-offerings and peace-offerings whence we see that these two onely are mentioned i● this place the reason whereof I conceive was this because the end of the sinne-offering which was to make atonement for the humbled sinner and the end of the meat-offering which was to testifie the joy and gladnesse of their thankfull hearts did not so well agree and it would not therefore be so proper to joyn them together and secondly that there are severall quantities of meat and drink-offerings here appointed as first for a lamb or kid vers 4 5. or secondly for a ramme ver 6 7. or for a bullock ver 8 9 10. for according as the sacrifice was greater o● lesse so must also the meat and drink-offering be more or lesse so there might be a proportion betwixt them Now concerning the measure of an hin and other things observable concerning these meat-offerings see what is noted before upon Exod. ●9 41 c. Vers 15. As ye are so shall the stranger be before the Lord. That is God will make no difference betwixt you and the strangers that have embraced the same religion with you his sacrifices and yours shall be alike acceptable to God and therefore as there is no difference in the Lords acceptation so neither in the manner of their offering them In civil things there was not one Law both for Israelite and stranger but before the Lord that is when they came into Gods presence to perform the duties of Gods worship as the Israelites were so were the strangers that is there was one Law for them both Vers 20. As ye do the heave-offering of the threshing-floore so shall ye heave it That is about the same quantity that ye offer of your first corn shall ye offer of you● dough and both shall be offered with the same ceremonies Vers 21. Of the first of your dough ye shall give unto the Lord an heave-offering in your generations That is to the priests as the Lords receivers for the first-fruits were their portion Ezek. 44. 30. And the first of all the fruits of all things and ev●ry oblation of all of every sort of your oblations shall be the priests c. Vers 22. And if ye have erred and not observed all th●se commandments c. There is a Law given concerning the expiation of a sinne ignorantly committed by the whole congregation Levit. 4. 13. But there is a manifest difference betwixt this and that There the Law speaks of doing that which should not be done here of not doing all which should be done there the sacrifice which the congregation should bring is onely a bullock for a sinne-offering here they are willed to bring a bullock for a burnt-offering and a kid of the goats for a sinne-offering And the ground of this difference I conceive is this because that Law concerned sinnes of doing evil forbidden this onely concerns the sinne of neglecting those ceremoniall duties commanded by the Law which may be the more readily yielded if we consider the occasion of inserting this Law in this place Having spoken of the first-fruits of the first of their dough he immediately added this Law to shew what should be done in case any of those things concerning the externall worship of God either first-fruits or any other thing that ought to be brought to the priests and to the tabernacle were om●tted either by the congregation or particular persons Vers 25. And the priests shall make an atonement for all the congregation of the children of Israel c. Or for every congregation whereby may be implyed the severall tribes cities towns and synagogues Vers 30. But the soul that doth ought presumptuously c. This Law for the cutting off that is the putting to death of those that do ought presumptuously must be understood onely of the same offences for which the foregoing sacrifi●cs were appointed when they were ignorantly committed to wit of offences committed against the worship enjoyned by the ceremoniall Law as it is noted before upon vers 22. In these things the soul that is the man that did ought presumptuously that is not of ignorance inadvertencie or infirmity but willfully and boldly purposely and openly as in an advised contempt of Gods Law and of those duties of his publick worship in the Law of God enjoyned he was to be cut off and that because he did thereby reproch the Lord this being all one as if he should fay that God was not to be regarded or that his judgements were not worthy his fear Vers 32. And while the children of Israel were in the wildernesse they found a man that gathered sticks upon the Sabbath day c. At what time in their wandring through the wildernesse this happened which is here related it is not expressed But I conceive it
I may say for the sinnes of the people and hereby was signified that Christ our sacrifice was pure in himself though made sinne for us yea and some Expositours adde that this laying up of these ashes in a clean place signified that Christ should be buried in a new tombe wherein never man before was laid Luke 23. 53. And it shall be kept for the congregation of the children of Israel for a water of separation Why it is called a water of separation see before in the note upon ver 2. As for the place where these ashes were kept when they came into the land of Canaan it is not expressed yet many hold that it was dispersed into all the cities that those that were unclean might have wherewith to purify themselves Vers 10. And it shall be unto the children of Israel and unto the stranger that sojourneth among them for a statute for ever To wit the making and reserving these ashes for a water of separation Whether there was a new heifer burnt at every station where the Israelites tarried any time or whether every tribe or Israelite which I should rather think fetched of the ashes from the place where they were laid without the camp and so kept them for their own use when occasion served because it is not expressed we need not curiously enquire Onely this we must know that as the burning so also the ashes of this heifer was a signe of Christs most ignominious and accursed death for to be brought to ashes upon the earth is noted for the extremity of Gods fierie judgments Ezek. 28. 18. and that the memoriall of Christs ignominious death is to be kept by us in the Sacrament of the Lords supper as a most glorious monument of our life justification and sanctification through faith in his name See 1. Cor. 11. 24 25 26. and Gal. 6. 14. Vers 11. He that toucheth the dead body of any man shall be unclean seven dayes He that touched a dead beast was unclean but one day onely Lev. 11. 24. c. Whosoever toucheth the carcase of them shall be unclean untill the even c. neither was he to be sprinkled with those ashes By these legall pollutions therefore contracted by the touch of a dead man the Lord did undoubtedly teach his people first to observe Gods curse in death secondly to take heed of being defiled by the society of dead men that is wicked men men dead in trespasses and sinnes Eph. 2. 1. and of polluting our souls by any sinne or communion with dead works See 2. Cor. 6. 17. Wherefore come out from among them and be ye separate saith the Lord and touch not the unclean thing and I will receive you and 1. Tim. 5. 22. Lay hands suddenly on no man neither be partaker of other mens sinnes Keep thy self pure and thirdly that if they had defiled themselves they should seek presently to be cleansed of their uncleannesse namely by repentance from dead works and saith towards God which purifieth the heart Acts 15. 9. Vers 12. He shall purifie himself with it on the third day and on the s●venth day he shall be clean The third day was mysticall having reference to the resurrection of Christ so was also the seventh being a perfect number and signifying how full and perfectly we are cleansed from our sinnes by the sprinkling of the bloud and spirit of Christ Vers 13. And that soul shall be cut off from Israel That is if he do it presumptuously but if he have done it ignorantly he was to bring a sacrifice Leviticus 5. 3 6. Vers 16. And whosoever toucheth one that is slain with a sword c. That is whosoever toucheth any slain man for though the text speaks onely of such as are slain with a sword yet hereby all other are implyed also or a dead body that is any other dead body of a man though not slain but dying his naturall death yea or the bone of a man or a grave he shall be unclean seven dayes and therefore it was that to avoid these pollutions they used to have their places of buriall without their cities Luke 7. 12. Now when he came nigh to the gate of the citie behold there was a dead man carried out See also John 9. 41. Vers 17. And running water shall be put theret● in a vessel Because such water is purest See Lev. 14. 5. This figured the spirit of God which they that believe in Christ do receive John 7. 38 39. Vers 18. And a clean person shall take hyssope and dip it in the water and sprinkle it about the tent and upon all the vessels For though a vessel were melted yet it was not clean till it was sprinkled with this water Numb 31. 23. Every thing that may abide the fire ye shall make it go through the fire and it shall be clean neverthelesse it shall be purified with the water of separation Vers 22. And what soever the unclean person toucheth shall be unclean c. The unclean person here spoken of must needs be meant of the unclean person mentioned in the foregoing verse as by the immediate inference of this upon that is evident to wit the person that was made unclean by touching the water of separation yet withall it may be extended to all the unclean persons mentioned before in this chapter as those that were made unclean by the burning or touching of the red heifer or her ashes or by the touching of the dead body of a man c. and the Law here given concerning those is that every thing should be unclean that such unclean persons touched and that every person should be unclean that touched any thing that was defiled by the touch of an unclean man and thus hereby was figured the contagion of sinne spreading from one to another to the infection of many CHAP. XX. Vers 1. THen came the children of Israel even the whole congregation into the desert of Zin c. Not the wildernesse of Sin mentioned Exod. 16. 1. whither they came on the fifteenth day of the second moneth after their departing out of the land of Egypt but the wildernesse of Zin which was near to the land of Edom. The last station of the Israelites mentioned in this story was Kadesh in the wildernesse of Paran Numb 12. 16. and 13. 26. which is also called Kadesh-Barnea Deut. 1. 19. and Rithmah Numb 33. 18. close upon the borders of Canaan for thence they sent twelve men to search the land But because here they murmured against God for fear of the inhabitants hence the Lord appoints them to return to the red sea from Rithmah therefore or Kadesh-Barnea they returned as we find it Numb 33. 19. to Rimmon-parez thence to Libnah thence to Rissah thence to Kehelathah where some think it was that the Israelite was stoned for gathering broken wood on the Sabbath day Exod 15. 32. thence they went to mount Shapher thence to Haradah thence to Makheloth thence to
severall times appointed them to offer My offerings and my bread for my sacrifices made by fire for a sweet savour unto me shall ye observe to offer unto me in their due season for though all the sacrifices that were burnt upon the altar are elsewhere called the Lords food Lev. 3. 11. and his bread Lev. 21. 6. the reasons whereof see in the notes upon those places yet here it seems most probable that by offerings are meant all the severall sacrifices that were to be killed and offered upon the altar and by his bread for the sacrifices is meant the meat-offerings that were to be joyned with their sacrifices and then secondly he sets down particularly what they were to offer first for their dayly sacrifice vers 3. secondly for their weekly sacrifice every Sabbath day vers 9. thirdly for their monethly sacrifice every new Moon vers 11. and fourthly for their yearly sacrifices at every severall feast in the year vers 16 c. Vers 3. This is the offering made by fir● which ye shall offer unto the Lord c. See the notes on Exod. 29 28. Vers 9. And on the Sabbath day two lambs of the first year without spot c. The sacrifices here appointed for every Sabbath day are full double to those appointed for every day vers 3. and yet the daily sacrifices the continuall burnt-offering vers 10. was not omitted on the Sabbath day neither So that every Sabbath in the morning there was offered one lambe for the daily sacrifice then two lambs more for the Sabbath and this was thus appointed fir●t to shew the holinesse of that day and that God required more service from them on that day then other dayes secondly by way of thankfulnesse for the worlds creation and thirdly because it was a signe of our rest in heaven purchased for us by Christ Vers 11. And in the beginnings of your moneths ye shall offer a burnt-offering unto the Lord c. That is the new Moons the first dayes of every moneth these were appointed to be kept as solemn festivals then did they blow with the silver trumpets in the Sanctuary chap. 10. 10. Also in the day of your gladnesse and in your sol●mn dayes and in the beginning of your moneths ye shall blow with th● trumpets c. then did they repair to the prophets or other ministers of God to hear his word 2. Kings 4. 29. Wherefore wilt thou go to him to day saith the Shunamites husband to her when she would go to the Prophet Elisha It is neither new moon nor Sabbath then also they kept religious feasts 1. Sam. 5. 6. And David said unto Jonathan Behold to morrow is the new moon and I should not fail to sit with the King at meat c. neither was it lawfull to buy or sell or do other worldly work on those dayes Amos 8. 5. When will the new moon be gone that we may sell corn and the Sabbath that we may set forth wheat c. Now these new moons were thus ordained to be solemnized first that they might be put in mind to be thankfull for Gods mercy in that change of times and seasons the mediate cause of many blessings and the remembrance of this mercy God would have kept at the new of the moon rather then at her full when she shined in her full brightnesse because then there was lesse danger of being taken so with the glorie of that creature as not to ascend higher to the admiration of God the Creatour whence is that expression which Job useth chap. 31. 26 27. If I beheld the sunne when it shined or the moon walking in her brightnesse and my heart hath been secretly enticed or my mouth hath kissed my hand c. It was the glory of the moon shining in her brightnesse that drew the heathens to worship the moon and to prevent this danger God would have the memoriall of his mercy in ordering the change of moons and seasons to be kept not at the full but at the new of the moon secondly that the renewing of the moon which borroweth her light of the sunne might be observed as a figure or shadow of the Churches renovation by Christ the sunne of righteousnesse Mal. 4. 2. whereby every true Christian doth put off the old man with his deeds and put on th● new man which is renewed in knowledge after the image of him that created him Col. 3. 9 10. whence is that of the Apostle Col. 2. 16 17. Let no man therefore judge you in meat or in drink or in respect of an holy day or of the new moon or of the Sabbath dayes which are a shadow of things to come but the body is of Christ And thirdly that as of every day so of every moneth they might consecrate the first unto the Lords service Vers 17. And in the fifteenth day of this moneth is the feast To wit of unleavened bread Levit. 23. 6. where see all the notes on the solemnities of this feast Vers 24. After this manner ye shall offer daily throughout the seven dayes c. That is upon every one of the seven dayes of this feast But besides these sacrifices upon the sixteenth day of the moneth which was the next day after the first solemn day of the feast there was also a lamb offered for a burnt-offering together with the wave-sheaf or omer See Levit. 23. 12. and the notes thereon Vers 26. Also in the day of the first-fruits when ye bring a new meat-offering unto the Lord after your weeks be out c. Called the feast of Pentecost Acts 2. 1. when they offered two loaves of their new corn and it was seven weeks or fifty dayes after the Passeover Levit. 23. 15 16. Vers 27. Two young bullocks one ramme seven lambs of the first year These and the rest following are here added to the feast over and beside those seven lambs one bullock a●d two rammes which were offered with the first-fruits Lev. 23. 28. concerning which see the notes there CHAP. XXIX Vers 1. ANd in the seventh moneth on the first day of the moneth c. This seventh moneth was called the moneth Ethanim 1. Kings 8. 2. it was in the end of the year Exod. 23. 16. and the revolution of the year Exod. 34. 22. for so the word is in the originall because then the old year went out and the new began as touching Jubilees and other civil affairs Lev. 25. 9 10. But by reason of Israels coming out of Egypt in Abib or March that was made the first of the moneths Exod. 12. 2. And thus numbring the moneths for after this order the ecclesiasticall feasts were reckoned this which had been the first moneth is here as usually elsewhere called the seventh moneth and so became as it were the Sabbath moneth and was accordingly honoured with as many feasts as were celebrated in all the year besides whereof one was this here spoken of which was called
the law at Horeb but with us that is us his people whom he brought out of Egypt even us who are all of us here alive this day that is not onely with those who then were living at the giving of the Law but since dead in the wildernesse but even with us their posterity who are all alive this day Now for the understanding of this we must know that though the covenant of grace which God made with the Israelites when he brought them out of Egypt was one and the same for substance with that whi●h he had made before with their fathers and though it was much alike too in regard of the outward dispensation both being delivered in a way suitable to the dayes of the old Te●tament which was common to both to wit under dark promises types and ceremonies yet first because the Lord did more fully and more clearly make known unto them at Horeb the tenour of the covenant then he h●d ever done unto their fathers partly by giving them many more signes and shadows of the promised Messiah and the good that was to be had in him as the tabern●cle the ark the mercy-seat and the priesthood c. and partly by giving them a written law containing a perfect summ● of all that God required of them and secondly because he then entred into covenant with them as a body politick a people whom he had separated from all other nations to be his peculiar people prescribing them an outward form of government laws and statutes to which they consented to submit themselves therefore Moses tells them that the Lord did not make this covenant with their fathers and hence it is also that the Apostle saith the law was after the covenant in Christ Gal. 3. 17. And of this speciall mercy afforded them above their fathers Moses puts them here in mind to make them the more carefull to keep Gods laws Vers 4. The Lord talked with you face to face in the mount c. To wit when he gave them the ten commandments following vers 6. then the Lord talked with them face to face that is immediately by himself and not by a messenger and indeed this was not without a speciall mysterie for the ten commandments being a renewing and repeating of the covenant of works to be performed by every man in his own person therefore the Lord delivered these laws himself and there was no Mediatour betwixt him and the people whereas the other laws which were afterwards given them containing many shadows of Chri●t in whom God had made a covenant of grace were therefore delivered to Moses and by him to the people Moses standing as a Mediatour betwixt God and them But of this phrase of Gods speaking to them face to face see also the note upon Exod. 33. 11. Vers 5. I stood between the Lord and you at that time c. That is after God had out of the fire spoken the ten commandments I was glad to stand as a Mediatour betwixt the Lord and you Vers 12. Keep the Sabbath-day to sanctifie it c. In Exod. 20. 8. it is Remember the Sabbath-day to keep it holy so likewise some other small differences there are which are not worthy the que●tioning the substance being exactly the same Vers 15. And r●member that thou wast a servant in the land of Egypt c. In this fourth commandment as it was delivered by the Lord from mount Sinai the worlds Creation and Gods resting on the seventh day was mentioned as a main ground of it Exod. 20. 11. but here Moses repeating this commandment omits that and presseth their deliverance out of Egypt as a chief reason of Gods enjoyning them to sanctifie this day Remember that thou wast a servant in the land of Egypt and that the Lord thy God brought thee out thence c. therefore the Lord thy God commanded thee to keep the Sabbath-day And indeed though the Lords resting on the seventh day at the worlds Creation was the main gro●nd of the sabbaths first institution yet their deliverance out of Egypt might be the reason why th● Lord did now insert this amongst other the commandments which he gave in charge to the Israelites and that in these respe●ts first because by their redemption out of Egypt they were bound to consecra●e themselves wholly to Gods service as his peculiar people whereof the holy imployment of the Sabbath might be a notable memoriall and signe and secondly because of that particular charge of suffering their servants to rest on the sabbath-Sabbath-day their former bondage in Egypt being a strong inducement to move them to take pity of their s●rvants and this enjoyned rest of their servants being a good memoriall to put them in mind of their bondage in Egypt Vers 21. Neither shalt thou desire thy neighbours wife c. Exod. 20. 17. God first forbids the coveting of our neighbours house and then next the coveting of his wife here contrarily the coveting our neighbours wi●e is sirst forbidden and then afterward the coveting of his house c. so that they that would divide this last commandment into two as the Papists do cannot justly say which is the ninth commandment and which is the tenth because one branch of it is first in Exodus and another is first here in Deuteronomie and we cannot think that Moses would pervert the order of the ten commandments Vers 22. And he added no more That is he spake no more unto the people but these ten commandments immediately by himself the rest he spake unto Moses and then Moses told it them and that because they desired it should be so which Moses relates largely in the remainder of the chapter to convince them that they had no cause to give lesse regard to the other statutes which Moses delivered them from Gods own mouth But yet withall these words may imply the perfection of the decalogue or tenne commandments to wit that the Lord hath therein given us such a perfect summe of the morall Law that there is nothing farther to be added to it And he wrote them in two tables of stone c. See the note upon Exodus ●1 18. Vers 24. We have seen this day that God doth talk with man and he livet● c. In these words they confesse that they had heard God talking with them and were for all that alive and yet in the next words in the following verse they adde Now therefore why should we die for this great fire will consume us whereas rather one would think that from their present safetie after they had heard God talking with them they should have encouraged themselves against all fear for the time to come But for this I answer that in these first words they speak of their present safety as a matter of wonder and thence inferre that though they had escaped this danger for the present yet the very terrour of it would kill them if God did thus still reveal his will to
to prevent their worshipping God in any other place then that one which he had appointed to which we in the dayes of the Gospel are not tyed Vers 4. Ye shall not do so unto the Lord your God That is ye shall not sacrifice to him in severall places upon mountains and hills c. as the heathens serv●● their Gods but all your sacrifices and offerings ye shall offer unto the Lord on●ly in that place which he shall chuse for that service for so it follows in the two next verses But unt● the place which the Lord your God shall chuse out of all your tribes to put his name there even unto his habitation shall ye seek and thither ye shall bring your burnt-offerings and your sacrifices c. Prayer and other spirituall duties of Gods worship they might even then perform in other places both in publick and private and therefore the Levites were purposely dispersed here and there all the l●nd over and they had their Synagogues in severall places where they met together every Sabbath day to perform these holy duties but their sacrifices were all to be brought unto the place which God should chuse which is meant of those places where the tabernacle was placed for some time after they were come into the land of Canaan such as were Shiloh and Nob and other places whence is that of the Prophet Jer. 7. 12. Go ye now into my place which was in Shiloh where I set my name at the first and see what I did to it for the wickednesse of my people but principally of the temple which God chose to be the settled place for sacrifices and it is called here the place which the Lord should chuse to put his name there both because it was to be called by his name The house of God and to be consecrated to his worship and service and withall to prevent that carnall conceit of Gods dwelling in temples made with hands to wit as essentially included therein whence it is also that the same San●tuary which is here called the Lords habitation or dwelling-place is elsewhere called his footstool Psal 99. 5. As for the reasons why the Lord did bind his people to offer up their sacrifices in one place onely which he would appoint they were chiefly these two first because hereby God would teach them that there was but one onely way to obtain pardon of their sinnes and acceptance of any service they did unto God and that was by Christ their promised Messiah of whom their tabernacle and temple was a type and secondly because hereby they might the better be kept to one unifo●m way of worshipping God and corruptions in his worship might be prevented whereinto they might easily fall had they been allowed to offer their sacrifices some in one place and some in another and for this cause it was that in after-times the Kings of Juda● were so often blamed because they did not remove the high places but ●uffered th● people to sacrif●ce there Vers 6. And thither ye shall bring your burnt-offerings and your sacri●ices and your tithes c. Here Moses reckons up all those holy things which they were to bring to the place which God should choose for those services where first by sacrifices are meant all other sacrifices besides burnt-offerings as ●●nne-offerings trespasse-offerings c. secondly by tithes are meant not those ordinary tithes which were yearly paid to the Levites for they were not brought to the temple but were paid to the Levites in their severall habitations throughout the land but a second tithe the tithe of that which remained after the first tithe was paid to the Levites for that or the money for which they had sold it they carryed up yearly to Jerusalem and there with those tithes so carried in kind or with such things as they bought with the money they kept a holy feast before the Lord as is largely expressed chap. 14. 22 27. thirdly by the h●ave-offerings of their hands are meant all the severall first-fruits which they brought in their hands and heaved them before the Lord and then left them to the priests for their portion fourthly by vows and freewill-offerings are meant all such sacrifices or offerings as they should extraordinarily bring either upon some vow they had made o● freely and of their own accord and lastly the firstlings are the first of that their herds and flocks brought forth for these also they carried up to the temple as is evident Numb 18. 17 18. where it is said that their bloud was to be sprinkled upon the altar and the fat was to be burnt for an offering made by fire and then the ●lesh was given to the priests for their portion Vers 7. And there ye shall ●at before the Lord your God and ye shall rejoyce c. That is when you carry your sacrifices and offerings and other things before mentioned to the place which the Lord shall choose there ye shall feast with your holy things and rejoyc● together before the Lord. But here yet for the fuller understanding of this place we must note first that the meaning is not that they might eat of all the holy things before mentioned for the burnt-offerings were wholly burnt upon the altar and of some other sacrifices none but the priests might eat but the things here intended wherewith the people were to fea●t were the tithes and the peace-offerings secondly that it is said that they should eat these things before the Lord their God because they were to eat them though not in the priests court yet in the place where the tabernacle first and temple afterwards stood the place of Gods speciall presence to wit in Jerusalem which is therefore called the holy city Matth. 4. 5. thirdly that by all things they put their hand unto Ye shall rejoyce in all that you put your hand unto is meant all the good things they had gotten by the labour of their hands through Gods blessing and so had in the power of their hands to use as they had occasion and that because of all that they had they carried still something by way of tithes or sacrifices unto Jerusalem and so this phrase is ordinarily used in the Scripture as chap. 15. 10. the Lord thy God shall blesse thee in all thy works and in all that thou puttest thine hand unto and so in many other places and fourthly that the drift of this place seems to be partly this Having told them in the foregoing verse that when they came to be settled in the land of Canaan they were to carry all their sacrifices and offerings c. to that one place in the land which the Lord their God should choose that they might not think much of the labour and charge which this would put them to especially those that dwelt farre off he addes this by way of encouragement There ye shall eat before the Lord your God c. as reckoning their glad enjoying of
that ran astray much more such fugitive servants as thus robbed their masters by flying from them Vers 17. There shall be no wh●re of the daughters of Israel nor a Sodomite c. Though the tolerating of whores and Sodomites that were of the sonnes and daughters of Israel be here onely expressed yet by necessary consequence the permitting of such open filthinesse by any other nations that should live amongst them is also forbidden who besides the ensnaring of Gods people to commit filthinesse with them might also corrupt them in regard of their religion too and seduce them by degrees to open idolatrie Vers 18. Thou shalt not bring the hire of a whore or the price of a dog into the house of the Lord c. It is a great question amongst Expositours what is meant here by the price of a dog First some conceive that because these two are joyned thus together the hire of a whore and the price of a dog this last is intended of some filthy thing as well as the first and so they conclude that as amongst us men are wont sometimes to give money to have some goodly horse to cover their mares so it was in those times for dogs and this is meant here by the price of a dog Secondly others think it is meant of such men as did openly in the sight of others commit uncleannesse in a most impudent and brutish manner Thirdly others again think that as in the foregoing verse the whore and the Sodomite are joyned together There shall be no whore of the daughters of Israel nor a Sodomite of the sonnes of Israel so it is here likewise and by a dog is meant a Sodomite the word dog being used metaphorically as it is also Rev. 22. 15. without are dogs and by the price of a dog is meant the hire that was given to him with whom men commit that horrid and unnaturall sinne of Sodomie And last of all most Expositours take it according to the plain meaning of the words for the price of a dog that is sold which being an unclean and withall a base and contemptible creature God would not allow them to bring the price of it into his house Now these two last Expositions I conceive are most likely to be intended here but especially the last and that hereby God taught them to reverence his sanctuary and sacrifices Lev. 19. 30. and not to offer him any thing that had been sinfully gotten or to contribute basely to any holy uses as thinking any thing good enough for his worship and service who forbiddeth hi● name to be despised his altar and table to be thought contemptible Mal. 1. 6 7 8. or his house to be made a den of thieves Jer. 7. 11. Vers 19. Thou shalt not lend upon usury to thy brother usury of money usury of victualls c. This last clause implyes the hainousnesse of the sinne forbidden to wit the exacting of usury from those that wanted meat and for their supply were glad to borrow of their neighbours Vers 20. Unto a stranger thou mayest lend upon usury c. That is a gentile who was also an infidel for to strangers who were brethren in the faith they might not lend upon usury Levit. 25. 35 3● Vers 21. When thou shalt vow a vow unto the Lord thy God thou shalt not slack to pay it To wit a vow which was possible and lawfull See the note upon Numb 30. 2. Vers 25. When thou comest to the standing corn of thy neighbours then thou mayest pluck the ears with thine hand c. And therefore when our Saviours disciples did this the Pharisees charged them not with taking that which was not theirs but onely with doing that which might not be done on the Sabbath day Matth. 12. 1 2. CHAP. XXIV Vers 1. WHen a man hath taken a wife and marryed her c. Two things must be known for the fuller understanding of this law concerning divorces first that whereas it is said here that if after a man hath marryed a wife his wife find no favour in his eyes because he hath found some uncleannesse in her hereby is meant any thing whatsoever either in her person or in her qualities and manners which being at the time of marriage unknown to him he hath afterwards discovered and for it dislikes and abhorres his wife yea though the cause of his dislike were never so slight a matter and therefore did the Pharisees so propound the question they made concerning this law to wit whether a man might put away his wife for every cause Matth. 19. 3. and secondly whereas it is said of such a man so disliking his wife then let him write her a bill of divorcement and give it in her hand and send her out of his house the meaning is onely that if he put her away he must write her a bill of divorcement c. for this was not a dispensation in regard of that first divine institution of marriage allowing the Jews without sinne to put away their wives upon any dislike taken against them contrary to that which God at first d●d establish for a law to all po●terity to wit that a man should have but one wife and a woman but one husband and they two should be one flesh for even when Moses law was in its full force such divorcings were displeasing to God Mal. 2. 16. The Lord the God of Israel saith that he hateth putting away no it was onely a law made in favour of the wife so put away that she should have in this case a bill of divorce given her that if she were put away causelesly she might have this as a testimony for her that she had not of her own accord forsaken her husband but was put away that without any just cause on her part and so was now free It is true indeed that by this law there was implicitly granted a permission or toleration of these unjust divorces to the Israelites in those times to wit that they might without incurring any punishment thus put away their wives and this injustice in the husband did so farre break the knot of marriage that it was lawfull for the wife so put away to marry another husband but yet still this which was thus tolerated was sin●ull in the husband and displeasing to God and onely permitted by Moses for the hardnesse of their hearts Matth. 19. 8. Moses because of the hardnesse of your hearts suffered you to put away your wives that is because they were such a perverse and hard-hearted people that had they been restrained from this they would have been likely to have made the lives of their wives extremely miserable by all kind of savage and cruell tyrannizing ●ver them and perhaps would at last have attempted to make them away and therefore also even this toleration of such causelesse divorces was abrogated by our Saviour Matth. 5. 31 32. It hath been said Whosoever shall put away his wife
to look to the ark and the other holy things And Moses commanded them saying At the end of every seven years c. The summe of this passage is briefly this that Moses commanded the priests to read this book of the law every seventh year which was the year of release amongst the people and that upon the feast of tabernacles that year Concerning the year of release and the phrase here used At the end of every seven years see the note upon chap. 15. 1. But besides for the fuller understanding of this passage we must note first That the law which the priests were here enjoyned to reade amongst the people every seventh year on the feast of tabernacles was the originall copie of this book of the law which Moses wrote and which he now delivered to the priests to be kept by them Doubtlesse some part of the book of the law was read amongst them by the Levites every Sabbath day Acts 15. 21. For Moses of old time hath in every city them that preach him being read in the Synagogues every Sabbath day nor can it be questioned but that the people had books of the law in the reading whereo● they did dayly in private exercise themselves if this were required of their kings chap. 17. 18 19. much more may we think it was required of them that were of inforiour rank But yet once in seven years God would have this book to be read by the priests from the beginning to the end amongst the people both that being read in such a solemn manner it might take the deeper impression in them and so cause them to fear the Lord their God and to observe to do all the words of this law as it follows vers 12. and perhaps also that it might be made manifest to all Israel that those copies of the law which they had and which were read and expounded to them every Sabbath day did agree with this originall which Moses wrote and secondly that the reason why God appointed this to be done on the year of release was not onely because that year they had most liberty of mind to intend that service the l●nd lying that year at rest and themselves being freed from the danger of having their debts exacted of them but also because it was a holy year the Sabbath of years and so the fitter for this extraordinary duty and thirdly that this was appointed to be done at the feast of tabernacles that year because then all Israel came to appear before the Lord as it is said vers 11. for though the males onely were bound to come up at the feast Exod. 23. 17. yet they did usually carry with them their women also and therefore it is said vers 12. Gather the people together men and women and children c. that they may hear and that they may learn c. Vers 14. Call Joshua and present your selves in the tabernacle of the congregation c. This was thus done that the people might be fully satisfied that he was called of God to this place and that Joshua himself might be put in mind that he was but Gods deputy and so might still acknowledge Gods sovereignty over him and be the more faithfull in discharging the trust which God had put into his hands Vers 16. This people will rise up and go a whoring after the gods of the strangers of the land whither they go to be amongst them The gods whom they have vanquished as it were that could neither preserve themselves nor the people that served them for the worshipping whereof the land had spewed out these her inhabitants Vers 17. I will forsake them and I will hide my face from them c. That is I will cast them off and take no more charge of them as my people and so when all kind of miseries do then come upon them though they seek for me to help yet I will hide my face from them a●d will not regard them Vers 19. Now therefore write ye this song for you and teach it the children of Israel c. To wit that which followeth in the following chapter containing a prophecy of their falling away from God and Gods just judgement upon them for this their apostacy It was given in a song that it might be the better remembred and might the more work upon their affections and the Israelites were to learn and sing it that in time to come when they should so provoke God by their sinnes as is there set forth and God should thereupon punish them with those very evils which are there foretold this song as out of their own mouths might be a witnesse for God against them to wit that the evils they suffered were of Gods sending as being the very judgements which God had long since threatned and that God had in that song given them warning enough and they were therefore inexcusable because notwithstanding this warning they had brought these miseries upon themselves Vers 21. For I know their imaginations which they go about even now That is what they will do hereafter I know now yea I see the false hypocrisie of their hearts and their pronenesse to idolatrie even at this present This I conceive is the drift of these words yet it might be also intended to intimate that there were some amongst them that had base apostatizing tho●ghts already in their hearts Vers 26. Take this book of the law and put it in the side of the ark of the covenant c. That is not the ark for there was nothing in the ark save the two tables of stone which Moses put there in Horeb 1. Kings 8. 9. but on the outside of the ark where was the pot of Manna and Aarons rod. And this was appointed to signifie that it was the law of God though written by Moses and so the people might heare it with the more reverence and attention when it was brought forth thence and read amongst them and withall that God would keep and preserve it and take vengeance on those that should disregard and dispise it Indeed this was that very book which was found in the treasurie of the temple in Josiahs time 2. Chron. 34. 14. and therefore it seems it was removed from the ark in after-ages and kept in some other place of the temple wherein seeing they transgressed the directions which God here gave to the priests no marvell though this precious treasure was for some years lost and not looked after Vers 28. That I may speak these words in their ears and call heaven and earth to record against them See the note chap. 4. 26. CHAP. XXXII Vers 1. GIve ear O ye heavens and I will speak and hear O earth c. That is the song mentioned in the former chapter which God gave Moses vers 19. and commanded him to teach the people And this Rhetoricall expression which Moses useth in the beginning of this song is to imply first of what great importance
the feast of trumpets and was in the first day of this moneth being their Newyears day for civil affairs and so a fit day to praise God for the blessings of the yea● past and to crave his blessing on the following year See what is noted concerning the solemnitie of this feast Lev. 23. 24. Vers 2. And ye shall offer a burnt-offering for a sweet savour unto the Lord one young bullock c. To wit beside the sacrifices of the day as it was a new Moon chap. 28. 11. and besides the daily sacrifice as is expressely noted vers 6. Vers 7. And ye shall have on the tenth day of this seventh moneth an holy convocation c. See Levit. 16. 29. and the notes thereon Vers 11. One kid of the goats for a sinne-offering beside the sinne-offering of ●●onement c. That is beside that goat-buck offered on the day of atonement whose bloud was carried by the high priest within the vail into the most holy place See Levit 16. 9 29 30. Vers 12. And on the fifteenth day of the seventh moneth ye shall have an holy convocation c. To wit the seast of booths See Levit. 23. 34 35. and the notes thereon Vers 13. And ye shall offer a burnt-offering a sacrifice made by fire of a sweet savour unto the Lord thirteen young bullocks c. There were moe sacrifices offered at this then at any other feast both because it was celebrated in remembrance of the mercies of many years even all those ●ourty years of their travel from Egypt to Canaan as also because at this time they had gathered in their corn and wine and had seen the blessing of God on all their increase and in all the work of their hands Deut. 16. 13 15. Thou shalt observe the feast of tabernacles seven dayes after thou hast gathered in thy corn and thy wine Seven dayes shalt thou keep a solemn feast unto the Lord thy God in the place which the Lord shall chuse because the Lord thy God shall blesse thee in all thy increase and in all the works of thine hands therefore thou shalt surely rejoyce Vers 17. And on the second day ye shall offer twelve young bullocks c. In every one of the seven dayes of this feast one bullock is abated for whereas they offered thirteen bullocks the first day they offered but twelve on the second day and el●ve● on the third c and herein happely was intended a representation how the years of their pilgrimage wherein God had appointed that they should wander up and down in booths did by degrees wear away and grow fewer and fewer or else by this abating of the sin●e-offerings whereby atonement was made for them the holy Ghost might teach their duty to grow in grace that in the whole course of their pilgrimage through this world sinne should still decay and wear away or it might signifie a diminishing or wearing away of the legall sacrifices and ceremonies CHAP. XXX Vers 1. ANd Moses spake unto the heads of the tribes concerning the children of Israel c. There being mention made in the latter end of the foregoing chapter vers 39. of sacrifices due upon a vow made which were to be carefully brought in besides the set sacrifices which God had injoyned upon this occasion it seems these precepts are in this next chapter here added concerning vows to shew who they were that must alwayes necessarily perform their vows and who not and these Laws it is said that Moses made known to the heads of the tribes because they were the men that were according to these Laws to judge either to bind them to their vows or free them c. Vers 2. If a man vow a vow unto the Lord or swear an oath c. That is if a man to wit a man of grown years having power over himself shall bind his soul with a bond whether it be onely a promise or vow that he hath solemnly made unto the Lord or whether it be a vow strengthened with an oath or that he hath sworn that he will do such or such a thing he shall not break his word but shall do according to all that proceedeth out of his mouth that is he must not fail to do exactly what he hath vowed and sworn to do and that without delay for it is also added Deut. 23. 21. When thou shalt vow a vow unto the Lord thy God thou shalt not slack to pay it to wit if it were not an unlawfull thing he had vowed or sworn for vows for the doing of that which it is unlawfull to do are not vows binding the conscience for how can that vow bind men to God when they vow to do that which God forbids and will not have done such as was that of those fourtie men Acts 23. 21 that had bound themselves with an oath that they would neither eat nor drink till they had killed Paul Vers 3. If a woman also vow a vow unto the Lord and bind her self by a bond being in her fathers house c. That is under his power and command whether in his house or no and by the rule of analogy the same exception is to be allowed for sonnes and servants under their governours power As for those last words in her youth either they are onely added because it is for the most part in their youth that maids continue in t●eir fathers house for it is not likely that they had power to vow without the consent of their fathers when they had lived unmarried till riper years and were still under their father sjurisdiction or else because though their fathers were dead yet in their youth maids had no power to vow without the consent of their governours whereas being of full years and at their own disposing they might vow and were then bound to do what they had vowed Vers 5. And the Lord shall forgive her because her father disallowed her Hereby is meant either that the Lord would forgive her rashnesse in vowing when she was not in her own power or rather that the Lord would not impute this as a sinne to her seeing her father refused to let her keep it Vers 8. But if her husband disallowed her on the day that he heard it c. This last clause on the day that he heard it is added first to shew that whenever he shall come to hear it he may make her vow void though it were long after the vow were made secondly to shew that if he dissembled for a time and afterwards shewed his dislike though it were the next day after it should be to no purpose Vers 9. But every vow of a widow and of her that is divorced wherewith they have bound their souls shall stand against her If it were made in her widowhood she must perform it yea say the Hebrews though she be afterward married or be turned to her fathers house Vers 10. And if she vowed in her husbands